The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, November 04, 1904, Page 13, Image 13

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NOVEMBER 4, 1904'
The Commoner.
13
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What Sulphur Does
For the. Human Body in Health and
Disease
Tho mention of sulphur will recall
to many of us the early days when our
mothers and grandmothers gave ut$
our daily dose of sulphur and molasses
every spring and fall.
It was the universal spring and- fall
"blood purifier," tonic anil cure-all, and
mind you, this old-fashioned remedy
was not without merit.
The idea was good, but tho remedy
was crude and unpalatable, and a
largo . auantity had to be taken to get
any effect.
Nowadays we get all tho beneficial
effects of sulphur in a palatable, con
centrated form so that a single grain
Is far more effective than a table
epoonful of the crude sulphur.
In recent years, research and ex
periment have proven that tho best sul
phur for medicinal use is that obtained
from Calcium (Calcium Sulphide) and
sold in drug stores under the name of
Stuart's Calcium "Wafers. They are
Bmall chocolate coated pellets and
contain 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 by tho
prompt elimination of waste material.
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 con
stipation and purify the blood in a
way nat often surprises patient and
physician alike.
Dr. R. M. Wilkins while experi
menting with sulphur remedies soon
found that the sulphur from Calcium
was superior to any other form. He
says: "For liver, kidney and blood
troubles, especially when resulting
from constipation or malaria, I have
been surprised at tho results obtained
from Stuart's Calcium Wafers. In pa
tients suffering from boils and pim
ples and even deep-seated carbuncles, I
have repeatedly seen them dry up and
disappear in four or five days, leaving
the skin clear and smooth. Although
Stuart's Calcium Wafers is a proprie
tary article, and sold by druggists, and
for that reason tabooed by many phy
sicians, yet I know of nothing so safe
and reliable for constipation, liver and
kidney troubles and especially in all
forms of skin disease as this remedy."
At any rate people w.ho are tired ot
pills, cathartics and so-called blood
"purifiers," will find in Stuart's ual
cium Wafers, a far safer, more pal
atable and effective preparation.
been discreditable to the great mili
tary powers of the world and unfortu
nate to the inhabitants of peaceful and
defenseless countries.
A marked illustration of th'Is Is the
recent action of one of tho great
powers that has burdened its people
with the one billion two hundred and
fifty million dollars of debt under
which they are now groaning. It has
crushed but of existence two repub
lics in as many years, and tho very
men who for selfish purposes instl-
Stops
Chills
"PainkiW&Y
(PERRY DAVIS')
Cures
Colds
gated that cruel war are now schem
ing to introduce cheap Chineso labor
to replace tho honest toilers in tho
mines of South Africa. Do the indus
trious citizen laborers of this coun
try wish their government to follow
that example?
When wo espoused tho cause of the
one and a half millions of Cuban pa
triots struggling against two hundred
thousand of the best trained troops ot
Spain wo assumed morally tho same
sentiment and responsibility toward
tho nine millions of people who had
been struggling with equal success
against less than fifteen tnouaanci
troops in tho Philippine islands. To
say that circumstances, either divino
or human, made us responsible for the
condition of these people is untenable,
unless wo aro governed by tho same
moral obligations and high sonso of
justice that have marked our course
with the people of Cuba. Tho theorv
that wo must hold in absolute subjec
tion for an indefinite terra of years
tho millions of people on tho other
side of tho globe until they aro pre
pared for self-government appears to
bo utterly unwarranted. What guar
antee can wo givo that tho sentiment
of our people twenty-five, fifty or one
hundred years hence will bo as hu
mane and just as that of our people
today? "Wo tried tho exnerlmenfc of
provisional and military governments
in the South after the Civil war, and
it was repudiated in tho thundering
voice of tho people at tho polls, and
was soon abandoned for the better
and wiser course of granting justice
and citizensnip to the people of tho
conquered territory. How long has
been tho schooling for the people ot
the republics of the Westorn hemi
sphere who threw off the yoke of op
pression and then immediately adopt
ed a system of constitutional govern
ment? Not a day, not an hour, and
their experience shows that all those
countries which have suffered most un
der despotic rulo appreciate best and
cherish with tho strongest devotion
tho advantages of liberal govern
ment. It was recently proclaimed by tho
highest official in tho Philippine isl
ands that the people of that country
should not contemplate free govern
ment, and the principal reason given
was that revolutions had constantly
occurred in the South American re
publics. This appears to come with
bad grace, when the very man who
uttered that statement had been en
gaged in a revolution which had
caused more blood letting and wasted
more American lives than all the rev
olutions in tho republics of South
America in the last one hundred years.
Should we adopt the same measures
toward the people of tho Philippine
islands that wo have found so success
ful with the people of Cuba, their
gratitude woiild be unbounded, ninety
nine per cent of the American people
would be satisfied with the result, and
oun would be the glory of establish
ing the first republic in the Orient,
where now its hundreds of millions
of people aro watching with intense
anxiety the action of this great Amer
ican republic.
Our first responsibility is to do unto
others as we would have others do
unto us. The hundreds of millions of
dollars that have been expended in the
Philippine Islands, to say nothing of
tho 'thousands of lives that have been
lost, would have put water upon ev
ery quarter section of our arid land
available for that purpose, thus bene
fiting tho home builders of our own
country. It would have given us a
magnificent system of good roads over
our entire country, or have built two
canals across the Isthmus. In fact,
instead of .seeking to subjugate the
people of far, distant countries, it
would, in my judgment, be much wiser
to endeavor to benefit our people at
home. There is more material wealth
within our own borders than is avail
able for tho coplo of any othor coun
try on earth. One-hair of it still re
mains practically unoccupied. Tho
western half of ho United Stntes is
occupied touay by scarcely moro peo
ple than aro crowded in tho Philip
pine islands -an area less In extent
than that Of Now York nnrl tlin Nnw
England states or tho territory of Now
Mexico.
The territory to tho north and
south of us, with our own, contains
.uwiu uuuuvuiopea weaun anu natural
resources than are to bo found In all I
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CHICAGO OASOLINE ENfJlNE COMPANY.
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