Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Norfolk weekly news-journal. (Norfolk, Neb.) 1900-19?? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1902)
THE NORFOLK NEWS : FRIDAY , AUGUST 8,1002 , The boat oleomargarine , uncolored , looks just llko lard , and that beats It Nature la full ofvlso provisions. iWlves do their worst cooking when they are young and good looking. Wo have found It this year moro bother and work to take proper care tot one aero of onions than twenty acres of corn. I When the time comes thnt the Amer ican people will take as much Interest In good roads , as they do In a prize- light wo will have butter wheeling. ' The successful dairyman will never figure on how cheaply he can keep his cows , but ruther on how much nutri tious , milk producing food he can get them to cat " i | The dairymaid of the twentieth cen tury Is a husky young fellow lu over alls and rubber boots manipulating the complicated machinery of the mod ern creamery. No poetry about him. 1 The isolation and quiet of farm llfo are not always conducive to godliness , for some pretty mean schemes are oc casionally hatched up by the son of toil as he works his fields and com munes with nature. f Boarding house keepers and hotel .men will still use olco , buying the col oring matter and working the stuff over to suit the taste of their boarders. For ordinary family consumption this plan will not work. ! In March , 1897 , the farmers of the 'corn belt were wrestling with the prob- tern of ten cent corn. It Is hardly likely 'they will ever have to do this again. 'Foreign nations have at last found out Bvhat our corn is good for The agricultural experiment stations bf the country are doing a good work , ln two lines In analyzing different , brands of commercial fertilizers and in conducting stock food experiments. 'A ' lot of frauds have thus been ex posed. ! In the days of Sophocles the Greeks , not having ofllces of record , used to record the existence of a real estate mortgage by setting a stone in the cor ner of the mortgaged field with the amount loaned and the name of the lender thereon. I In some states competitive sparrow hunts are held to flll up the church treasuries where there is a bounty of fered for the birds. One church got recently 1,700 birds , for which It got § 17 , Just about the price the birds sold for In the olden time when two sparrows - -rows sold for a farthing. i A farm of seventy-three acres la jWales paid a tithe or church tax of $100 In the year 1831. Then wheat eold for $2.20 per bushel , barley $1.20 .and oats 80 cents. In 1001 the tithe had been increased to ? 112.50 , with iwheat at 00 cents , barley 75 cents and oats 55 cents. This will explain why the English farmer Is not Inclined to bo pious. ' Twelve years ago p. friend of ours 'gave ' $300 for a well bred Shorthorn cow. This cow has raised him ten -calves seven males , which ho has sold for over $100 each , and three heifers , [ which ho kept in bis herd. He now has fifteen full blooded descendants of this cow In his herd , all doing as good work as their ancestor. This Is etock sense. j Many a woman can do a good thing for her family by substituting corn bread , corn cakes , mush and Injun pudding for the white flour bread and cakes which form almost the entire cereal menu of the meals she pre pares. Sklmmilk and cornmeal when properly prepared , as they may bo In many ways , make an almost perfectly balanced ration. I In order to secure a coloring matter for their product the oleomargarine men are trying different experiments , hoping to find some plan whereby they can color the stuff and not violate the law. Here's ono for them : They might ' have the steers whose tallow they use fed on carrots. It works with the cow and might with the steer , though he docs his dairy business on a little different plan from the cow. ' It is of more importance to see to it that the hogs are fed a properly balanced ration than any other thing If the herd is to be kept healthy. If grass , clover , rye and barley meal , oats , peas and bran form the staple 'food ' of young and growing hogs nnd they are allowed to mature before finishing them off with corn and only fully matured hogs are used as sires and dams , the cholera will have b n largely prevented , _ _ Th best bny is cut In the morning and put lu the burn In the afternoon. The busy harvest Benson Is hero , with all its reward for Intelligent toll. It Is just as well that wo do not know what sort of weather wo are to have next week nnd next year. Of the 50,000 tramps In the country about 8,000 got killed each your , large ly by the cars and fights among thorn- Bolvon. The Jersey cow should bo tested aa any other cow. The Jersey cow often looks mighty pretty , but la not worth a cent In the dairy. Ono of the worst things about some hired men Is that they corrupt and de grade the boys on the fnnn homo. That sort are dear at any price. When a man finds ho has to make land worth $100 per acre pay its way , ho should have no bull at the head of his herd worth less than an aero of land. A superannuated minister manages to live comfortably on three acres ot land , nts half acre of celery market ed in New York brings him in from $700 to $800 each year. The sugar beet will find its most congenial home on the Irrigated lands of the west Irrigation almost com pels Intensive culture , and this Is just what the nugnr beet needs. The common skunk or polecat is ono of the pests of a well settled agricul tural country. Skunks are real pests In almost every way , and there should bo n moro organized effort to exterminate them. The placing of n Jersey bull at the head of a herd of native cows so Im proved the grade of fifteen hulfers , the product of this herd , thnt they inndo 100 pounds more butter per head than did their mothers. It Is not true that farmers' wives are moro than any other class of wo men liable to go Insane. When wo consider the sort of men some of them have for husbands , wo wonder why moro of them do not go crazy. There Is no profit In crowding hens Into \vlnter laying of twenty cent eggs when her unforced spring and summer product will bring from 13 to 15 cents. Cold storage has largely robbed win ter egg production of Its old time profit. If you gave your boy a pig or a calf and later sold It and pocketed the pro- ceuua , uuu E join me cuurcu until you have squared up things with the boy. It will bo n hard matter to keep him from playing with the cat's tall while you offer the family prayers If you do. A lady who was in the bee business In a small way , keeping twelve swarms , did well with them until a distillery was started in her neighbor hood. After that the bees would go off and get drunk and would not work , just like some animals man , for In stance. Your cows will give more milk if during the heated and fly period of midsummer they are kept in the cool and darkened basement barn from 0 a. in. to 4 p. in. and arc allowed to have the run of the pasture all night There should be a sweet corn patch to draw , on for a midday ration. Plants find the best condition of soil for their growth nnd development when the soil holds about 30 per cent of the moisture of which it is capable of carrying. Less than this keeps the plant from making a normal and healthy growth , while an excess tends to exclude the air , which is almost aa vital as water. The way to keep one of the boya on the farm is to interest him In the farm work while he is young. This means that ho should not be overworked , should bo given a chance to have a boy's recreation , bo given some animal or crop his very own and be encour aged in studying about the scientific as well as the practical Bide of farm life. The straw stack and cornstalk dairy cow is fast becoming a thing of the past A better knowledge of the laws governing milk production has turned the straw stack and the stalkflcld over to the colts and the young stock , while old bossy finds a good ration awaiting her lu a warm barn , much to her comfort and the profit of her owner. The outlook for the farmers of the country has never been moro promis ing. Good prospects for crops are re ported from nearly all sections , the foreign demand Is likely to be large and prices are certain to be good. As a re sult of this condition we look 'for a still further Increased demand for farm lands and a still greater rush for the unsettled portions of the northwest Even the dry sections of the north west will harvest a fine crop this year , and that will prove a great stimulus to Investment Twenty years ago the butter product of the agricultural community where the writer lives was made in all sorts of ways , was of all sorfa of color , smells and strength. It was the terror cf the local merchant , who was almost forced to take it of his patrons. It was placed In the cellar In old barrels and sometimes shipped to Chicago to bo sold for a song for axle grease and sometimes taken by night and dumped In the river to be rid of it The cream ery has changed all this , and that kind of butter la wholly unknown now , Improved methods of trniiflportntion lire great equalizers of laud valuim. While the modern railway line ban made the good American farm worth $100 per acre , the cheaply produced and transported productH of mich fnnn have deteriorated the value of farm lands In England. Low priced beef , , K > rk , buttur and cereal grains have mused such a reduction in rent rolls 11 lOngland that in many cases my lord has actually had to got right down to work and business in order to live , while the bishop and the rector of the Entabllnhed church , long well fed on lusty tithes attached to their livings while they gave their pnrlohloneni boughton sermons coating half a crown each , are on short rations. Fertility of Boll and not location will In the near future bo the only factor In fixing the value of farm land. 1'ITY THIS tVOWAW. While n lot of rot flndn Its way Into the papers about the hard condltlona of the fnrmcr'u wife the coasolooa toll , Lick of conveniences , Isolation and deprivation of social ploasurcH no body over peeps about the troubled of the wife of the day laborer In our cities the woman w'ho cares for a big family witli the smallest resources and who , living within touch of all the so cial gnycty of a city , is as far removed from It as though she lived in a for est or on n desert ; who hna to buy all the necessaries of life , oven to milk and eggs ; who hears the church belln ring out each Sabbath an Invitation she Is too poorly dressed to nccopt ; who too often has to make the rounds of the saloons to find a wayward hus band or son this Is the woman who deserves your Hympnthy , not the farm er's wife. THE COW AND rilOSl'ICIUTY. It Is very interesting to watch the evolution of an agricultural communi ty from the grain raising nnd grain selling period Into one of dairying and meat production. It docs not seem to matter much what sort of a communi ty It Is , whether native born or foreign , whether the soils of the farms are good or poor , it always comes that lit tle by little that community com mences to get out of debt , builds new houses and barns and In a few years bears all the evidences of prosperity. Wo have seen this evolution take place In Wisconsin , Iowa , Minnesota , the Dakotas , Kansas and Nebraska , nnd It seems strange that so sure a remedy for unprofitable farm conditions Is often so long neglected. HOLD OX TO TUG OLD HOUR. A man owning an excellent farm In the state of South Dakota got the Pa cific coast fever and sola" his farm last winter for $42 per acre. At quite a heavy expense ho moved his family and belongings out to the coast and after spending three mouths there hunting for a location came back to his old community and tried to buy back his old farm , the owner of which wanted $12 per acre more for It than be paid. If you ever get an attack of this fever , rent the old place , but don't sell it ; then start on a hunt for a bet ter place to live. Not finding It , you will have a place to come back to. A D13FINITU POLICY PAYS. It Is the following up of a definite policy on the farm which pays best iu the long run. This Includes the se lection of and the sticking to the breeding of some one variety of cattle , hogs , horses , sheep and poultry and the adoption of some system of crop rotation. The constant shifting of breeds , the crossing nnd rccrosslng , the hit and miss assignment of crops , are the heaviest taxes there are on agriculture In this country today. Ono cannot raise all kinds of stock nor grow all sorts of crops , and the very common attempt to do BO results In disappointment , failure and loss. DEEP EATING ENGLISHMEN. An Englishman Is naturally a car nivorous animal. Ho is one of the best judges of meats to be found. Ho eats lots of meat and wants it rare done sort of bloody so that it will taste good to him. This undoubtedly has a good deal to do with making him such a good scrapper and flghter. Ho wants his beef cooked in largo joints and likes It better cold than hot He takes our best beef and pays the highest price for it As he Is cer tain to keep on scrapping , fighting and eating beef , ho becomes one of Amer ica's best customers. TUB FARMER AND LEGISLATION. The real political power of the farm ers of this country was never better illustrated than in the passage of the oleomargarine law. Every congress man and senator who had a cow keep ing constituency heard from home , and most of them believed that their place in congress really depended upon giv ing their support to this measure. It proves that when the agricultural In terests of the country really want any legislation In their Interests all they have to do Is to go for it , Just as they did on this oleo business. A PROIILEM IN IIOAOMAIUNG. The agricultural department sent out missionaries last year to preach the gospel of Improved highway making. They took the rock crusher and other appliances with them nnd would stop hero and there nnd make a few rods of road. This may be all well enough in seine places , but what the great west wants to know is how to take a black gumbo soil and convert It into good roadbed when there is neither gravel nor rock within fifteen miles. Catholics Pay No Attention to Warning of Archbishop. TAKES ISSUE WITH IRELAND. Bishop McFaul Criticises Stand Taken by the Admnlstratlon In the Phil ippines Congress of Federated 8o < clotlce Moots In Chicago , Chicago , Aug. 6. The American Federation of Catholic soutotloa mot yoatorday at the Young Men's Carlo- tlan association hall. In the after * noon , after the addresses of welcome , the convention went Into executive essiou and organised. Short ad dresses were made by Bishops Menu- mor of Green Day , Win. ; MoFuul ot Trenton , N. J. , and by the prualdeut of the federation. It waa evident from the tenor of the romarko made lu the afternoon tlwut the convention would not hoed the manifesto of Archbishop , Ireland , warning them against a discussion of the administration's methods lu the Philippines. At the evening sesnlon Bishop Me Paul was the principal speaker and directed MB aUontlou to tha tieatment of the friar * and the nchool question in the Philippine * . The bishop said , In part : "The calm , Intelligent observer must admit that some of the HUito- mouts made In the public peons re. gardlng the situation lu the Philip plnoa were either Incorrect or oxng crated. There wan , nevertheless , a very substantial foundation of truth In most of the reports Which amply justified the strictures made on those accountable for the abuse of power. When the news arrived that the CaMiolIc churches in the Philippines were desecrated and looted , ofllcors ol high rank In the army attempted to refute the charges , yet the desecra tion and looting ot these sacred edi fices are now BO certain that claims for damages to ecclesiastical property - ty will bo accepted by the government Since then wo have all hoard of the 'water cure' and the murderous orders Issued by an American general. " The speaker then declared that the federation Is deeply Interested in oh talnlng Just treatment for the friars In the Philippines , who had suffered he declared , under so many cruel cal umnles. Ho charged thnt In selecting school teachers for the Philippines discrimination had been practiced against the Catholics , because of a total of 9G7 teachers who , ho said , had been sent to the Islands , but eighteen or nineteen were Catholics. KING TO RETURN TO LONDON Trip to Be Marked by Great Demon stratlon En Route to Palace. London , Aug. 6. The emphatic de nlals of the sinister rumors of King Edward's condition are continued by all persons who have recently vlsltec his majesty. The king will land at Poitsmouth and entrain for London a 3:30 : this afternoon and his train Is due to arrive In London at 5:30. : His drive to Buckingham palace will be by an extended route Instead of the direct way , in order that the public may have an opportunity to see am congratulate the sovereign. On ac count of the approaching coronation most of the troops are undergoing their annual training at Salisbury It Is decided that they arc to leave their camps Aug. 8 , Instead of Aug 9 The rehearsal ot the coronation ceremony In Westminster abbey yes terday was the most largely attendee nnd elaborate ono which has yet boon held. The king and the queen and other prominent personages who were not present were represented at the proceedings by substitutes. AMBASSADOR WHITE RESIGNS Tower May Be Transferred From St Petersburg to Berlin. Berlin , Aug. G. United States Am bassador Andrew D. White has re signed. The date set by the ambassa dor for his resignation to go into cf feet was Nov. 7. He is now at Horn burg , where Is taking the waters and where he will probably remain till th nd of the month. There Is much goa sip at Berlin concerning Mr. White' probable successor , and ono clrcum stantlal story Is that the president In tends to transfer Ambassador Towo from St. Petersburg to Berlin , Minis ter Storcr from Spain to be ambassa dor to Russia and to appoint Henr White , now secretary of embassy a London , as minister to Spain. Mr Tower , who has been dissatisfied wit Bt. Petersburg , expressed months ag a wish to be transferred to some cqua ly desirable point , preferably Berlin German Mission Board Meets. Keokuk , Ia. , Aug. 6. The goners home missionary board ot Nort America of the Gorman Evangelica church began its semi-annual session yesterday. There were present : Rev J. BalUer , St. Louis , chairman ; Rev F. Roller , Evanavllle , secretary ; Rev W. Hackman , St. Joseph , Rev. Jaco Nuesch , Keokuk , and Rev. J. Plster Cincinnati , president of the synod o North America. Reports were re ceived from the mission at Salt Lak city , established three months ago and from San Francisco , Now Yor city , and other missions la the Unite States and Canada , , all of which ar aided by this board. Apostolic Delegate at Manila. Rome , Aug. 6. Italia announce that Mgr. Guard ! , at present in th office ot Cardinal Rampolla , tha papa secretary f state , baa been appointed postolio delegate at Manila. "TESTING CAPTIVE DALLOONO. To Uo Used In Naval Demonstration by Rear Admiral Hlgolnson , Utlrn , N. Y. , Aug. (1 ( Major Huhor and a detachment of the signal flervk'O mlloou corps are now stationed at Ftankfort In the Interest ot the gov ernment In ttuporvlriliiK the construe- Ion of eleven captlvo hydrogen giui mllooiin bolng made for uno In tha naval dumonntratton to bo made b > Rear Admiral HlxKlnson with the squadron off the Atlantic coast late In Allgtint. Tim 11 rot balloon line boon practical- y completed and a nunconsftil test ban jcen nude by the government offi cials. Controlled by a koroaono oil motor wtndhun , the balloon In vtald to have made fllchtn of ixiarly a qunrtet of a mile In thirty to forty sucondu and then was alowud , chocked and re versed nnd was brought to the ground n three or four minuted , with two to four pansonnorn oaoh tlmo , nonu ot whom could linuiedlntoly delect thu atop or reversed movement tt the top , Although the wind was brink and at times quite severe. PRESIDENT DEARDQHEAR DEAD , Noted Iowa Educator Passes Away at Result of Nervous Prostration. Den Molnoa , Aug. G. Dr. William M. Boarduhoor , president ot Iowa state college at A mini , died yonterday as the result of nurvoim prostration whllo attending the meeting ot tha National Educational association at Minneapolis i month ago. Dr. Beard ehcar wau president of the association , Dr. Dunrduhunr was ono of the fore- moat educators In Iowa. Prior to an Burning thu presidency of the Btato agricultural college ton yearn ago ha wan superintendent of schools foi WoBl Du.s Molnes. Before that 1m had been president ot Western college lego at Tama , Ia. When ho became head of the state college It was lone than hulf Its present size , Its growth bolng duo In largo part to bin efforts GREAT SALT LAKE IS DRYING UP , Fall of Water During Last Eight Years Amounts to Eight Feet. Salt Lake , Aug. G. Great Salt Iiiko which for several years hay boon nlow ly , but steadily receding , has , accord Ing to Director Murdoch of the Unltoc Suites woathur bureau , now roachoi the lowest level recorded since , ol ) Bcrvatlonu have been taken by the do partmunt. Up to Aug. 1 the lowest mark ever recorded was on July 11 Since that time the lake linn rccedci four Inches. The fall of ) the wato nlnco 1894 amounts to nearly nix foot , and on the low , flat eastern shon this has resulted In a recession of th * water line during that tlmo of fullj three-quarters of a mile. MHIWWIWIIM III WUIIlJbl Port ot Spain , Tilnldml , Aug. C. NOWB has reached hero from Voni cuola that Barcelona , In the state ol Bermudoz , is at present being BUT rounded by revolutionists , estimated to number 800 man , under the com maud ot General Platoro. They de mand the surrender of Barcelona. The government soldiers In the town number only 200 men and It Is not ho lloved that they will offer resistance. Police Break Up a School. Paris , Aug. C. The expulsions ol the sisters from their schools were continued In the provinces yesterday and in most cases wore conducted without trouble , but a few Instances of disorder have been recorded , most ly from Brittany and Savolc. At Regny , Loire , near Mncon , the gen > darmes were compelled to break down a school door with axes. German Veterans Elect Officers. Hamilton , O. , Aug. C. At their ses nion last night the German Army an Navy Veterans decided to hold th next meeting at Terre Haute , Ind. , I September of next year. The electlo of officers resulted as follows : Pros dent , William Embs , Pittsburg ; vie presldtnt , Julius Frans , Dallas ; secre tary , Mylius Langohahn , Cleveland treasurer , Martin Gags , Cincinnati. President Sails for Gardiner's Bay Groenpoint , N. Y. , Aug. 6. Th president and Mrs. Roosevelt arrive here from Oyster Bay yesterday afte noon and went aboard the naval yach Sylph , which sailed immediately fo Gardiner's bay , where the target prac tlco of the Mayflower , the president official naval vessel , is to take pine today. Mr. Roosevelt will present th uccessful gun crew $25 In gold. Many Strikers Slain. London , Aug. G. A dispatch to th Dally Telegraph from Vienna says th trikOB in Gallcla have led to sevora encounters between the troops ant Etrlkcrs in the last three days. O ono occasion three persons wcr killed and 118 injured ; in anothc case 200 persons were killed o wounded. Kills Son In Self-Defense. Tola , Kan. , Aug. 6. T. F. Klrby she and killed his sou , J. L. Klrby , in thl city last night as a result of a quarre The father says that ho shot In Belt- defense , 03 his son attacked him with a razor. TELEGRAMS TERSELY TOLD , The strike of Gallclan peasants Is at present spreading to districts which have hitherto not hoen , affected and there have been many conflicts be tween the peasants and the military. William Coyno , a pioneer mining man , died at Helena , Mont , Tuesday. Ho was ono of the flrst printers on the Denver Rocky Mountain News , when that paper was founded by William M. Byors. Train employes of the Northwest ern road are to receive Instruction in the science of medicine and the art of eureery , so that they shall be able to et a broken leg and bind up the pounds of the injured , _ , . Jnscttlccl Conditions at Shcti-r nndoah , However , Continue. WOUNDED RIOTERS ARRESTED ; Three Strlkoro Held to Answer Before the Court Officers Foci Tension U on Increase and Troops May De Sent to Other Points. Blion.iudouh , Pa. , Aug. 0. Tua peace of thin troop-protected town ro- uialtiH unbroken. The unnottlud fcot ug which has boon apparent for tha oat few dnjru , however , continue * * It wuu u llvoly day at brigade head quarters , where all the aUtff offlconK were kept busy in connection with tha uiovumoutn of the troops and la keen ug In touch with the situation la tha entire county. There were many ru- uora of trouble , but excepting at Jlranlvlllo , where a workman TTM hot and slightly Injured , nothing of a orluuu nut tire occurred anywhere. Drlgadlor General Gohlu was unusual ly alert , however , nnd kept the aol- dlom hi roadlnonsH for Instant use * Many utorloa of threatened trouble reached him , but he wuu able in every uatnncu to run them down without Bending out a detail of man. OfUcom uound headquarters fuel that the ton- lion Id Inci casing nnd would not ha Burprlncd If some of the troops now lu camp heru vruru scut Into the UUP rounding region. Piolmhly the most Important dovcl opmont In the Shunandouh region yea- lorday was the arrest and commit' inont to the county jail of two wound ed Lithuanians , who participated In the riot lust week. The arrest waa attended with a considerable show ol military fotco , they doing taken Into custody by constables who were HUP rounded by a platoon of Infantrymen and being taken through the streets under strong guard. The prisoners are Antony KlltnnvlU and Stanislaus /iiUonioskl. ISasli had been shot lu the fool during the riot and was tin , nhlo to walk. They wore located In boarding houses In the heart of tha forolgn quarter of the town. Tha Lithuanians , along with a follow coun tryman niunod Waldo RowliiHkl , who WUH arrested late Saturday night , on the charge of lining a participant ID the riot , were then arraigned. The principal witness wai Thomas R. Hod dall , a deputy sheriff , who was In tha riot. IIo Identified the men and testi fied to having deliberately shot KIo > movltz and Kukomoakl. The threa men were then held In $3,000 ball each , nnd In default they were taken to the Jail at Pottsvlllo. MACHINISTS OUT AGAIN. Strike at Allls-Chalmero Shop In Chicago cage Is Renewed. Chicago , Aug. 6. The machinist ! of Allls-Chalmors' company , who were on strike for the greater part of a year and returned to work Juno 13 , ara out again. The trouble originated through the determination of tha union men to force all the nonunion men from the shop. There are six. teen of these , all high grade machin ists. At noon yesterday the union men , 200 In number , seized eight ot the nonunion men and compelled them to run the gauntlet between two lines of men armed with shingles. The eight men were badly bruised and Biicli a disturbance was raised that the police were called. The officials of the company promptly discharged five of the ringleaders In the assault upon the nonunion men and the others left their places at once. The com pany declares that it will not rein Btato the men , and the strikers say that they will call out all of the ma. chlnlsts in the city unless this ia done. Street Railway Strike Declared Off. Huntlngton , W. Va. , Aug. 6. The Camden Interstate street railway strike , which has been on since Sun day last , was declared off yesterday and all the care on the Ohio , Kentucky and West Virginia divisions are being operated on schedule time by union crews. At o > conference between Pres ident Graham of the Camden company and members of the national execu tive board of railway employes , the strike was satisfactorily adjusted , the company agreeing to recognize the union and restore all raqn discharged without cause to their former places. Henderson In New York. New York , Aug. 6. Congressman D. D. Henderson of Iowa , speaker of the house of representatives , who has arrived in this city , was Joined by his wlfo and daughter yesterday. They have been in Ogdensburg. The daugh ter has Just returned from a two years' sojourn iu Europe , and is not ia good health. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of tha digest-ants and digests all kinds ot food. It gives Instant relief and never falls to cure. It allows you to eat all the food you want , The most sensltlva stomachs can take it. By its use many thousands of dyspeptics have been , cured after everything else failed. la unequalled for the stomach. Child ren vrlth weak stomachs thrive on it. Cures all stomach troubles