, s OCTOBER 7, 1904 " . Thfieommomf, jp 15 &mP mit difference to The Hague came most promptly also from these na tions. Although The Hague trtbunal has not been the immediate success that was hoped, it is nevertheless making notable progress, as history will juage. Assistant Secretary of State Loomis gave, at St. Louis, the address of wel come as a representative of the pres ident. In this address ho gave the following statement of the progress made in securing treaties to augment the usefulness of the peace tribunal as What Sulphur Does For the Human Body in Health and Disease. The mention of sulphur will recall to many of us the early days when our mothers and grandmothers gave us our daily dose of sulphur and mo lasses every spring and fall. It was the universal spring and fall "blood purifier," tonic and cure-all, and mind you, this old-fashioned rem edy was not without merit. The idea was .good, but the remedy Was crude and unpalatable, and a large quantity had to be taken to eet any effect. Nowadays wo get all the beneficial effects of sulphur in a palatable, con centrated form, so that a single grain is far more effective than a table spoonful of the crude sulphur. In recent years, research and exper iment have proven that the best sul phur for medical use is that obtained from Calcium, (Calcium Sulphide) and Sold in drug1 stores under the name of Stuart's Calcium Wafers. They are femall chbcolate coated pellets and con tain the active medicinal principle of sulphur in a highly concentrated, ef fective form. Few people are aware of the value of this form of sulphur in restoring and maintaining bodily vigor and health; sulphur acts directly on the "liver, and excretory organs and puri "fies and enriches the blood b the prompt elimination of waste material. 4 Our grandmothers knew this when "they dosed us with sulphur and mo lasses every spring, and fall, but the crudity and impurity of ordinary flow ers of sulphur were often worse than .the disease, and can not compare with the modern concentrated preparations of sulphur, of which Stuart's Calcium Wafers is undoubtedly the best and most widely used. They are the natural antidote for liver and kidney troubles and cure constipation and purify the blood in a way that often surprises patient and physician alike. Dr. R. M. Wilkins while experiment ing with sulphur remedies soon found that the sulphur from Calcium w; su perior to any other form. Hu says: "or liver, kidney and blood troubles, especially when resulting from consti pation or malaria, I have been sur prised at the results obtained from Stuart's Calcium Wafers. In patients suffering from boils and pimples and pven deep-seated carbuncles, I have repeatedly seen them dry up and dis appear in four or five days, leaving the Si'in clear and smooth. Although Stu art's Calcium Wafer is a proprietary article, and sold by druggists, and for that reason tabooed by many physi cians, yet I know of nothing so safe and reliable for constipation, liver and Sidney troubles and especially in all forms of skin disease as this romedy." t any rate people who are tired of pills, cathartics- and , so-called blood 'purifiers," will flncrMn Stuart's Cal cium Wafers, a- far safer, more palat able and effective preparation. woll as similar examples pf arbitra tion. He said: ' ' "Tho cause of International, arbitra tion is making notable and pcimanent progress. Since your last meeting Great Britain and France, France and Italy, Great Britain and Italy, Holland and Denmark, Great Britain and Spain, France and Spain, France and Holland, and Spain and Portugal have con cluded treaties pledglngthomBelvos dur ipg a period of five years to submit certain classes of cases to Tho Haguo tribunal. The signing of these treaties marks a distinct and promising ad vance. The Alaskan boundary dispute has been amicably settled, ai;d the record of tho year counts among its achievements, besides tho'caucs dealt with In Tho Haguo tribunal, the ap pointment of special arbitrators to settle: "The boundary dispute between Ecu ador and Peru. "The boundary dispute between Col ombia and Peru. "The claims for indemnity of French citizens on the treaty shore of Now foundland, provided for under tho gen eral agreement between France and Great Britain; tho question of tho boundary line at the entrance of the Christiania fjord, between Sweden and Norway. "The land question in the New Heb rides, between France and England; also provided for under the Anglo French agreement. "The Barotzeland frontier question between Great Britain and Portugal. "The controversy between the Turk ish government arid the administration of the Ottoman debt. Secretary Loomis also called atten tion to the fact that America ha3 been a party to seventy of the 200 (ap proximately) cases of arbitration in the solution of -international difficul ties during the past 100 years. Tho most notable of these was the treaty negotiated in Washington in 1871 pro viding for four arbitrations. Of this Mr. John Morley says: "The treaty of Washington and the Geneva arbitration stand out as tho most notable international feature of the nineteenth century of the noble art of preventive diplomacy, and the most signal Instance in their history of self-command In two or threo chief democratic powers of the western world." It is significant that this trnaty was made under the administration of Gen eral Grant, a man who loved peace the better because he knew war so well. It may be well to remember Jn this connection the words of Grant toward tho. close of his life: "Though educated a soldier," he said, "and though I have gone through two wars, I have always been a man of peace, preferring to' see questions of difference settled by arbitration. It has been my misfortune to be engaged in more battles than any olhpr Amer ican general, but there was never a time during my command when I would not have chosen some settle ment by reason, rather than the svcrd. When the duke of Cambridge asked me to review; his troops at Aloershot, I told him that the one thing I never wished to see again was a military parade. I never went Into a buttle willingly. I never want to command another army." The sentiment of Grant was akin to that of the first great warrior statesman, Qeorge Washington. m a letter of July 25, 1785, to David Humphreys, secretary of the comjiis sion sent abroad to negotiate treaties of commerce, he wrote: "My first wish is to see this plague to mankind (war) banished from the earth, and tho sons and daughters of this world employed in more pleasing and innocent amuse ments than in preparing Implements and exercising them for tho destruc tion of mankind." Tho noble, body of men and women, then, whoso faces aro turned toward Boston and tho body of statesmen now in our stato aro trying to bring about that which America's great firot presi dent urged as his "first wish." It is well that tho great pei',o con gresses have como in America Thoy will revivo tho nation's dulled sense of tho enormity of war and tho actlvo desire to bo a mighty power In tho cause of peace. Edgar Fawcett has given in the following lines tho purpose of tho peace workers and tho message they bring to America: If thou detcstest war, as all mon should, Make monumental thine antipathy; Intoxicate theyself with loathing of It; Givo policy's least mood of .protean guile No quarter. S'ound one note, and vary it not. While tumults of Insidious "ifc" and "thoughs." Like locust legions, loundening as thoy swell, Would buzz and hiss thee muto. Denver News. Blindfold Chess "There aro 318,979,504,000 ways of playing tho first four moves on each side of a cheesboard," says Paul Sever ing In "Everybody's Magazine" of Oc tober. "Yet Harry N. Pillsbury has played against as many as twenty-two different boards at one and the same jC There lljott ooe way to male- Iht roott mmxty out of any ImtlneM. Tho war to make th meat aMaeytMefdalrytarlstheKatplraWar. TrW Empire Cream Separator mile dairying txxltr, ptreunter tad mora ro8tblf. It aaree time, trouble aad temper. It i tci wuik became It It eay to operate and atytoclean. Hum worry becauieltla al wart ready. ikJmi cloict y and If made to last. One book about the money maklnr Umpire Wayc-fdatrrlfteT re free to everybody. They arejutt cotnmoa-tcnie talks la plain language, plainly printe-i for buiy ftrmm and dairymen. Send for them. They are free for the atkteg. Emplro Cream Separator Co., BImUiJ,N.J. Chicago. Mlaneapolla, Mlas. MaaniHaanHawBaBnHuianBHaanHa FOR SALE ' Up to date Short Horn Bulla from 0 to 21 months old. H. B, Quintoh, Donmnrk, . Iowa. mmmmimmmmmmmmmmmmmnmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmKmmmmmammm PlUOrUP 125,000.00 rnndc Irom half Acre hlnnrrlll Kwlly grown In Garden or Farm uiiiuh.uu n(1otjari(lBccljiior"ulc HcncMo lor postage nml gel booklet A. Q.telllriK all about it, McbOWJBI.L, (JJ.NHKNO fjAUDKM, JOPLIN, Mo and Whlaketjr HfIf a cured at lioma without pain. Ilook of particulars Wo4Ue7,al.l.tAUHtaHCJit., 103 M.l'ryer t. . 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