The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 23, 1905, Image 6

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    HADE HEWSJRENGTH
QUICKER THAU DOOTOBS TONICS
SAYS TYPHOID PATIENT
STounp Tndy Left by Fovor In Very TVcali
Stuto Uses Dr Willlama Pink rills
ivlth Gratifying Result
After a f over such as typhoid or scar
let has ruu its full course there remains
She recovery of strength The tonic that
will most rapidly increase the red cor
puscles in the blood is the one that will
most quickly restore color to the pale
cheeks strength to the weak muscles
Mid elasticity to the sluggish nerves So
far nothing has ever been produced su
perior to Dr Williams Pink Pills for
this purpose
Miss Midendorf had been ill with
typhoid fever for fourteen weeks Sha
bad n good physician who carreid hoi
safely through tho critical stages When
he left nothing remained to be dono ex
cept to build up her strength which was
very feeble and ho gave her some pro
scriptions for that purpose Here how
ever sho mot with disappointment
I took tho doctors tonics sho says
for two months after I had recovered1
from tho fever but they did not do me
tho good I looked for My strength camo
back so slowly that I scarcely seemed to
bo making any progress at all Just
then 1 read in a book thrown in our
yard some striking testimonials showing
what wonderful blood builders aud
strength givers Dr Williams Pink Pills
are I got a box of them soon after
this and after I had taken only about
half of them I could seo a very great im
provement in my condition When I
had used up two boxes I felt that I did
not need any more medicine I havo
remained etroug ever since
Miss E B Midendorf lives at No
1501 Park street Quincy 111 Dr Wil
liams Pink Pills aro tho best remedy to
uso in all cases of weakness from what
ever cause the system may be run down
tn cases of debility due to overwork they
minister fresh strength and overcome
uervous symptoms Thoy are a specific
for iwiamiia or bloodlessuess They aro
particularly helpful to girls on the vergo
of womanhood They meet all tho re
quirements of tho period known as tho
change of life Thoy correct spring
languor They strengthen weak diges
tion and rouse up sluggish organs No
other tonic combines so many virtues
All druggists sell them
VAGARIES
Its hard to tell which is the most
exciting a country literary or a
game of indoor baseball
If there is one time more than an
other when we long to do bodily in
jury it is when we hear a little 12-year-old
snip speak of love
Its pretty hard for the rock ribbed
old Democrat who named his son after
Andy Jackson to see the young fel
low walk up and vote the Republican
ticket
Competition is the life of trade but
the lack of it hasnt caused the de
mise of Rockefellers oil trade De
troit Tribune
The Beef Report Refuted
You will remember with what a
gasp of astonishment the country re
ceived Commissioner Garfields report
on the Beef Trust say the publishers
of Everybodys Magazine in With
Everybodys Publishers for June
Could it be possible that the Beef
Trust was the victim of unjust perse
cutions Could it be possible that the
Beef Trust was the object of pity as
Garfield painted it Mr Russell in
this June installment takes up Mr
Garfields report and in a calm un
impassioned overwhelmingly convinc
ing fashion shows the utter absurdity
of the report gives the real facts and
backs them up with proof piled on
proof It is a rare ability that can
make a dry business subject interest
ing Mr Russell has the gift in mark
ed degree and he has never used it to
so good purpose as In this June in
stallment of his series
The Power of a Phrase
In the great stir that the revolt of
the mayor of Philadelphia against his
corrupt bosses has made in the press
of the country the pungent little
phrase coined by Lincoln Steffens to
describe in McClures the lethargy of
the Quaker Citys robbed and mis
governed citizens has been every
where applied Corrupt and content
ed has been the refrain of a hundred
editorials on the prologue to the
drama that Philadelphia is now enact
ing Phrasemaking is one of the most
forceful attributes of Lincoln Stef
fens literary style He has a power
of pithy and virile expression which
distils the essence of a situation into
a few square cut sledge hammer
words which make a permanent dent
in the readers consciousness
New and interesting side lights on
the Civil War are promised in the
June Century What a Boy Saw of
the Civil War by the Rev Leighton
Parks rector of St Bartholomews
New York City with glimpses of Rob
ert E Lee a curious and surprising
article on Boys in the Union Army
by George Langdon Kilmer A Pu
pils Recollections of Stonewall Jack
son and Recollections of Jubal
Early by one who followed him
These articles with several stories in
cluding Miss Sally and the Enemy
a war story by Gouverneur Morris
and In the Virginia Room by Arlo
Bates the scene laid in one of the
rooms of the Confederate Museum at
Richmond make up a number of
special interest in the Memorial Day
season
Tou never hear any one complain
about Defiance Starch There is none
to equal it in quality and quantity 16
ounces 10 cents Try it now and save
your money
NEBRASKASTATE NEWS j
NEBRASKA BRIEFS
Seward county banks have deposits
amounting to 131850993
Two of the ministers of Gering last
week last their wives by death
Nebraska City Baptists will cele
brate their semi centennial August 18
Outbuildings on the farm of Dow
Wells were destroyed by wind near
Madison
The postmasters of Nebraska will
hold their annual convention in Omaha
next year
Frontier countys assessment shows
an increase of more than 10 per cent
over last year
James A Dallas and Miss Venters
have been elected to positions in the
Kearney schools
Osceola has a few hundred dollars
in sight that will be used in cele
brating the Fourth
Jake Rife a young man of Johnson
county paid 10 and costs for selling
drugs without a pharmacists license
The skull of August Breckner of
Norfolk was fractured when he was
thrown from a wagon by a runaway
team
The citizens of York are making ela
borate preparations to dedicate the
new Young Mens Christian associa
tion building
About one hundred Fremont famil
ies will have to move as a result of
the coming of the Great Northern rail
road to Fremont
The Great Northern has been buy
ing right-of-way at Oakland giving
assurance that the road is to pass
through that place
The Wood River band once one of
the best of its kind in the state has
been reorganized and will play at
home on the Fourth
The Young Mens Christian associa
tion of Fremont has not given up the
new building project but is still hust
ling for subscriptions
A heavy hail storm spread over a
strip of country about two miles wide
south of Louisville and destroyed
corn corps and garden patches
Miss Blanche Castile of York 17
years old suicided by taking poison
The cause seems to have been that
she was behind in her school studies
A big religious revival is on in Au
rora all churches uniting in the effort
A tent seating 1200 has been erected
and large assemblies are gathering
nightly
Osceola people are looking forward
in pleasurable anticipation for the
Fourth of July The committee has
secured Colonel George W Robey of
Lincoln as speaker
The business men of Wymore have
raised a sufficient sum by subscrip
tion and will put the race track in
first class condition with the intention
of holding a racing meet in the fall
Mr Scott postmaster at South Au
burn is rejoicing over the fact that
the United States postal department
has increased the salary of that office
from 1300 to 1400 to take effect
July 1
While the graders were at work on
the new court house ground at Wahoo
they unearthed a number of Indian
relics where the former court house
stood it having once been the burial
ground for a part of the Pawnee tribe
August Ruckner a farmer living
three and a half miles southeast of
Hoskins in Wayne county was thrown
from his buggy and suffered a frac
tured skull while driving home The
team was fractious and ran away with
him
The two year old son of Ed Fair
banks of Grand Island got hold of a
bottle of iodine and had swallowed
some of it before the danger was dis
covered A prompt antidote by a phy
sician however saved the little fel
lows life
David Dunkle admitted to the Sol
diers home at Grand Island in No
vember 1904 died last week He
served in Company H Thirteenth
Iowa
Failure on the part of a husband to
indulge in a bath for a period of about
four months was adjudged sufficient
cause for divorce by Judge Cornish at
Lincoln
Report comes in from the strip over
which the hailstorm traveled in Col
fax county that some of the farmers
are plowing up wheat that was dam
aged and are planting corn in its
place Rye was likewise injured but
oats will probably come out again
At a meeting of the board of man
agers of the state board of agriculture
at the Lindell hotel contracts were
agreed to with the managers of a fa
mous trotting steer called San An
tonio Pete The steer is said to have
given several trotting exhibitions at a
number of fairs last year and to have
proved a splendid feature At the Ne
braska fair he will trot on at least two
days and perhaps others His record
is 230
Charles Green a well known farm
er living south of Litchfield was kill
ed by the explosion of the bowl of a
cream separator at his home His
body was terribly mangled though he
lived for hours after the occurrence
- The board of trustees of the Grand
Island college has re elected the old
faculty with the exception of Miss
Bloomer instructor In England and
Prof Boswell instructor in modern
languages Miss Hannah Pierson a
graduate of Hiawatha and now an in
structor in Dresden Germany has
been elected to the chair of modern
languages and dean of women
YEISER TAKES THE CASE
TO THE SUPREME COURT
OMAHA John O Yelser has filed
a petition in error in tho supreme
court asking a reversal of the decree
of Judge Troup in the 20000 tracts
of land made defendants in the 22000
scavanger suits for which no answer
was made and a decree of default was
entered
Yeiser volunteeered his services as
the legal representative of these
20000 tracts but the court objected
and at the request of the state in
whose name the scavanger suits were
brought ignored his answer In his
brief Yeiser quotes from legal lore
to show that he has a perfectly valid
representative of the defaulters even
though he appeared voluntarily
Moreover he says his action has been
ratified by the sanction of some 600
owners of the property affected by
the decision He argues also that
even though he had no right to ap
pear there was no actual default
THE GOVERNOR GREW WARM
Said Some Plain Vords to a Railroad
Man
LINCOLN The railroads are the
greatest barrier to the enforcement
of the new revenue law in the state
I am ashamed of you Why dont you
pay your taxes Thousands of indi
viduals had their taxes increased by
the new revenue law and they paid
their taxes If this thing keeps up
there will be a revolt as sure as you
live You railroad men are cutting
your own throats
This was among the things Gov
ernor Mickey remarked to Tax Com
missioner Pollard of the Burlington
at a meeting of the State Board dl
Assessment which was marked by
several such conversational engage
ments Mr Pollard came at the re
quest of the board to assist in finding
a way to distribute the valuation oi
the various corporations of the Bur
lington along the mileage in a manner
that would be fair and just to all the
towns along the lines The board
desired to get Mr Pollard to allow
it to take a line and value it from one
town to another at a certain rate and
then if the next division was of a
higher or a lower valuation to change
the assessment to correspond Mr
Pollard however would not waive his
right to go into court on this manner
of assessment Instead he refused
to say what he would do under the
circumstances should the assessment
not suit him
Fined for Illegal Voting
FAIRBURY After a two days ses
sion here the grand jury called for
the June term of district court foi
Jefferson county has adjourned hav
ing brought but one indictment That
was against Carl Lutz a locomotive
fireman who runs out of this city on
the Rock Island for illegal voting
at the last city election Lutz had
been a resident of the city long
enough to vote but it seems that h6
had forfeited his legal right to vote
by moving from one voting precinct
to another
Young Bunting a Lieutenant
DAVID CITY Archer M Bunting
son of W M Bunting of this city
who recently graduated from Went
worth Military academy Lexington
Mo has just been appointed by Gov
ernor Folk a second lieutenant of the
National Guard state of Missouri
York College Closes Fifteenth Year
YORK York college closed its fif
teenth year of educational work last
week The total enrollment for the
year was 394 The graduates in all
departments numbered thirty seven
six of whom also earned state cer
tificates
Pharmacists New Officers
YORK The Nebraska Pharmaceu
tical association elected officers as
follows President Nels P Hansen
Kearney Vice President Dr F
Simon Oakland Secretary O P
Bauman Grand Island Treasurer
Carl Speilman Sutton
Holdrege is talking up the matter
of holding a harvest jubilee some time
in the coming autumn
THE TRAIN WRECKED
AH ENGINEER KILLED
EUSTIS An extra freight train on
the Burlington ran into a washout
five miles west of here The train
was eastbound with two engines
The head engine passed over but the
second engine dropped into the ditch
The engineer and head brakeman
who were on the engine at the time
escaped without serious injury but
Clyde Sederburg the fireman was
killed
County Wants Compromise
A reminder of the hard times era
was brought to notice by the appli
cation of Hitchcock county to effect a
settlement of the suspended accounl
due from that ounty The total
amount was 4S0G67 representing
collections of state taxes lost in three
depository banks which failed These
institutions were the Bank of Trenton
the Hitchcock county bank of Cul
bertson and the Bank of Stratton
The county now has been able to ef
fect a settlement and wants to settle
with the state
WHY EYESIGHT PAILS I
INFERIOR ARTIFICIAL LIGHT FRE
QUENTLY THE CAUSE
Illumlnants of the Past One and All
Have Serious Defects Acetylene
Gas with Its Clear Unwavering Yet
Soft Flame Cannot Hurt the Eyes
Chicago June 20 No ere can
go into our schools or meet a
group of children on the street
without noticing how large a number
of them wear spectacles The
tion seems to increase yearly and
there are many more who ought to
wear glasses The experience of one
teacher might be duplicated by the
score She knew Alice was inatten
tive and she thought she was unusual
ly stupid She said so to the principal
and sent a note to the mother re
questing that the child be helped at
home if she wished her to keep up
with her class One day after a black
board explanation the teacher called
upon the child and found that she
had not seen what had been written
She was kept after school and by dint
of much sympathetic questioning Miss
C found that Alice had never been
able to see what was put on the board
and that her head had ached so often
and so hard that she frequently failed
to hear what was said
Such a condition may be caused by
lack of proper food but in our Ameri
can homes it is usually due to the
poor quality of the artificial light The
yellow insufficient light of the ordi
nary kerosene lamp with its smoky
chimney is about as bad for the eyes
as can be imagined The flickering
light from a coal gas jet is but little
better and even the electric light
brilliant as it usually is has an un
steadiness due to variations in power
and a glare peculiarly trying to the
delicate nerves of sight The compar
atively new illuminant acetylene gas
produces as nearly perfect an artificial
light as has yet been found It gives
a clear whits unwavering light very
brilliant yet perfectly soft and so
nearly like the rays of the sun that
even colors appear as in daylight
Fortunately acetylene is very easily
and cheaply produced and the simple
apparatus necessary can be purchased
and installed in any home at a very
moderate cost and the acetylene can
be piped to convenient points in the
house where a light is needed It is
then lighted and extinguished and used
exactly like common city gas
Acetylene is rapidly coming into
common use in homes churches
schools and institutions of all kinds
and it is reasonable to expect that as
its use in the home increases there
will be fewer defective eyes particu
larly among children Poor eyesight
and the many ills resulting therefrom
will undoubtedly be much reduced by
the use of this new illuminant
The average girl will allow hei
mother to pick out a husband for her
but when it comes to the wedding
gown she generally asserts herself
RAILWAY RATE LEGISLATION
At the biennial convention of the
Order of Railway Conductors recent
ly hold at Portland Oregon resolu
tions were unanimously adopted voic
ing their sentiments as to the effect
of proposed railway rate legislation
on the 1300000 railroad employes
whom they in part represented These
resolutions indorse the attitude ol
President Roosevelt in condemning
secret rebates and other illegalities
and commend the attitude of the
heads of American Railways who
with practical unanimity have joined
with the president on this question
They then respectfully point out to
Congress the inadvisability of legis
lation vesting in the hands of a com
mission power over railway rates
now lower by far in the United
States than in any other country
because such regulation would result
in litigation and confusion and in
evitably tend to an enforced reduc
tion in rates irrespective of the ques
tion of the ability of the railroads to
stand the reduction especially in view
of the increased cost of their supplies
and materials They further protest
ed against such power being given to
the present Inter State Commission
because the proposed legislation is
not in harmony with our idea of
American jurisprudence inasmuch as
it contemplates that a single body
shall have the right to investigate
indict try condemn and then enforce
its decisions at the cost of the car
riers pending appeal which is mani
festly inequitable
The conductors base their demand
for only such legislation if any as
would secure and insure justice and
equity and preserve equal rights to all
parties concerned on the ground that
the low cost of transportation is the
result of the efficiency of American
railway management and operation
which have built up the country
through constant Improvement and
development of territory while at the
same time recognition has been given
to the value of intelligence among em
ployes in contrast to foreign methods
where high freight rates and lowest
wages to employes obtain
In pressing their claim against leg
islation adverse to their interests
they point out the fact that the
freight rates of this country average
only two per cent of the cost of arti
cles to the consumer thus making the
freight rate so insignificant a factor
in the selling price that numerous
standard articles are sold at the same
price in all parts of the country
Society is a body It isnt well un
less its well all over A sore little toe
can make a whole man miserable
Defiance Starch is guaranteed blgges
and best or money refunded -ounces
10 cents Try it now
fjam
Dr F R Walters in his study on
the various sanatoria for consumptives
calls the open air life tho keynote of
sanatorium treatment He further
says that the patient instead of being
kept In a carefully warmed room ven
tilated from other parts of tho house
according to the popular notions of
old lives in the open air from morn
ing till night at all seasons and in all
weathers Lack of fresh air is the
greatest predisposing cause of con
sumption fresh air is the most po
tent means of restoring him to health
Now this prescription is very easy
to carry out in dry climates such as
those of Egypt the Alpine health re
sorts South Africa or Colorado but
it requires special arrangements and
special precautions in a damp and
rainy climate The credit of showing
how this may be accomplished belongs
mainly to Brehmenr Dettweiler and
their followers The open air method
may perfectly well be carried out in
any climate which is healthy for those
who are not consumptive As Leon
Petit observes Here the climate
may help the cure there it
may hinder it butit only exerts a
secondary influence on tho treatment
1 Moreover just as the pleasantest
climates are not always those which
are best for healthy people 2 so it
may bo that the most pleasant clim
ates for an out-of-door life where the
air is warm and dry and little rain
falls are not best for those consump
tives who have later on to return to
a less favored place It is bracing
climates rather than warm and equ
able ones which have the greatest in
fluence in restoring the consumptive
to health in all but exceptional cases
For the open air treatment a four
fold shelter should be provided against
wind excessive cold extreme sun heat
and rain Wind raises dust increases
cough in consumptives and intensifies
the chilling effects of cold The for
eign sanatoria with few exceptions
have both natural and artificial shelter
against wind Cold within certain lim
its is useful to the consumptive but
it should be a windless cold and suit
ed to the individual power of reac
tion As damp intensifies the cli
matic effect of both heat and cold the
chilly consumptive will be able to
withstand a lower temperature in a
dry than in a humid climate Protec
tion against rain and snow will seem
to most people an obvious necessity
although at Nordach rain is often dis
regarded It is not enough to provide
resting places in the sanatorium
which are protected against rain At
certain stages exercise is imperative
and sheltered paths and open covered
corridors are needed for exercise in
rainy weather At Falkenstein there
is such a corridor 200 feet long
In places where the suns rays are
very powerful as at Canigou in the
Pyrenees direct exposure to the sun
is found to increase the tendency to
fever Even at Hohenhonnef on the
Rhine which is not far south a large
verandah has been provided which in
hot weather can be artificially cooled
by a stream of water Protectior
against wind and weather is afforded
in most santoria by large verandas
which may be fitted with movable
glass screens as the Adirondack Cot
tage Sanatorium In our own climate
it would be useful to have a veranda
with a hollow floor which could be
warmed as cold and damp can be
more easily borne if the feet are
kept warm Other simpler ways are
the provision of hot bottles and warm
clothing Recumbency also helps a
chilly patient the blood circulating
with less cardiac effort in this posi
tion According to Dr Weicker and
Dr Jacoby the recumbent position
also favors the flow of blood to the
apices of the lungs In most foreign
sanatoria summer houses or sun
boxes are also provided at Falken
stein some of these can be rotated ac
cording to the direction of the wind
Dr Burton Fanning in his experi
mental sanatorium near Cromer has
modified the well known shelters of
our seaside resorts by providing them
with reversible glass screens
1 Loc cit p 49
2 Hermann Weber and Michael G
Foster article in Allbutfs Syst of Med
on Climate in the Treatment of Dis
ease
Stable and Conditions
The condition and health of a
horse says the National Builder de
pend very much upon the kind of
stable it is kept in There are horses
which suffer from disease of the eyes
from coughs from scratches and
other skin diseases all of which are
produced by the pungent foul air in
the stables Farmers and others who
have horses will take pains to keep
their carriages and harnesses protect
ed from the strong ammonical air of
the stables lest the leather may be
rotted or the varnish dulled and spot
ted and at the same time they will
wonder why their horses cough or
have weak eyes or moon blindness or
suffer from other diseases which if
they would only think for a few min
utes they would readily perceive are
due to the foul air the animals are
compelled to breathe every night in
the year while confined in close badly
ventilated stables The remedy is
very easy The stable should be kept
clean this will prevent the greater
part of the mischief and it should be
well ventilated The floor should be
properly drained so that the liquid
will not remain on it washed off at
least twice a week with plenty of wa
ter and then liberally sprinkled with
finely ground gypsum plaster which
will combine with and destroy the am-
tfUNWULKHtixIMJ
FRESH AIR TREATMENT
Most Potent Means of Restoring Consumptive
Patients to Health
monia A solution of copperas sul
phate of iron will havo the same re
sult Lastly the floor should be sup
plied with absorbent litter which
should be removed when it Is soiled
Ventilation should be provided in
such a way as to avoid cold drafts
Small openings which may bo easily
closed with a slide may be made In
the outer wall near tho floor and
similar ones near the celling or in
tho roof through which the foul air
can escape Pure air is of the utmost
importance to the well being of
horses
Insomnia
This very common condition Is
most often due to six oclock dinners
or eating in the evening To secure
sound sleep no food should bo taken
after 4 p m or at least nothing more
than a little ripe stewed fruit without
cream and with as little sugar as pos
sible better with none Oranges or
some other juicy fruit are preferable
for an evenings lunch Avoid bread
and butter or milk and similar arti
cles which digest slowly Fruit juices
and completely predigested food sub
stances may be added in moderation
Tea and coffee also produce sleep
lessness Sedentary habits conduce
to sleeplessness by promoting the ac
cumulation of uric acid which is a
nerve excitant and gives rise to rest
lessness and disturbing dreams
Said the wiso man The sleep of
the laboring man is sweet Eccl 512
Gentle fatigue produced by exercise
out of doors is wonderfully effective
as a means of producing sleep A
prolonged bath fifteen to forty min
utes or even longer if necessary at
a temperature of 92 degrees to 95 de
grees F taken just before retiring Is
an excellent remedy for sleepless
ness Tho moist abdominal bandage
consisting of a towel wrung quite dry
out of cold water and wound around
the body covered snugly with mack
intosh and then with flannel in suf
ficient quantity to keep it warm is an
exceedingly helpful measure in pro
ducing sleep in cases in which sleep
lessness is due to excess of blood in
the brain Care must be taken to
keep the feet warm If necessary a
hot bag may be applied to the feet or
a moist pack to each leg If the head
is hot a cool compress may be ap
plied
Still Saws Wood at 91
The Rev Jacob Chapman of Exeter
N IT is the only nonagenarian and
one of the few clergymen in New
Hampshire who saw all the wood used
in their stoves for cooking and heat
ing purposes The amount of wood
rsed by a family during the long New
Hampshire winters is something enor
mous yet Mr Chapman goes out into
the woodohed every day and saws al
most enough to keep the parlor and
bedroom stoves well supplied as well
as to furnish what is needed for the
kitchen
Mr Chapman celebrated the 91st
anniversary of his birth this week
Though never robust Mr Chapmans
physical powers are remarkably well
preserved A day seldom passes irx
which he fails to cut a little wood
an exercise which he considers very
beneficial In gcod weather he takes
long walks His mind is alert and
his memory very retentive
He was born in Tamworth and in
1827 entered Phillips Exeter academy
of which he is the oldest living gradu
ate He was graduated from Dart
mouth college in 1S35 and from And
cver Theological seminary in 1839
For many years he was a teacher
Since his retirement Mr Chapman
has lived here devoting himself to
genealogical research He has writ
ten a number of family histories and
contributed to secular genealogical
and religious publications Exchange
Why the Body Needs Water
Someone has asked What would be
the cause of death of a person who
drank no water This subject has
been studied considerably animals
have been experimented upon and
it is found that without water they
lose their power to eliminate the naC
ural poisons they must have water in
order to eliminate them otherwise
the secretions become too dense
Without water the amount of urea
which should be secreted becomes di
minished and so with the other se
cretions We need water not only to
dissolve the food and carry it along
but we need it to dissolve and carry
out of the system the poisonous and
worn out material of the body after it
has served its purpose Water forms
a circulating medium for carrying sub
stances back and forth in the sys
tem conveying nourishment to the
various parts of the body bringing
back the used up material and carry
ing it out by way of excretory ducts
The amount of water daily required
is from two to three pints In very
hot weather a larger amount is need
ed as much water is lost by persplra
tion If ones diet rnnsistc -
the juices of fruits the quantity of
water may be considerably diminished
Is Water a Food
Hutchinson an English authority
who has published the latest and best
work on foods includes water among
food substances Water enters tho
body not only as a solvent but as des
tined to become a constituent elenient
of the tissues themselves Water adds
to the energy of the body by increas
ing the power of the heart and In
other ways contributing to the activity
of the tissues
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