Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 6, Petersburg, Pike County, 22 June 1894 — Page 6
THE SUGAR INQUEST.. The Examination of Senators in Alphabetical Order. Vhkh It to Believed Will Brin* Out tit* Whole Truth in All Case»-The Examination of Senator Brice— Emphatic Denial*.
Washington, June 16.—The senatorial Sugar trust investigators started in yesterday on what is considered the most direct and, therefore, the most important branch of the inquiry. It is the branch that consists, in the examination of the individual members of the senate in alphabetical order as to their knowledge of or connection with dealings in sugar stoek or the sugar legislation of the tariff bill. The committee has made excellent progress, examining each of its live members and all the senators, with few exceptions, from A to 11 inclusive. l*rior to beginning the examination of their colleagues the members of the committee heard the testimony of Theodore A. llavemeyer. of the American Sugar Refining Co., but nothing new was developed from his answers. The examination of senators was based on a number of carefully-pre-pared questions, so framed that the committee to a man believe that no senator who has ever touched sugar stock or had anything to do with the members of the trust in connection with legislation to make even a technical denial or evasive answer of any sort without putting himself in a questionable position. These questions are as follows: 1. Have you been in attendance at the present session of congress during the pendency of the tariff bill in the senate?
a. Have you given any information, directly or indirectly, to anyone interested in sugar stocks, socalled, or in the stock of the American Sugar Refining Co.‘, that was intended or calculated to affeet its value? 3. Have you bought or sold, directly or indirectly, since the beginning of this session of congress, any socalled sugar stock or stocks, or stock or certificates of the American Sugar Refining Co.? .4. Have you been concerned with any one interest, direct or indirect, contingent or otherwise, in any operation. whether by purchase or sale of said stocks or certificates? 5. Has anyone bought or sold for your account, or in your interest, any of such stocks, or speculated in any such stocks on your account, or given you to understand that you would share in the profits of any operation in such stocks, or placed any money to your credit as the proceeds of the purchase or sale' of such stocks, or promised or agreed to place such money to your credit? fi. Has any member of your family, or any person in your employ, or any clerk employed under the laws of the United States in your service, been, to your knowledge, interested, in any of the ways indicated in any of the preceding questions, in any transaction of sugar stocks or certificates during the period mentioned? * 7. Ilaye 3'ou. or has any member of your famil3'. or any such clerk, owned or held certificates of the American Sugar l^fining Co. during the period heretofore mentioned? 8. iiave3'ou. at any time, been connected with the American Sugar Refining Co., or have you, at any time, been in its employ as attorney, agent or otherwise?
The members of the committee— namely. Senators Gray (chairman) Lindsay, Davis, Lodge and Allen— were examined before the alphabetical list was begun, and each answered each question in the negative with the exception of the first which from its nature required some explanation. The most interesting if not the most important testimony of the day was that of Senator Calvin S. Brice. The examination of Senator Brice was not made on the questions given, because other witnesses had brought in his name in giving their testimony. Senator Gray read to Mr. Brice the statement of Correspondent Edwards in the Philadelphia Press, alleging that Senator Brice was a speculator in sugar stocks, and then put this question: “I ask you, senator, whether this statement, which means to impute that you and others have been enabl< d to accumulate wealth upon the probable course of legislation, is true, and to state what you have to say in regard to it?” “Before or since entering the senate?” asked Mr. Brice. “Since entering the senate?” ‘ But I may as wel. answer as to the whole time, both before or since, “said the Ohio senator, “that I have' neve# been concerned in any speculations or investments or interested in them, the result of which depended upon legislation in congress or elsewhere. Since entering the senate I have not been concerned in any way, directly or indirectly, in any property, securities, stocks, investments or speculations in anything that is mentioned in the tariff bill, from the first line to the end of the free list, with the exception of some local manufacturing establishments in Lima and adjoining towns in Ohio. Nor have I sought to accumulate wealth in any way by investment or speculation since I “entered the senate, in any of the things which I have mentioned. In other words my investments and the things with which I am concerned are not connected with or affected by the tariff act, except as the general property of the country is. There is no truth whatever in it so far as I am cen- ’ corned. « The Chairman—It is stated in the article to which I have referred, and it has been in testimony before the committee, that you were present in the Arlington hotel in the room of a Mr. ■Terrel, with Mr. Ilavemcyer, president of the American Sugar Refining Co., and some other person or persons, at •which time the matter of value of •sugar stock was discussed, and the ef
feet of the tariff legislation rrpontne same, and in vwhich the particular schedule desired by the Sugar trust, so called, was (ions^dered. Senator Brice—I was never present at any conference or meeting where any such subject was discussed. I was at the Arlington hotel on the evening of the 7th of March last, in the room of Mr. H. L. Terrell, of New York (for the past thirty years one of my most intimate friends). I called at Mr. Terrell’s room for the purpose of meeting him and a common friend, a New York lawyer interested in railway matters, and not connected with or interested in the tariff bill in any way. We spent perhaps an hour, or an hour and a half without any other person being present. Mr. Terrell, with whom I had for many years business interests, but with whom I had no interests whatever in any way for more than six years last past, said that he was interested in sugar, and discussed the question of the effect of an ad valorem as compared with a special tax. about which I was concerned. Mr. Terrell said that Mr. Henry llavemeyer was in the hotel. I requested that he send for Mr. llavemeyer, that I might get Mr. liavemeyer's statement, presuming him to be the best-informed man in the country on that subject. He came, and after a few minutes' talk on the subject
The Chairman—Let me ask there, were you previously acquainted with Mr. Uavemeyer? Senator Brice—I had been at all acquainted with Mr. Havemeyer, it was no more than a familiarity with his faee. He went back to his own room and brought from that to, Mr. Terrell's room some ten or thirteen eases of sugar of various kinds of both raw and refined, and discussed the manufacture of sugar, the different kinds of sugar, the prices in various markets, and the effects of specific and ad valorem duties, for some time, possibly threequarters of an hour. I said to Mr. navemeyer that there was a strong feeling against a tax on sugar, and against any additional tax on refined sugar, and that I had great doubt whether the senate and the house would not put sugar, both raw and refined, on the free list— The Chairman—The house? Mr. ltrice—And the senate—I said both the senate and the house—would not put raw and refined on .the free list. Td FORM A TRUST. The Gasoline Stove Manufacturers to Unite in a Combine, Cleveland, O., June 16.—A combination of manufacturers of gasoline stoves is now considered a certainty. The project has been fostered by several conventions, and only the details of the consolidation remained ineompplete. The executive officer of the concern will be Hon. D. A. Dangler, of this city. Emerson McMiilin. president of of the Laclede Gas-Light Co., of St. Louis, has obtained options on a majority of the stock of the gas and gaso- j line stove manufacturing companies all over the country, as a preliminary step to the formation of a trust in these two industries, with a capitol stock of 810,000,030. Mr. Dangler returned from a conference in New York yesterday, and confirms the reported formation of the trust. Mr. Dangler said to a United Press reporter: “The organization has not yet reached a state of perfection, but we feel assured that a consolidation will be effected. The capital, with bond issue, will be 810,000,000, and the manufacturers of these vapor stoves which have a large sale in the west, think ’that they can save a large amount of money in expenses by doing business as one concern. The new consolidated companies will probably receive a charter in Illinois, and the organization may be completed very short! j\ There are six large manufacturers of these stoves in Cleveland, Cincinnati. St. Louis and other cities in the west. It is proposed to get them together in a working arrangement.” The principal firms to be merged into the trust are: The Rmgen QuickMeal Co.t of St. Louis; George M. Clark, of Chicago; and the Dangler Stove Cot, of Cleveland.
CONSUL POLLOCK At San Salvador Gives American Farmers a Pointer. Washington, June 16.—The state department has made public the following extract from a report of Consul Pollock at San Salvador, dated May 14: “I learn that the customhouses at the seaport stations are closed, and that it is very difficult, if not impossible, for our steamers to secure men to handle their freight. The revolution prevents the planting of corn and beans, which must be done before the. rainy season sets in. It is too late now; and in consequence these too staple food products, which form almost the .sole subsistence of the common people, will have to lie imported from the United States.” Archbishop Tactic of Manitoba At the Point of Death. New York, June 16.—A Times special from Winnipeg, Man., says: Ilis grace, Archbishop Tache, who for more than forty years has been the head of the Roman Catholic church in Manitoba and the Canadian northwest, lies at the point of death. Archbishop Tache is the most widely known of the Canadian Catholic prelates. An Illadvised Strike Ends in a Fizzle. Cincinnati, June 16.—The carpenters’ strike has been officially declared off by a majority vote of the men engaged in it. The strike was inaugurated May 31 because of several cuts being made in the matter of wages on certain classes of work. One thousand men went out on the first order, but many desertions followed within a week, and up to the present time fully COO have returned to work. The republicans of the Eighteenth Ohio dis. triet nominated ex-Congressmaa Lorenzo Conford for congress
“ANOTHER CHANCE.” Bov. Dr. Talmag-e Treats as Chi-* merical a Common Belief.8 Tke Opportunities Thrown Awaj In This World Will Not be Braffordcd lrs In the Vest—As We FnU So Must We Lie.
The following discourse was selected br Rct. T. DeYYitt Talmage to be laid before his great reading congregation this week. The subject is: “Another Chance,” being based on the text: It tbe tree fall toward the south or toward the north, in the place where the tree falieth there it shall he.—Ecclesiastes, xL, 3. There is a hovering hope in the minds of avast multitude that there will be an opportunity in the next world to correct the mistakes of this; that if we do make complete wreck of our earthly life, it will be on a shore up which we may walk to a palace; that, as a defendant may lose his ease in the circuit court, and carry it up to the supreme court or eourt of chancery and get a reversal of judgment in his behalf, all the costs being thrown over on the other party, so, if we fail in 'i the earthly trial, we may in the higher jurisdiction of eternity have the judgement of the lower court set aside, all the costs remitted, and we may be victorious defendents forever. My object in this sermon is to show that common sense, as well as my text, declares that such an expectation is chimerical. You say that the impenitent man, having got into the next world and seeing the disaster, will, as a result of that disaster,, turn, the pain the cause of his reformation. But you can find ten thousand instances in this world of men who have done wrong and distress overtook them suddenly. Did the distress heal them? No; they went right on. That man was flung of dissipations. “You must stop drinking,” said the doctof, “and quit the fast life you are leading, or it will destroy you.” The patient suff^ts paroxysm after paroxysm, but, under skillful medical treatment, he begins to sit up, begins to walk about the room, be gins to go to business. And lo! he goes back to the same grog-shops for his morning dram and his evening dram, and drams between. Flat down again! Same doctor! Same physical anguish. Same medical warning. Now, the illness is more protracted, the liver is more stubborn, the stomach more irritable, and the digestive organs are more rebellious. But after awhile he is out again, goes back to the same dram shops, and goes the same round of sacrilege against his physical health, r? He sees that his downward course is ruining his household, that his life is a perpetual perjury against his marriage j vow. that that broken-hearted woman j is so unlike the roseate young wife ! whom "he married; that her old school- j mates do not recognize her; that his sons are taunted for a lifetime by the fathers drunkenness; that the daughters are to pass into life under the scarification of a disreputable ancestor. He is drinking up their happiness. their prospects for this life, and perhaps for the ■ life to come. Sometimes an appreciation of what he is doing comes upon him. His nervous system is all a-tangle. From crown of head to sole of foot he is one aching, rasping, crucifying, damning torture. Where is he? In hell on earth. Does it : reform him? , After aw-hilehe has delirium tremens, with a whole jungle of hissing reptiles let out on his pillow, and his screams | horrify the neighbors as he dashes out of bed, crying: “Take these things off< me!” As he sits pale and convalescent, | the doctor says: “Now I want to have a plain* talk with yon, my dear fellow. The next attack of this kind yon ha$e. vou will be beyong all medical skill, and yon will die.” He gets better and goes forth into the same round again. This time medicine takes no effect. j Consultation of physicians agree in say- j ing there is no hope. Death ends the j scene.
That process ot meonation, warning' and dissolution is going on within a stone's throw of you; going on in all the neighborhoods of Christendom, j Pain does not correct. Suffering does i not reform. What is true in one sense | is true in all senses, and will forever be so, and yet men are expecting in the next world purgatorial rejuvenation. Take up the printed reports of the prisons of the United States, and you will find that the vast- majority of the incarcerated have been there before, some of them four, five, six times. With a million illustrations, all working the other way in this world, people are expecting that distress in the next state will be salvatory. You can not imagine any worse torture in any other world than that which some men have suffered here, and without any salutary consequence. Furthermore, the prospect of a reformation in the next world is more improbable than a reformation here. In this world the life started with innocence of infancy. In the case supposed, the other life will open with all the accumulated bad habits of many years upon him. Surely, it is easier to build a strong ship out of new timber than out of an old hulk that has been ground up in the breakers. If with innocence to start with in this life a man does not become godly, what prospects are there that in the next world, starting with sin, there would be a seraph evoluted. Surely the sculptor has more prospect of making a fine statue out of a block of pure white Parian marble than out of an old black rock, seamed and cracked with the storms of half a century. Surely upon a clean, white sheet of paper it is easier to write a deed or a will than upon a sheet of paper all scribbled and blotted and torn from top to bottom. Yet men seem to think that, though the life that began here comparatively perfect turned out badly, the next life will sheceed, though it starts with a dead failure. “But,’’ says some one. “I think we ought to have a chanee in the next life, because this life is so short it allows
| only small opportunity. We hardly hare-time to turn around between cradle | and tomb, the wood of the one almost j touching the marble of the other.” I But do you know what made .the an- ; eient deluge a necessity? It was the i longevity of the antediluvians. ; They were worse in the see- | ond century of their lifetime than in the first hundred years, and I still worse in the third century., and still worse all the way on to seven, eight and nine hundred years and the earth had to be washed and scrubbed and soaked and anchored clear out of sight for more than a month before it could be made fit for decent people to live in. Longevity never , cures impenitency. All the pictures of Time represented him with a scythe to cut, bnt I never saw any picture of Time with a case of medicines to heal. Seneca says that Nero for the first five years of his public life was set up for an example of clemency and kindness, but his path all the way descended until at sixtyeight he became a suicide. If eight hundred years did not make antediluvians any better, but only made them worse, the ages of eternity could have no effect except prolongation of depravity.
“But.” says some one, “in the future state evil surroundings will be withdrawn and elevated influences substituted. and hence expurgation and sublimation and glorification.” But the righteous, all their sins forgiven, have passed into a beatific state, and consequently the unsaved will be left alone. It can not be expected that Dr. Duff, who exhausted himself in teaching Hindoos the way to heaven, and Dr. Abeel, who gave his life in the evangelization of China, and Adoniram Judson. who toiled for the redemption of Borneo, should be sent down by some celestial missionary society to educate those who wasted all their earthly existence. Evangelistic and missionary efforts are ended. The entire kingdom of the morally bankrupt by . themselves, where are the salvatory influences to come from? Can one speckled and bad apple in a barrel of diseased apples turn the other apples good? Can those who are themselves down help others up? Can those who have themselves failed in the business of the soul pay the debts of their spiritual insolvents? Can a million wrongs make one right? - - Peneropolis was a city where King Philip of Thracia put all the bad people of his kingdom. If any man had opened a primary school, in Poneropdlis I do not think the parents from other cities would have sent their children there. Instead of amendment in the other world, all the associations, now that the good are evolved, will be degenerating and down. You would not want to send a man to a cholera or yellowfever hospital for his health; and the great lazaretto of the next world, containing the diseased and plague-struck, will be a poor place for moral recovery. If the surroundings- in this world were crowded of temptation, the surroundings of the next world, after the righteous have passed up and on, will be a thousand per cent, more crowded of temptation. The count of Chateaubriand made his little son sleep at night at the top of a castle turret, where the wind howled and where the wind howled and where speeters were said to haunt the place; and while the mother and sisters almost died with fright, the son tells us that the process gave him nerves that could not tremble and a courage that never faltered. But I don't think that towers of darkness and the spectral world swept by sirocco and euroclvdon will ever fit one forth© land of eternal sunshine. I wonder what is the curriculum of that college of Inferno, where, after proper preparation by the sins of this life, the candidate enters, passes oh from freshman class of depravity to sophomore of abandonment, and from sophomore to junior, and from junior to senior, and
KXiiy ui graauuiiiUii auu uilu ur ploma sig'ned by Satan, the president, and other professional demoniacs, attesting that the candidate has been long enough under their drill, he passes up to enter Heaven! Pandemonium a preparative course for heavenly admission! Ah, my friends, Satan and his cohorts have fitted uncounted multitudes for ruin, but never fitted one soul for happiness. Furthermore, it would not he safe for this world if men had another chance in the next. If it had been announced that, however wickedly a man might act in this world, he could fix it all right in the next, society would lie terribly demoralized. and the human race demolished in a few years. The fear that, if we are bad and unforgiven here, it will not be well for us in the next existence, is the chief influence that keeps civilization from rushing back to semibarbarism, and semi-barbarism from rushing into midnight savagery, and midnight savagery from extinction; for it is the astringent impression of all nations, Christian and heathen, that there is no future chance-for those who have wasted this. Multitudes of men who are kept within bounds would say: ‘Hio to, now! Let me get all out of this life there is in'it. Come, gluttony, and inebriation, and uncleanness, and revenge, and sensualities, and wait upon me! My life may be somewhat shortened in this world by dissoluteness, but that will only make Heavenly indulgence on i a larger scale the sooner possible. I will overtake the saints at last, and will enter the Heavenly Temple only a little later than those who behaved themselves here. I will on my way to heaven take a little wider excursion i than those who were on earth pious, ! and I shall go to heaven via Gehenna | and via Shecl.” Another chance in the next world means free license and wild abandonment in this. Suppose you were a party in an important case at law, and you knew from consultation with judges and attorneys that it would ,l>e tried twice, and the first trial would be of'little imI portauce, but that the second would
| decide everything; for which trial would you make the most preparation, | for which retain the ablest, attorneys, for which be most anxious about the attendance of witnesses? You would put all the stress upon txe second trial, all the anxiety, all the expenditure, saying: ‘‘The first is nothing-, the last is'evervthing-." Give the race assurance c*f a second and move important trial in the subsequent life, and all the preparation for eternity would be “po6t mortem,” post funeral, post sepulchral, and the world with one jerk be pitched off into impiety and godlessness. Ah Heaven offered ns as a gratuity, and for a lifetime we refused to take it, and then rush on the bosses of Jehovah's buskler demanding another chance. There ought to be, there can be. there will be no such thing as posthumous opportunity. Thus our common sense agrees with my text—‘‘If the tree fall toward the south, or toward the north, in the place where the tree faileth. there it shall be.” You see that this idea lifts the world up, from an unimportant way station to a platform of stupendous issues, and makes all eternity whirl around this "hour. But one trial for which all the preparation must be made in this world, or ever made at all. That piles up all the emphases and all the climaxes and all the destinies into life here. No other chance! Oh, how that augments the value anti the importance of this chance!
-aiexanuer witn ms army uses to surround a city, aad then would lift a great light in token to. the- people that., if they surrendered before that light went out. all would be well: but if once the light want out, then the battering rams would swing against, the wall, and demolition and disaster would follow. Well, all we need to do for our present and everlasting safety is to make surrender to Christ, the King and Conqueror—surrender of our hearts, surrender of our lives, surrender of everything. And He keeps a great light burning, light of Gospel invitation, light kindled with the wood of the cross and flaming up against the dark night of our sin and sorrow. Surrender while that great light continues to burn, for after it goes out there will be no other opportunity jfit making peace with God through onr Lord Jesns Christ. Talk of another chance! Why, tMs ia- a supernal chance! In the time of Edward VT., at the battle of Musselburgh, a private soldier. seeing that the earl of Huntley had lpst his helmet, took off his-own helmet and put it upon the head of the earl; and the head of the private soldier uncovered, he was soon slain, while his commander rode safely out of the battle. But in our case, instead of a private soldier offering helmet to an earl, it is a King putting His crown upon an unworthy Subject, the King dying that w might live. Tell it to all points of the compass. Tell it to night and day. Tell it to all earth and Heaven. Tell it to all centuries, all ages, all milleniums. that we have such a magnificent ehance in this world that we need no other chance in the next. I am in the burnished judgment hall of the last day. A great white throne is lifted, but the Judge has not yet taken it. While we are waiting for His arrival I hear immortal spirits in conversation. ‘“What are you waiting here for?” says a soul that went up from Madagascar to a soul that ascended from America. The latter says: “I came from America, where forty years I heard the Gospel preached, the Bible read, and from the prayer that 1 learned in infancy and at my mothers knee until my last hour I had Gospel advantage, but, for some reason, I did not take the Christian choice, and I am here waiting for the Judge to give me» a new trial and another chance.” “Strange!” says the other: “I had but one Gospel call in Madagascar, and I accepted it and do not need another
chance. ‘•What are you here for?” says one who on earth had feeblest intellect, to one who had great brain, and silvery tongue, and scepters of influence. The latter responds: ‘'Oh, I knew more than my fellows. I mastered libraries, and had learned titles from colleges, and my name was a synonym for eloquence and power. And yet I neglected my soul, and I am here waiting for a new trial.” “Strange,” stays the one of the feeble earthly capacity: "I knew but little of worldly knowledge, but I knew Christ, and made- Him my partner, and I have no need of another chance.” '. Now the ground trembles with the approaching chariot. The great folding doors of the hall swing open, ‘“Stand back!” cry the celestial ushers. “Stand back, and let the Judge- of quick and dead pass through!” He takes the throne, and, looking over the throng of nations, He says: “Come to judgment, the last judgment, the only judgment!” By one flash from the throne all the history of each (me flames forth to the vision of himself and all others. “Divide!” says the Judge to the assembly. “Divide!” echo the walls. "Divide!” ery the guards angelic. „j And now the immortals, separate, rushing this way and that, and after awhile there is a great aisle between them, and a great vacuum widening and widening, and the Judge, turningto the throng on one side, says: “He i that is righteous, let him be righteous still, and he that is holy, let him be holy still;” and then, turning toward the throng on the opposite side, He says: “He that is unjust, let him be unjust still, and he that ]se filthy, let him be filthy still:” and then, lifting one hand toward each group, He declares: “If the tree fall toward the south or toward the north, in the place where the tree falleth, there it shall be.” And then I heay something jar with a great sound. It. is the dosing of the Book of Judgment. The Judge ascends the stairs behind the throne. The hall of the last assize is cleared and shut. The high ccurt ofetcraity is adjotlrned forever
KnoeM Oat <*t Ha» By that able blood depureat, Hostetler's Stomach Bitter*, the young giant, rheumatism, withdraws beaten. la maturity it is harder to conquer. Attack it at the start with Hostetler's Stomach Bitters, and *»■/« yourself years of agony and constant dan* ger, for this malady is always liable to iv tack the heart. Potent in malaria, dyv~s> sia, constipation, nervousness and kidney complaint is the Bitters. “I luce to see a man think * good deal of his home.” said old Mrs. Jason, "hat when he stays out all night to brag about how happy a home he has, I think it»» carrying his affection a little too far.”—Indianapolis Journal, ' To Cleanse the System Effectually yet gently, when costive or bilious or when the blood is impure or sluggish, to permanently care habitual constipation. to awaken the kidneys and liver to m healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dispel headaches, colds or fevers, use Syrup of Figs. Georoe—^Amelia, dear, do you believer* that love is blindf* Amelia—"Yes, George, darling."’ George—‘•Then, dear, I do not see any need of keeping the gas homing.”— Harvard Lampoon.
Verdict for Hood’s “ I was in the army 4 years* was wounded and contracted sciatica and rheumatism. Have suffered ever since and lost tha use of my left leg and side. I most sav that of all the medicines 1 have eve; tried Hood’s Sarsaparilla i» the best. It has done me the moat good. I do not say J-J<xxfs Sflrso- •* parUla that it will rsise a fellow from the dead; but it will come the nearest to doing it of c ures ngit __ any medicine I nave ever known or used.* T. H. Sacxpeks, Osceola, Nebraska. ~ Hood’s Pills cure indigestion,biliousness Hie Greatest fledical Discovery off the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. 88MLD KENNEDY, of RSXBURY, UASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two casei (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates Df its value, all within twenty railed ot Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When tiie lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same w:th the Uver oi Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and alwavs disappears Hi 4 week after taking it. fcead the label. if*the stomach is foul or bilious it wii| cause squeamish feelings at first. No ch an ge of diet ev^r necessary. Ea| the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bee* Lime. Sold by all Druggists.
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