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About The Norfolk weekly news-journal. (Norfolk, Neb.) 1900-19?? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1902)
THE NORFOLK NKWS : KUI1UY , AUCIUST 2 , 1002 , f > " = fit The new crop of hops Is being con tracted for on the Pacific coust nt 20 cents per pound. This is n fancy price. July rains and July heat BO stimu lated the growth of weeds this season that it lias boon the fight of a man's life to keep them down. There is a small compensation fpr the men who have this year lost their crops on the river bottom lands the overflow has done something to enrich the soil. \Ve notice that when n boy has earn ed and saved up $25 he Is more likely towant to put his future earnings with the nest egg than he is to blow his money In for pop and cigars. The great dam across the Nile river nt Assouan will be completed in an other year and water bo thus made available to convert a vast area of new desert land into the most fruitful of fields. Farm rents are moving up , adjust ing themselves to the Increased value of farm lands. From § 3 to $4 per acre Is now being asked for land rent where $2 and $2.50 have heretofore been the usual prices. The reports on the culture of the macaroni wheat Imported for use on the semlarld parts of the west are very encouraging. A new and val uable cereal has thus been provided for a large section of the country. A Minnesota sow of no particular breed has In three years brought her owner fifty-eight pigs , which he In turn has fattened and sold for $382.05. This very forcibly suggests the wis dom of Minnesota growing less wheat and raising more hogs. Every year new varieties of straw berries are brought out and boomed for the purpose of selling at high prices to the growers of this berry. The old sorts are just as good as they ever were and In most cases better than any of these new kinds. "When a farmer Indulges In a one hundred and fifty dollar surrey for his family to ride in , he should Invest $25 more in a set of buggy harness for his team. Such a carriage drawn by a pair of heavy work horses in n plow harness makes a ludicrous combination. We believe It to be good advice to suggest going very slow on feeding much new corn to the young pigs. We know that they will grow and do well on it , but whether it induces It or not there seems to be some undefined con nection between the new corn and the cholera. Meat values are almost certain to maintain a higher level of prices for the coming four years than for the past decade. This will surely have an effect upon the price of eggs and poul try and make the keeping of hens a more profitable business than it has been for many years. Most men know that corn , less than any other of our cereal crops , depletes the fertility of the soil on which it is grown , yet not all know why this Is Corn to a greater extent than any oth er cereal Is carbonaceous or fat produc ing , and as this carbon element is al derived from the sun and air the crop therefore draws lightly on the soil. The country schoolma'am is at best transitory. It usually only takes from three to eighteen months for her to capture some nice young fellow , and then good by to school teaching. It Is better so , even though the school may Buffer us a result. While matrlmonj brings about many mlsilts and lots of trouble , It Is still best for most cvcrj one to run the risk. There is a difference of 100 per cent In the weight of a dozen eggs. This we know , for we made the test In n store wficro eggs were bought and sold. Quo dozen of the largest eggs weighed Just twice as much as a dozen of the small est ones. The small eggs always get to the market , whether the large ones do or not. In France eggs are sold by weight , and they should be BO sold here. A railway company In the west set out several miles of Its right of way across the prairies with lurch trees , primarily for their use as a windbreak to prevent the winter snows from fill ing the cuts on the road. These trees after thirty years' growth were cut down the past winter , and the only available use which could be made of them was to , convert them Into fence- posts , for which purpose the larch Is of little value. Tlie experiment showed that trees grown on the prairie need protection by grouping and missing. If the burdock Is sliced off with n I sharp spade four Inches be-low the crown of the plant , it la the end of tlmt burdock. Purely grass fed Texas cuttle Bold for $0.-15 per hundredweight on the Chicago market In July. At these fig ures the growing of nuch cattle IB n lonanzu. The range cattlemen have a great prospect ahead the bent growth of grab's ' known for years and an ubnor- nully high market In sight for their fatted cattle this coining fall. The quality of n potato depends al most wholly upon the kind of soil on which It la grown , the amount of nolsturo available for the plant dur- ng Its growing season and thn slzo of the tubers. The cow is proving to be the re deemer of South Dakota , the creamery nislncss In that state being developed nt a wonderful rate. The cow , wher ever kept , always works an Improve ment in agricultural conditions. Weather conditions are such tills sea son that the corn belt is likely to move back to the south again about 150 miles , perhaps more. Hard Juno frosts and excessive moisture are not 'nvornblo to a corn crop grown north of latitude . The black things on the farm arc among the best to be had. There are the jluck Pcrchcron h6rsos , the Polled An gus and Galloway cattle , the Poland- Jhlna hog , the Black Spanish and the Luugshan fowls , while the most fertile soils are black. The goldenrod and the daisy are two wild flowers which appeal to the ar tistic and rcsthctlc sense and Inspire the poets , but In many parts of the country , particularly In the east , these plants are two of the very worst weed pests which the farmer has to fight. "That settles It , " said an old farmer who was Just on the point of renting bis farm and moving into town when told that n rural mall route was to bo laid past his door. "I'll build a tenant house , keep my old home , have my dally paper and die where I have work ed for forty years. " The unusual rainfall of June and July , covering an immense area of the Bornlarld lands of the west , has in sured n wonderful crop of grain of nil kinds where men had faith enough to sow the seed. The western parts of the two Dakotas , Kansas and Nebraska will have a full crop this year. The prospective crop'of hogs In many sections of the country , assuming that the price remains nt $5 or over during the winter , will of Itself , providing the cholera does not make its appearance , bring an enormous revenue to the pro ducers , a thousand dollars at least for every quarter section farm. It is always either too hot or too colder or too wet or too dry for some men ; never just right. Born In the wrong stage of the moon , these came kicking Into the world , go kicking through It and kicking out of It and will be kick ers nt paradise conditions If old Peter lets them through the gates. Now , what's right In this case ? A wandering swarm of bees dropped down on to a tree on a man's farm. While he was going to the house to get a hive for them n man passing along the highway spied the bees and , enterIng - Ing upon the man's farm , had them hived before he returned. Whoso bees arc they ? This is what rape will do as a sheep food : One hundred and twenty-five grade Shropshire lambs were fed for seven and one half weeks on fifteen acres of rape and made nn average gain of three and one-half pounds per head per week , or , In other words , made n gain In selling value of $181 on the fifteen acres in that time. We came across a model farm gar den the other day nn acre or so of land adjacent to the farmhouse laid out In a long strip and everything planted In long , straight rows so as to admit of machine cultivation. Enough email fruits and vegetables was thus easily raised to supply four families and at a minimum of labor and trou ble. So far the past year the grain gam blers on the boards of trade have gambled In the producer's Interest. All corners attempted have been of the bull type , and while the farmer has rarely been able to reach the fancy figures resulting from such manipula tion of thev markets , still the general effect has been to stimulate the cash market for grain , and to this extent the farmer has been benefited. Americans cook their food altogether too much from hand to mouth , with the result that the baking powder can and the frying pan go hand In glove with the patent medicine man and the dentist. Withal , this style of cooking lays a big burden of work on the housewife. Bread , pastry , cakes and meats should not be cooked every day. A baking day once a week , or nt most twice a week , Is enough In all reason. There will be some most desirable agricultural opportunities developed In the coming years In connection wlih the government Irrigating schemes. Many n sagebrush plain Is to bo coc. verted Into n fruitful land filled with prosperous farmers and nice homes. The water Is there , and the rich soil Is there , and the genial sunshine only awaits the bringing of the land and the water together to do Its part and produce the finest of crops. f IUW 1IMJV tiiT A STAUT. Ono reason why tin.1 pom-or clnea of foreigners who come to this country are enabled to get a nturl IH that It cuntH them far loss to live than It doi-H the nverugi1 American. Always UHi-d to a scant bill of fare and a monitor subsistence , the poorest food available here Is better than anything they S'o ever known and withal IH ulwuys to bo had In abundance , They are thus Butlslled with IUSH expensive foods than nre our own people and prefer to Hi-ll rather than consume the best of the foodstuff ) * which they may prouiico. The foreigner hardly over fools away any hard earned money on knlckkiiueks and delicacies and Icta no food at all nvulluhlo ever go to waste. The Amer ican laboring man wants and will have the best things which the market af fords , and In all too many fumllloB the earnlngH of the head of the house uro all cither put Into the Htonmolm or on to the buck * of the family , many mich using up th'.H month on tick the salary which It Is oxpct-tod will bo onrnr-d next month. Men can never got out of the rut and on to tholr financial fcot by doing this way , and tin- man from the old country never docs It. TllAIN Tllfi 11OV8 AM > OIHI.S. The wise mother will loach her boys to do the everyday work of the homo how to neatly make a bed , swoop a room , darn a stocking , put on a patch , et a table and how to do HOURof the common and simpler forms of cooking and the wise father will teach IIN ! girls how to milk a cow , harness a horse , care for a garden and ko buy supplier for the family ; not that olthor boy or girl should be expected to always be doing these sorts of things , but that they may both thus bo , made in n measure Independent and helpful In case of emergencies. The writer 1ms been many a time where It was mighty convenient to know how , to do n little housework , mend n rent In his punts or wash out n change of clothing , and we never yet BUW n woman who could handle , harness and drive n horse but who was u more self reliant woman because of that fact. AN EMKHGENCY MAN. A half dozen railway employees wore trying to get a seventeen hundred pound Pcrcheron horse Into nn express car. A gangway ribbed with slats was set from the ground at an angle of for ty-five degrees up to the door of the car. The hor.se wan In no sense frac tious , but just simply stubborn , and every means failed to get It to climb the steps into the car. One man , one of the emergency sort , finally took the horse by the halter and turned It square round , backing it up to the foot of the gangway , lie then commenced to back up that horse a little at a time and In two minutes bucked It into the car just ns nicely as could be. Wo have found out that , quite often men can bo handled In Just this way. Too contrary to go ahead , they may be backed up to where you want then to go. THE innnn MAN. One farmer's wife who could not get any help In the house , and having a sort of winning , pleasant wi.y , Inveigled the hired man Into helping her do some of the heavier work. She showed him how to make his own bed and keep ills room In order ; she planned to have him bring in nil the wood and water , hud him wash half a bushel of potatoes at a time and hud him turn the washing machine and wringer. At first her husband ob jected , us he wanted the man all the time for Ills farm work , but the wife very sweetly replied that If they could got along with one meal n day she WUH willing to get along without the help of the hired man , and this settled It. This cannot be done with all hired men. however. IKUIGATION LIMITATIONS. A greatly mistaken notion prevails with regard to the possibilities con nected with even the best planned schemes of irrigation , the popular Idea being that millions of acres of desert land can be thus reclaimed. The pos sibilities connected with Irrigation arc nt best very limited Indeed when com pared with the vast desert area of the whole country. In only specially fa vored localities Is any Irrigation sys tem possible , these localities having suitable reservoir sites , a flood supply of water available and a tillable area of land of such contour as to permit the proper distribution of the water. There are only really a very few such places to be found. LAZYIIONES WON OUT. We suppose that it ought not to be so , because it puts a premium on shift- lessncss , but it is a fact this yeur through much of the country which has had such an excess of moisture during the growing season that the lazy , shiftless farmer who hud let his land run down and did not half put In his crop of small grain has n bet ter crop thnn his forehanded neighbor , Whoso rich acres produced such a bur den of straw that his crop was greatly Injured If not ruined entirely. MILK AM ) IIOQ CIIOLCHA. During seasons when hog cholera Is prevalent It has been noted that what arc1 known as the creamery and dairy sections of the country suffer much less from the disease than those sec tions where the steer takes the place of the dairy cow. The reason assigned Is that pigs In the dairy sections get a good ration of sklmmllk , ono of the best balanced rations to bo had , and arc thus better fitted to reslbt the dis ease than purely corn fed hogs. President Addresses Dig Gath ering at Boston. PUBLICITY MOST IMPORTANAT Advocates Governmental Supervision of All Big Corporations Presiden tial Party Starts for Tour of Mnlno. Makes Speech at Lynn. Boston , Aug. 20. The weok'u work for i'lusldont ItooHovolt In hlu tilp thioitgh Now ISngluiul began In earn est yeutonlay afternoon , when ho departed - parted from the suniniur homo of the junior sotintor of MuHmiohuuoltH , Henry Culiol Lodge , ut Nahant , anil iimlil the enthusiasm of the grunt out number of people lie IIIIH faced ulnco the IMtlHlmrg visit on July 4 , rode Into Lynn under cavalry escort ami upoko from a platform at the city hall. Then ho was taken to Boston by special train and on arrival went to Symphony hall , there addressing n great gather ing of Boston business men. Ills speech hero was devoted almost en tirely to consideration of the trust question. The president said In part : "When this government was founded there were no great Individual or corporate fortunes. Kvorythlng has been revolu tionized In the business world slncn and the progress of civilization , from being a trickle , has become a torrent. There wini no particular thing at that time to bother as to whether the na tion or state had control of the cor porations. They wcro easy to con trol. Now , however , ( ho exact reverse Is the case , and remember I say 'cor porations. ' I do not merely say trusts , ineruly combinations or corporations under certain peculiar conditions. For Instance , some time ago the attorney general took action against a certain trust. There has boon coinddorablo discussion ns to whether the tnist aimed at would not seek to got out from under the law by becoming a single corporation. I want laws to en able us to deal with It , no matter what shape It takes. I want , to BOO the government able to get at it dell- nltely , so that the action of the gov ernment cannot bo evaded by any turning within or without federal or state statutes. At present wo really' liavo no elllclent control over a big. corporation which does business In more than one stnto. What I hope to I BOO Is power given to the national ] legislature which shall inuko the con trol real. State Action Proves Useless. "Nothing has bqcn done In the di rection of Intelligent dealing by the states as n collective body with these great corporations. Hero In Mnssa- ' chusotts you have what I regard as , on the whole , excellent corporation laws. I think that most of our diffi culties would bo In a fair way of solu tion If wo had the power to put on the national statute books laws for the nation much like you have here , oil the subject of corporations , In Massa chusetts. So you can see , gentlemen , I am not advocating anything very revolutionary. I nm advocating action to prevent anything revolutionary. Now , If wo can get adequate control by the nation of these corporations , then wo can pass legislation which will glvo us the power of regulation nnd supervision over them. If the nation had that power , mind you , I should advocate as strenuously as I knew how that that power should bo exorcised with extreme caution and self-restraint. No good will come from plunging In without having looked carefully ahead. Publicity the First Step. "The first thing wo want Is pub licity , and I do not mean publicity ns ! a favor by some corporations. I mean It as a right from all corporations af fected by the law. I want publicity aa to the essential facts in which the pub lic has an Interest. I want the knowl edge given to the accredited repre sentatives of the people of facts on which those representatives can , If they see fit , base their actions later. The publicity Itself would cure many evils. Some of these things I have cald can be done now. A good deal Is being done now. As far as the anti trust laws go they will be enforced. No suit will be undertaken for the eako of seeming to undertake it. Every suit that Is undertaken will bo begun because the great lawyer and upright man whom wo nre so fortu nate to have as attorney general , Mr. Knox , believes that there is a viola tion of the law which we can get at , nnd when the suit is undertaken it won't bo compromised excepting on the basis that the government wins. " From the hall the president went to Hotel Touralne , where a little later j In the evening he was the guest of Governor Crane at dinner. This morning bright and early the residential oartv started for Maine. Big Vessel Launched at Dubuque. Dubuque. Aug. 26. The steel hull of the Pelican , built here by the Iowa Iron works , was slid down the ways yesterday afternoon In the presence of 3,000 spectators. She Is the larg est vessel ever built on Inland waters outside of the great lakes. Her length Is 363 feet and her beam 52& feet. Her upper works will be put on here , also her boilers and machinery. Bank Wrecker Gets Ten Years. Whatcom , Wash , , Aug. 2C. Judge Noterer overruled a motion for a new trial for II. St. John Dlx and sen tenced him to ten years in the peniten tiary , the limit under the laws of this tate. Dlx was convicted of wrecking the Scandinavian-American bank In this city. He fled to England and was arrested there six months ago. PEOPLE LEAVE CHAMPERICO. Earthquake Frightens Away the In habitants of QuaUmalnn Town , Hun Dltijjo. Cul , Aug. 211. The KOHIIIOS liner KatnlivBou , which has arrived hero from Hamburg , via the wruil count of South anil COntrul Amor- lea , loporls tlmt while running thioiiKh the tropics itvin ) u inuny electric storms , which lighted up the liei\venn In \voiuleiful manner. When It approached Cliuniporlco , on the wunt t'oiiHt of ( Inatoiuiiln , the lights of nollvo volcanoes were soon for many mllim ut tu-a. Upon reach ing port II was Tound ( hat the Inhabi tants of the town had all Hod on ac count of nn earthquake ami the steam- rr hail to dlnclmrgo and take on freight with ltn own urow , UH no 'long- uhorumon could bo found. KINO ON WAY TO SCOTLAND. Length of Stay Will Depend Upon Nature of the Weather. London , AUK. 26. The king and queen are n lowly sailing north In ( ho royal yacht anil uru expected to land at Aberdeen at the end of the woelr. Thence they will proceed by special train to Hallater for Balmoral. The duration of tlielr stay In Scot land Is yet undecided. Much will depend pond on the nntiirn of the went her. In all probability they will go for an other yachting trip next month from Aberdeen to Copenhagen , ( o pay n visit to the king of Denmark and meet the emperor of Russia. Premier Combes to Resign. London , Aug. 20. In a dispatch from PuilH the correspondent of the Dally Chronicle says M. ConihcH , the French premier , han announced hln Intention of icHlgnlng on the reopen ing of the eluunher of deputies. M , Combes considers that ho has fiilllllod the mission entrusted to him by Presi dent Loubot , In carrying out llio law relating to unuullioilzcd congregation * 1st schools , and , according to the cor respondent , ho will now advlso the president to call M. Kouvlor , minister of finance , or M. Waldcck-Uousseau , the previous premier , to succeed him Will Accept Parcels for United States. London , Aug. 26. Beginning Sept. 1 , the postolllcos of Great Britain will accept parcels for transmission to the United States. The various at tempts of the Urltlsh government to conclude a parcels post arrangement with the * United States having result ed In failure , the British postal depart ment has arranged this Independent service. The Canard and VVhlto Star lines will convey the parcels to the United States and the American Rx- press company will deliver them in that country. Manila Editors Sentenced. Manila. Aug. 2G. Frederick Dorr , proprietor , and Edward O'Hrlcn , edl tor of Freedom , have each been sen tcnced to six moths In Blllbld prison and lined $1,000 each for libeling Bonlto Legara , a natlvo member of tha civil commission , by publishing a cer tain article In Freedom. Both Dorr and O'lirlen have also been convicted of sedition , but have not yet been Bcntcnced bn this count. The cases have been appealed to the supreme court of the Islands. OUTPUT OF GOLD AND SILVER. Director Roberts Issues Final Esti mate of Production for Year. Washington , Aug. 2G. Gcorgo E. Roberts , dliector of the mint , has Issued - sued his final estimate of the produc tion of gold and sliver In the United States in the calendar year 1001. Mr. Roberts shows that during tUo year the United States produced 3,085,300 ounces of gold , valued at $78,000,700 ; a decrease of $504,300 , as compared with the yield of 1900. Ten of the nineteen states and territories yieldIng - Ing gold showed an Increased produc tion California leading with $1.075- 200. Nevada- - showed the material gain of $957,600. South Dakota also made a gain of $301,900. The greatest decrease , amounting to $1,285,300 , was In Alaska. Colorado diminished $1,135,900. The silver yield for 1901 amounted to 55,21-1,000 ounces , of the commcr clal value of $33,128,400. which was 2,433,000 ounces , or 5 per cent lens than It was in 1900. Colombia Rebels Stronger. Kingston , Jamaica , Aug. 2C. The British steamer Orinoco , which ar rived liore from Colombian ports , re ported that the rebels of Colombia arc increasing their forces continually and that there Is great activity in the vl clnlty of the Isthmus. It is feared that the government garrison nt Colon cannot successfully defend the town , owing to the strength of the rebels. Ohio Legislature Convened. Columbus , . O. , Aug. 26. The Ohio legislature convened yesterday In ex traordinary session to enact laws to provide for the government of munic ipalities and to restore lost Jurisdic tion to the supreme court , these mat ters having been rendered chaotic by the action of tliat court during the early summer. Kruger to Resign Leadership. London , Aug. 26. Cabling from Brussels , the correspondent of the Dally Telegraph says he hears that as a result of the conferences between former President Kruger and the Boer Generals Dewet , Delaroy and Botha , Mr. Kruger Is to resign the leadership of the Boer people. General Botha , adds the correspondent , was unani mously designated the future leader of the Boers. Shah Welcomed to Paris. Paris , Aug. 20. The shah of Per Bla arrived here last night. He re ceived an ovation at the station and was escorted by a detached portion of. the Republican guards. MacArthur Announces Rules of Coining War Game. TO FIGHT ON LAND AND SEA Gcherne IB to Illustrate Repuloe of Hostile Fleet Details Will Ue Faithful to Actual Conditions War like About the Forts , Now York , Aug. 20. Major Uonural MficArthur mnilc public the tux I. o ( the rules ugioed upon for the coming army and navy nmneuvurn. The wholn ncliomo IH biiNod upon the assumption Unit In expectation of a declaration of hofltllltlon u strong hostile Heel , with out torpedo boats , determines to malta a Hitddon dunh on the imntorn onlruiico. of Long Island Hound , to neoure a nuv- ul bufio , in the expectation of flmllnrj tlio land forecn , In the absence of n declaration of war , In n somewhat na- prepared condition. The periods ot the maneuvers are to bo divided Into two distinct plumes period of prepiv ration and period of hontllltloa. Dur ing the drat It Is decided there shall bo ia day attack and a night attack by the ( loot , and IT possible a bombard- in u nt and the enforcement of a putt- Hugo. During thin mines and olmtrito tlonn may bo planted by the defomw , nnd the conditions of war are to ha followed as closely us possible. On the part of the ninny the Information mation to bo gained relates to the general - oral ntllclency of all that uppottnlna to the construction and armament of the land dofonnoH and the training ot the forces manning thrni. The n vy will concern Itself with the best * mouuH of obtaining ranges , the ofloct of mines und obstructions , forming ot attack , HCiircu lights und the general control of artillery flro. Umpires ot uom services win DC ueiaiiou 10 an fortn and ships , and will report to n hoard of arbitrators of five olllcers , whoso judgment will bu final. The period of preparation will he from midnight , Aug. 29 , to midnight , Aug. 31 , the period of hostilities ex tending from the latter hour to noon Sept. fl. The defense will consist ot Forts Redman , Adams , Wetherlll , Groblo , Mansfield , Wright , Mlchlo , Terry and the fort on Gardner's Point. The attack wilt consist ot about fifteen ships , of which flvo will rank ns battleships and the rest at cruisers and gunboats. Warlike at New London. Now London , Conn. , Aug. 2li. Con ditions are exceedingly warlike In the forts of the New London district In preparation for the army and navy maneuvers , which begin at midnight Friday and are to he carried out on the plans adopted yesterday by the re spective departments. Five steamers are running continuously from thli port to the Island fortlllcatloiiH , bring ing supplies and munitions of war. Detachments of troops uro arriving dally. GOVERNOR JENKS WINS. Rcnomlnatcd by Democrats at Ala bama Primaries. Montgomery , Ala. , Aug. 20. In tha Democratic primaries , held yesterday for the nomination of candidates fet state oillcos , William D. Jeuks of Har bour , the prevent Incumbent , won ovei former Governor Joseph F. Johnston ol Jefferson for governor by a majority which will probably reach 20.000. Thia election was the first held since tha adoption of the new constitution , by which the negro Is eliminated as a political t actor in Alabama , and the new organic law was made an Issue In the campaign. It was endorsed In Its entirety by Governor Jenks and or- Governor Johnston also guaranteed to uphold It , a > hough he opposed ita ratification. Spanish War Vets Seek Preference. Blnghamton , N. Y. , Aug. 26. At tha ftato assembly of Spanish War vet erans , held In this city yesterday , a committee was appointed to secure for veterans of the Spanish war , If possi ble , the same preferences now accord ed veterans of the civil war under the civil service law. Delegates to the na tional convention wore Instructed to assist in an effort that Is to be made to bring about an amalgamation of all the Spanish war veterans' organiza tions In the United States. Takes Friend for Burglar. Richmond , Va. , Aug. 26. Mistaking bis friend , who occupied the same dwelling with him , for a burglar , J. D. Wilson shot and instantly killed G. F. Apperson here last night. Apper- con recently had changed his sleep ing apartments and Wilson , seeing a form which In the darkness ho sup posed to bo that of a burglar , chal lenged and , receiving no answer , Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of tha dicestants and digests all kinds ot food. It gives Instant relief and never falls to cure. It allows you to cat all the food you want. The mostsensltlva stomachs can take it. By its use many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else fulled. la unequalled for the stomach. Child ren with weak stomachs thrive on lu Cures all stomach troubles by E. 0. DEWiTT & Co. . Ouldago eoaUlnsSH times tbuSOc. elM.