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THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. ( ., MAY 27, 1897. THE BAG WITH HOLES DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON ON IMPROV IDENCE AND ALCOHOLISM. Th<* flrciitcsfc Faciny of the 1’eople Who Work—Drink the Anarchist of the Cen turies—A I'lea lor Christian Pruilecce. Christ as an Aid Against Temptation. Washington, May 23.—This sermon ; of Dr. Tulmago is an arraignment of j improvidence in all classes, and of al- | coholism as the greatest enemy of the working people. The text is Haggai i, 6, “Ho that earuetli wages earueth wages to put it into a hag with holes.’’ In Persia, under the reign of Darius Hyststspes, the people did not prosper. They made money, but did not keep it. They were like people who have a sack in which they put money, not knowing that the saik i.s torn or eaten of moths, cr in someway made incapable of hold ing valuables. As fast as the coin was put in one end of tho sack it dropped out of the other. It made no difference bow much wag< s they got. for they lost tlum. “lie that earnetli wages enrm th wages to put it into a hag with holes.” What has Leecmo of the billions and billions ( f dollars in this country paid to tho working classes? Some of these moneys have gene for house rent, cr the purchase of bniui steads, or ward robe, < r family expenses, < r the necessi ties of life, or to provide comforts in old age. What has become of oth< r bil lions? Wasted in foolish outlay. Wasted at the gaming table. Wasted in intox icants. Put into a bag with ICO holes. Gather up the money that the work ing classes have spent for drink during the last 30 years, and I will build frr every workingman a house and lay out for him a garden, and clothe his sons in broadcloth and his daughters in silks, and place at his front doer a prancing span of sorrels or hays, and secure him u policy of life insurance, ^o that the present home may be well main tained aft< r he is dead. The most per sistent, most overpowering ei!< my of tho working classes is intoxicating lienor. It is the anarchist of the eenturii s and has boycotted and i? now boycotting the body and mind and soul of Amer ican labor. It is to it a worse foe tlum monopoly end worse than ussociutui capital. A Strike Arnlnst Strong Drink. It annually swindles industry out cf a large percentage ei its earnings. It holds out its I lasting solicitations to the mechanic or operative cn his w ay to work, aud at tho noon spell, and on ^his way homo at eventide; on .Satur day, wh( a the wagt s are paid, it snatch: s a largo part of the m< ).< y that might <• mo into the family and sacri fices it among the saloon k< < p< is. Stain: Lt. e saloons of this country side by side, and jt i.; carefully estimated that they ■would mu li from N* w \ork to Chica go. “Forward, march,” says the drink power, “and take possession of the American nation.” The drink 1 usiness is pouring its \it- riolic and damnable liquids down the throats of hundreds of thousands of la borers, and while the ordinary strikes Are ruinous both to emph yovs ami em ployees I proclaim a strike universal ugaim t m< i g di ink, which, if b pt up, will be the relief e f The working cla»« s aud the sal vat ien of the nation. 1 will undertake to say that thtre is not a healthy labor'r in the Unit'd Mutts who within the next Mi years, it lie | will refine ill intt xicating Leverages ; and be saving, may not Lteome a cap italist on a ! mall scale. Our country i:, a year spends $1,5(10,050,0U0 lor drink. Of courv thewcrkingclassf sdo a gn at deal of th* ' xpenditure. Can ful statis tics show’ that the wage earning classes of Gnat L'ritain exptnd in liquors £100,000,000, or $.>00,000,000 aytar. Hit down and calculate, oh, working- mau, how tii'.i'-ii you have cxp< not tl in these directions. Add it all up. Add up what your neighbors have t xpended and realize that instead of answering the beck of oth< r ptt pie you uiiglit liave been your own capitalist. Wlien you deplete a v »rhingman's jjliysh al i m r- gy, you d« pl' te l:is capital. The stim ulated workman givs out bt fore the unstimulab d wt rkmam My fuller raid: “I htsame it t» nipt rante man in early life, h< cause 1 i.' tictl in the liar- vest field that tin ugh 1 was physically weaker than .th'r v orkuicu, 1 could hold out longtr than they. They texik ■tuinuiauts, f tetk ntue.” A l rick- luukcr in Knglantl gives his ixpeii: nee in regard to tins matter among nit n in his emphy. lie says, aftt r investiga tion: “The 1 it r drinkt r whe» made tlie fewest biit ksmado (>50,000, and the ah- staimr who made the fewest Iricki 74(5,000. The difftre i t t'in I half <f the abstainer ovt r tl:e indulgt r, k?,(/(i0. ” Tlie StrfitiftJi i>f I.lt|uur. When an army g< < < ut tt> (lie battle, the soldit r wbt) haa wet: r e>r e-t fii <• in his canteen marches easier anti fights bette r than the stile,icr who h'e v. hi.-!:y in his t aunt n. Drink lit lj - a man to fight when lie has only one ct nit stunt, utid that at the str» ot toru* r, but when he ge>t'H forth to maintain stm.e great ! battle ft t <jt;d and his country, he wants no drink about him. When the Itussians potovar, a corporal pa x s along the lim* anti mjk !>s the breath » f every soldier, if tin re bo in bis breath u taint of iutoricatinp' Jitpit r, the man is sent back to tlie barracks. Why? He cannot t nduro fatigue. All our young men know this. Win n (In y are pn par ing lor a regatta or for a I all club t r for an athletic wrtstliug, they al tain. Our working pmjde will hi wise/ nin r awhile, anti the mom y the y fling av ny on hurtful intiiilq. lie. • they will put into co-operative us-ociuticu, mid ■<> be come capitalists, if the workingman puts down his wages anil then isk< s lib exp'iim s und spreads them iiut ■<. tiny will just t qua), he is not wise. 1 know wbrfingmeu who are in a perfei’t fidget uutil they get rid of tin ir last dollar. The following circumstances came vutitr our olitenratiou: A young uir.u worked hard to earn his $<IU0 or $700 | had inherited $500 from her grand father. She spent every dollar of it on the wedding dress. Then they rented two rooms in a third story. Then the young man took extra evening cmploy- Eicut—almost exhausted with the day's work, yet took evening employment. It almost extinguished his eyesight. Why did he add evening employment to the day employment? To get money. Why did he want to get money? To lay up something for a rainy day? No. To t) t iiis life insured, so that in case of his death his wife would not Lo a keg- gar? No. He put the extra evt niug work to tho day work that he might get $150 to get his wife a s’calskiu coat. The sister of tho bride heard of this achievement, and was not to be ec lipsed, j She was very poor, and she sat up work* j ing nearly all the night for a great while until she bought a sealskin coat. I have not heard of the result on that street. The street was full of those who are cu small internes, but I suppose the con tagion spread aud that everybody bad a sealskin coat and that the people came out and cried, practically, not literally, “Though the heavens fall, we must ka\o a sealskin coat. ” Tlie RecKleftnly luiproiiiieiit. I was out west, aud a minister of the gospel told me in Iowa that his church and the neighborhood hud been impoverished by the fact that they put mortgages on their farms in order to send their families to the Philadelphia centennial. It was not respectable not to go to the centennial, lii tween such evils autl pauperism thtre is a very short s:tep. The vast majority of chil dren in your almshouses are there be cause their parents are drunken, lazy or recklessly improvident. I have no sympathy for skinflint sav ing, but I plead for Christian pre- , dt nee. You say it is iniis ssible now to lay up anything for a rainy day. I know it, but we are at the daybreak of national prosperity. Mine people* think it is mean to turn the gas low when they go out of the parlor. They fet 11 m- barraesed if the doorbell rings before : they have the hall lighted. They apolo gize for the plain meal, if you surprise them at the table. Well, ir is mean if it is only to pile up a mi rrly board. Dut if it he to educate your children, if it be to give more help to your wife' when she tlt ts not fed strong, if it lo to keep your funeral day irem being horrible beyond all endurance, bt cause it is to be the disruption and annihila- ti' n t f the done stic eirelt —if it, be for that, then it is magnifici nt. There are those who are kept in pov erty because of their own fault. Tin y might have been well iff, hut they smoked or eht wed up their earnings, or tiny lived beyond their means, while olhers on the same wages and on the same salarit s went on to <■< nipt tt ncy. I know a man wh" is all the time com plaining cf his pov< rty and crying t ut auainst rich nun while lie himself k< • ps two dogs anti chew s and siik kca and is full to the chin with whisky and 1»i r. Wilkins Mienwht r said to David Coppcrlield: “Copperfield, my boy, £1 income, i xp< iih s od.; rt suit, mis ery. Hut, Coppenit id, my hoy, £‘l in- come; t-xpensi s, IDs. (id.; result, hap piness. ” Dut, O workingman, take your morning dram, and your noon dram, and your evt ring dram, and speiiti t vi rything you havt over for to bacco anti excursions, und you injure povt rty for yourself and yt ur children forever! More Doles In tlie Rag, If by some gem it us fiat t f the capi talists ' f this country < r by a m-w law of tin* governmt nt of the United .States 25 ] i r t < nt oi 50 per t<nt or 100 per ct nt wore add'd to the wages of the working classes of America, it would be i:o advantage to liuntlrtds of thou sands of tiit in unit -s they steppt d strong drink. Aye, until they quit that t vil habit the more money the more ruin, the more wages the more holes in the ! bag. Mypha is to the‘■e working people who are in a diw ijilt ship to tho whisky bottle, the betr jug anti the wine flask. And what I say to them will not be mt re appropriate to tho working classes 1 than to the husint-s classt s and tho lit- era.y < la-s< and the j rob ssional ehust-s anil all t la- 's, and not with the people ct one age mi tf than ti all ages. Take < no* geotl square h,ok at the suffering of the man whom strong drink has en thralled ami renu mbt-r that toward that goal multitudes aie running. The dis ciple of ulecheliMii suffers the loss of self respect. Just as soon as a man v.akis up and tiudn that he is tho cap- tiv« of sti» ng tlrink, 1"; 1' els dt moaned. 1 tio not caie how rockhly he at fs. Ho may say, “I don’t care;” he th < s care. He cannot look a pure man in tho eye unli ss it is with positive force of r> so lution. Thn e-fourths of his nature is | d'stn ytd; his self iesp« ct is g« i * ; lie says things he would not otherwise say; ■ be tie's things lit wt uld nt.t otbt rwiso do. W)i< n a man is niii' -tenths gt ii'i with strong drink, the fii>t thing he v ants to tlo is to pt isur.de you tliat ho i can stop any time fit: wants to. Ho can not. Tlie HiilistiUt s have bound him hand and font, anil slioin his locks, and put t.ut his •yes, and are making him grind in the mill ot a great horror. Ho cannot stop. J will prove it. He knows that his course is bringing ruin upon himself. H»* lev s him-elf. If he could stop, he would, ll" knows his course is bringing ruin upon his family. He loves tliein. He would stop if be could. Ho cannot. IVrhups he could three months or u year ago; not now. Just ask him to stop for a month. He cuiiin I—he knows he cannot, so he <1 s not try. Kitlftl by Drink, I had .a friend who w as fi r 15 year* going down under this t vil habit. Un had large means. He hail given thou sands <1 dollars to Dibit soon tits anti reformatory institutions of all sorts. He was vi ry genial, very gun rous and very lovable, mid whenever he talked about | this evil habit he would say, ”1 can ■top any time.” Hut he kept going on, going on, down, (town.dow n. HIn family would say, “1 wish yon would stop.” “Why,” he would reply, “I can stop yearly. Marriage day cuiue. The ht<db , <ujy time, if I want to.” After uv/hib he had delirium tremens—he had it twice, and yet after that he s-aid, “I could step at any time, if I wanted to.” He is dead now. What killed him? : Drink! Drink! And yet among hia last i utterances was, “I can stop at any time.” Ho did not stop it because ho could not stop it. Oh, there is a jwint in inebriation beyond which if a man goes he cannot stop! One of these vic tims said to a Christian man, “Sir, if I were told that I couldn’t get a drink until tomorrow night unless I bad all my ling' rs cut off, I would say, ‘Bring the hatchet and cut them off now.’ ” I have a dear friend in Phila delphia whese nephew came to him one day, aud when he was exhorted about his evil habit said: “Uncle, I can’t gm it up. If there stood a cannon and it was loaded, and a glass of wine were set on the mouth of that cannon, and I knew that you would fire it off just as I came up and took the glass, I would start, for I must have it.” Oh, it is a sail thing for a man to wake up in this life and ft el that he is a captive! He says: “I could have got rid of this cnee, but I can’t now. I might have lived an honorable life and died a Christian death, but there is no hope fui me now. Thtre is no escape for me. Dead, but not buried. I am a walking corpse. I am an apparition of what I once was. I am a caged immortal beating against the win s t f my rage in this direction— boating against the cage uutil there is blood on the wires aud blood upon my soul, yet not able to got cut. Destroyed without remedy!” The Drunkard's Sefft-ring. I go on aud say that the disciple of rent suffers from the loss of health. The cider men may remember that some years ago Dr. fcewt ll went through this country and electrified the people by his lectures, in which he showed the effects of alcoholism on the human stomach. He had seven or eight diagrams by which he showtd the devastation of str< ug drink upon the physical system. There were thousands cf people who turned back frt in that ulcerous sketch, swearing eternal abstinence from every thing that could intoxicate. God only knows what the drunkard suffers. Pain files cn every nerve, and travels even'muscle, and gnaws every bone, and burns v\ith every flame, and stings with evt ry poison, and pulls at him with every torture. What reptiles crawl over his sit < ping limbs. What fiends stand l y his midnight pillow. What groans tear his ear. What hor rors sliivt r through his soul. Tt Ik of the rack, talk of the inquisition, talk of tiie funeral pyre, talk of the crushing Jug- gi ruaut—he feels them all at once. Have you ever been in the ward of the hospital where these itnLriatts are dying, the stench of their wounds driving hack the attendant-, their voices Founding through the night? The keep er (■t.nies up and says: “Hush, now lo still. Mop making all this noise. ” Dut it is effietual only for a moment, frr as sr: n as the kcept r is gone they begin again: “O God! O God! licipf Help! Drink! Give me drink! H* Ip! Take tin m off me! Take them off me! O God!” And tli<n they’ si rick, and they rave, and they pluck out their hair by handfuls and bite tin ir nails into the quick, anti tin u tiny groan, and they shriek, and they Ida-pheme, and tiny ask the keepers to kill linn.— “Stab i! « ! Smother me! Strangle me! Take the tit vils off me!” Ob, it h- no fancy skt t'Jj. That thing is going on now ail up aud down the* land, aud I tt 11 y< u further that this is going to he tlie death tiiat : une of you will die. i know it. I e it coming. A DfStroj-fr «>f tin* Home. Again the inebriate suflVrs through the h>s of home. 1 do not care hov much he loves his wife and children, if this pa.—ion for strong drink has mus- tcicd him he will do tho most outra geous things, and if he could net get di ink in any other way he would sell bis family into eternal bondage. How many homes have been broken up in that way tin one but God knows. Oh, is there anything that will so tit -troy a man for this life aud damn him for the life that is to t ome? Do not tell me that a man ran It happy when he knows that he is freaking his v. ife’s heart and clothing hit ehildn n with rags. Why. there are on the rout’s and streets of this land today little children, bare footed, unwashed and unkempt, want on every patch of tin ir faded dress and en every wrinkle of their prematurely old t-ouii- temiiifCH, who would have been in church' s today anti us well clad us you un- but for tlie fact that run. destroyed tin ir parents aud drov them into the grave. Oh, rum, thou foe of God, thou d* spoilt r of homes, thou recruiting olfi- ct r of the pit, 1 hate thee. Dut my sulijtet tala s a deeper tone, anti that is that tho unfortunate of whom I speak suffers from the It-s tf tlie •< ul. Tin Dilde intimates that in the future world, if we aie unforgivcu hue, our 1 .al pasfions anti upp* tites, uni' strain! d, will go along with us and m our torni' ut there, fcn that, I sup- pi *, wh n an inebriate wakes up in that world lie will ft el un infinite thirst consuming him. Nov/, down in this world, altht ugh li» may have been vi ry just, lie could beg or he co uld steal 5 edits with which to git that which would f lake his thiist ft r a little while, but in t U mity where is the rum to come from? Oh, the di < p, exhausting, exasperat ing, everlasting thirst of the drunkard in hell! Why, if a fiend f ame up to earth for some infernal work in u grog- shop and should go Luck tal.iug on itt wing jmt one tin p of that fer which tho inebriate- in the It t world longs, vhut i xciti ini nt would it make tht re! Hut that one drop from t ff tin fi< nd'a v.ing on tin tipi f tlie tongue of the tic- sfroyetl iuebriate, let the liquid bright- lit — just touch it, let tho drop b» vi ry small, if it only have in it the smack ot ulf’ohnliodrink; let that drop just touch the It rt ini briute iu the lost world, ami he v/i uhl spring to Lin feet and t ty: “That is riirn, aim! That is rum!” And it would wake Up the cchotM of tho damned: “Give me rum! Give me rum! , Gm- me rum!’' In the future world I do not believe that it will to the absence of God that will make the drunkard’s sorrow. I do m t believe it will be tho ab: c nee of light. I do not b< lieve that i{ will be the absence of holiness. I think it will be the absence of rum. Oh, “Lotk not upon the wine when it is red, win n it movetli itself aright in the c up, for at the last it biteth like a serpent, and it stmgeth like an adder.” T!u* Hflp of liod’K Grace. While I declared some time ago that there was a point beyond which a niau could not stop, I want to tell you that, while a man cannot stop in his own , strength, the Lord God by his grace can help him to stop at anv time. I was iu a room in New York where there were many men who had been reclaimed from drunkenness. I heard their testi mony, and frr the first time in my life the re flashed out a truth I never under stood. They said: “We were victims of strong drink. We trhd to give it up, but always failed, hut somehow since we gave cur hearts to CJirist he has taken rare of us.” I believe that the time will scon come when the grace of God will show its power not only to save man’s soul hut’ hi« body and re construct, purify, elevate and redeem it. I verily believe that although you feel grappling at the roots of your tongues an almost omnipotent thirst, if you will give your heart to (-rod, ho will help you by his grace to conquer. T:y it. It is your last chance. I have look ed oft upon the desolation, fitting next to you in our religious assemblages thtre are a good many people in awful peril, ami judging from ordinary cir- cunistances there is not one chance in five thousand that they will get clear of it. There are men in every emigre gation from fc'al bath to Sabbath of whom I must make the remark that if they do not change their course within ttn years they will, as to their bodie s, lie down in drunkards’ graves, aud as to their pe nis, lie down in a drunkard's i perdition. I know that is an awful thing to say, but I cannot help saying it. Darkness Fort-vt-r. Oh, beware' You have not yet been captured. Dew a re! Whether the Lever age be poured in golden chaiie? or pew- ! ter mug, in the foam at the top, in white letters, let there be spelled out to your st ul, “Beware!” When Hit books of judgment are open, and 10,000,000 drunkards come up to get their doom, I want you to Lear witness that i, in tb? fear cf God and in the love for your soul, told yen, with all affection aud with all kindness, to beware eif that which has already exerted ir* influence upon your family, blowing tut some of it- lights—a preuie.niti(>u cf the black ness cf darkness lorevt r. Oh, if you could only bear intomprr- ance with drunkards’ hones drumming on the head t f the liquor task the (h ad march of immortal souls, mi thinks the very glance of a wine cup v. mid make you Fhudtltr, and the color of the liquor would make you think of the blood of th'- st ul, and tho foam on the tt ;< of the cup w ould rt mind you r f the fif th cm tin- maniac’s lip, and you would kneel down and pray God that, rather than your children should bee me captive s of this evil habit, yt u would lik'- to carry them out same bright spring day to ihr t emeteiy ami put them away to the la.-t shep, until at the call of the south wind the fiowtrs would come up all ovt r the grave—swt 11 prophi t-it s < f the resurrection. Get] has a Lalm for such u wound, hut what flower of comfort ever grew on a drunkard’s st pulehcr? That heritage of rich and poor, has saved many a life. For Throat and Lung affections it is "invaluable. It never fails to cure Cough, Cold, Croup and Whooping-Cough. DR. BULL’S COUGH SYRUP is the best. Price 25 cents. Chew LANGE'S PLUGS. The Great Tobacco Antidote JOc. Dealers or mail.A.C.Meier & Co., Batto-.atd. y ■ ^ t. * ■M xt':r I 1 * > The ITettlest >/ J :1 Dressed Ladies in Cherokee Coun’y are the ones who buy their dresses from us. Come and see our elegant line of Dress Goods and Millinery. Just received—a. beautiful line ot Organdies so popular for ladies’ shirt waists. I3e sure to call and see litis line. Yours Truly, Carroll & Carpenter 1 TllO I^OildCTH- The Gaffney City Land and Improvement Company, Offer for Sale Building Lots in this Flourishing Town, Also Farms near by and in reach of the schools of Limestone Springs and of this place in lots of from 30 to iUU acres on liberal time rates. A! o Agricultural Lands to rent for farm purposes. For full particulars aptly tt MOSES WOOD, Agent. X. B.—All trespassing on lands of this Company cutting and removing timber, fishing or hunting are forbidden under penalty of law. Are you not doing yourself tin injustice if you neglect such / • / "r-. N /. '-si \\ N v ! i 'r' Xf f L> r A -/ .Wstkaig Kirch Oil. Coniiecti'.ut far mt rs have found a comfi rtabic .-ide prefit in gathding the twigs, branches ami saplings rf 1 ia* k birch for the lircli oil distilleries. By protecting tlie young growth crops aie quickly raised. The birch brush has brought from $1.50 to $3 a ton. Th3 birch oil J:a- r sold at $5 to $ ; S a pound, but is now less. One ton of 1 iroh yields four pounds of oil. Farmi rs t-an make the oil themselves. Tin-distill ry may be any rough building, and the machinery is inexpensive. The birch tw igs, not ovt r two in' In s in diameter, are cut in lengths of five inehf s and thrown into v. ati r tight tanks with copper liottoms, iu whi'h a!" coils of steam pipes. Three feet if water is poured in, tho tanks are hermetit ally seal* d, and steam is turn'd into the pijie-s. Th" water is k' pt toiling six hours, und the steam, ri-:ug, passes into a pipe which runs in the form of a worm into a barrel of cold v.attr ti n-tantly remwod. The steam i t t ntli nst d in the worm, anti the oil drips frt ui the cud of the pipe into a pail. Ir was ftirini rly clarified from a tin 11 biiwn to a light gm u uftt r this proei —. Now this is done by spreading a heavy v. eohn blaukt t over tin- bireh- w< < d in-idc tlie tank, ar.d the t il drips out pure and ready for market.—Chi cago Journal. A WEIGHTY MATTER a*? that of doitig your trading with mt*. I have tin* latest styles? in Spring ttnd Summer Clothim:, Alpaca Coats and Vests, Straw Hats, patent leather ami tan Shoe-, Fruit Jars, Jolly Tumblers, and anything to he found in a general merchandise-tore, at rock bottom prices. A complete line of Farming Tools and Hardware 1 always on hand. Respect fully, S MiH.ionary With Onion Satic-c. A missionary about to be pat to death by a savage king, whom ho hud vainly att mptcfl to convert, was greatly as- tonishid to find that the king hail sud denly n solved to pardon him. The only st>T irlatiou his majesty.made was that be should mount his horse and carry u Final 1 F' aled pack f aid a letter to an- cth< r king some distauen away. lie start'd off iu high glee, ai d on his way be tin t with a detachment of KiiglisTi sailors, -- nt to his cn-istaiiee. They wanted Join to gn on beard their ►hip, tint he declined, being desirous of fulfilling his mission. But they would not accept this answer, and while tho discussion w as proa .ding an officer c x- uminerl the packet ami the letter. Iu ih* fenm r he found a number cf pungent little onions, while thi' latter cent.uind the simple but significant words in native hieroglyphics: “H«) v.ill bt delicious with these."— Pearson's Weekly. r mw ■ . - Vi \ 'A A x: rf 'M c • ■rj .t U v/j L^.,1 '//> No lO lmti'. He—Last wetkyou told me you loved me. Bbc—But things are different now. Hu—'Thera is no dirfenuce iu my , Jcir.Icr's LilL—LTUoit Free Presa, Say the m in tiling* :o do is to keep the stojri.ci-, Tver a id bowels in order if j"ti wan: l.> iivc long ai d keep vveh. Good piysiciaas say the san.e thing, tco. '1 lie remedy called RIPANS TABULES while not mysterious or miraculous in it : curative ta.dil’c-. i : a * h pie formu!:i prescribttl by the l ist pi-y-iciai -lor tii-i-1.<; ■ "t t!.e < g«»Uve organs. Just little t ji>l> ts. easy to'take, en-y tt> but d qu < toacr. If your trouble is Dyspepsia, Diliousness. I dz/ir.c -s. Heatia< ( i iistipaiion, llcartburn, and the like, no reed of railing a physician. Kip., .s iabulcs contain exactly what lie would tell you to t .ke. ONE TABUE GIVES RELiCE. riPJCANENT CURE FOLLOWS A FAIR TRIAL. NO CSCIRTAINTY AEOCT IT.