Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, July 20, 1905, Page 2, Image 2
2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. r'er year (} 00 112 paid in advance 1 APVERTISINO RATES: Advertisements pre published at the rate ol #ce dol.ar per square lor one insertion and fiftj ecr.ts i er square for each subsequent insertion Rates l>v the year, or for sii or three month*, •re low and uniform, ar.d will be furnished oo licat.on. Leg til and Official Advertising per square three times or less, each subsequent nsei tlo.i fO cents per square. Local notices lo cents pet line for ona tnser icrtion; 5 cents per line for each subsequent •on-ecutlve insertion. Obituary notices oyer five lines, 10 cents line. Sin.ple announcements of births, mar tinges and deaths will be inserted free. Business eards, five lines or less. 45 per year; ever ;.ve lints, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for less than 75 cents per Usua. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pmtss Is complete •nd affords facilities for doing the best class of nrrta Pauiicui.au attention paidto Law PttINTINO. No paper will be discontinued until arrear- Efcs are paid, except at the option of the pub slier. Papers sent out of the county must be paid lor in advance. Cocoanuts, being lighter than water, are transported along waterways in i lie same manner that timber is float ed. Thousands of them are thrown to gether and the whole mass surround ed by long strands of bark fiber. One native can tow a number of such rafts, and the fiber is tough enough to stand considerable rough treatment. In a train wreck on the Missouri Pa cific railway every car except one went into tlie ditch at the side of the track, but not a person on the train was seriously injured. The train was running at 25 miles an hour, yet not a car was damaged by the sudden stopping. The cars were new and heavy and of firm steel framework. Sea water as a medicinal beverage, to reduce obesity, is becoming a fad among many women spending the summer in resorts along the New .Jer sey coast. The business of supplying the water has grown into quite an en terprise by fishermen. Three or four glasses a day are said to have a bene ficial (ffect upon the digestion as well as a tendency to purify the blood and reduce the flesh. Geological conditions remarkably -iiJse those observed at the Kimberly mines in South Africa hav§ recently been discovered in Kentucky. The Piedmont Plateau, (.lie southeastern -vIiSSG. of Appalachians, lias Already produced, in the region Tielwcen S&uth y. . t •+ *.. «irn Virginia and Georgia, some 10 of 12 diamonds, which fTd've varied in weight from those of two or three carats to the "Dewey" diamond, which when found weighed over 2?, carats. It is gratifying to note that the commission intrusted with the distri bution of the awards provided by the Carnegie hero fund have not confined their benefactions to the giving of medals, but have granted substantial Burns of money to a number of worthy and deserving persons—the widow-:, in most instances, of men who have lost their lives in heroic service to hu manity. The distribution of bronze and silver medals does not serve ilie purposes nor further the objects for which this hero fund was primarily created. What is supposed to be the largest pair of shoes ever made in this coun try was turned out recently in a Nashua shoe factory. The size of these shoes may well be imagined when it is known that the weight is 18 pounds for the pair. Each shoe is 23 inches long and 7'i inches wide in the widest place. Every detail is as carefully attended to as in an ordinary first-class shoe, but because of the enormous size it required several weeks to turn them out. They were made for a negress who lives near A' lanta. There are many ways of getting a living in New York City, but the most amazing of them all was partly unfold ed in the Tombs court recently when it was alleged there was a regular es tablished business for "losing babies" there, the headquarters of the gang being some where on Mott street. For a long time the managers of children's societies have been convinced that the "losing" of babies has been conducted systematically. For many months they have found too much system in the abandonment of babies not to believe Ihere was a regular trade in it. There is comforting assurance of the magnitude of the 1905 crop of wheat coming from the statistics of the agricultural department, addition al evidence of the fact that the farmer remains the real king and that this is a land of plenty and of promise, with the promise fulfilled. The crop of 1905, with the exception of the crop of 1901, will be the largest ever har vested in the United States, the esti mate being a total of spring and win ter wheat of 729,000,000 bushels, tin' crop of 1901 having been 748,000,01)0 bushels. If one-half that, is claimed for the new German p»ini is true, the white lead base of paints so universally used is doomed. The new pigment is ob tained from a burnt limestone which ■contains a considerable proportion, 2 f < per cont. or more, of magnesia, the best combination being that found naturally in dolomitic limestone. Thi> is mixed with a hydrocarbon and fired until all the carbon id consumed Among the desirable features claime, 1 for the new paint are fineness and smoothness of surface, covering power jptrmanence aud fcheapnesii. PARTY IS ALWAYS ADRIFT. Instability of the Democracy Costs It the Support of Able Agencies. One swallow does not make a summer, and neither does the desertion of the democratic party by some of its greatest newspaper organs indicate its dissolution to the point of immediate disappearance, says the St. Louis Globe- Democrat. Two such desertions have taken place within the past year, how ever. which, because of a wide va riance of opinion in the two seceding journals, on the factional issue dividing that party, indicate unmistakably how far that organization has drifted from any safe and sure anchorage. Immedi ately following the action of Judge Parker io accepting the edinocratig nomination for the presidency on a platform which he had repudiated, the Chicago Chronicle, one of the ablest and most honest of democratic party organs, announced that, the party hav ing ceased to stand for anything defi nite or positive, and to have any con victions touching any point in contro versy and offering no assurance to any of its supporters of what they could or might expect in the event of its suc cess, the Chronicle would not consent to support it, but would, in the fu ture, act with and for the republican party. Since that announcement the Chron icle has been consistent in the perform ance of its promises. Its change of party allegiance was decried at the time, and since, as being inspired by devotion to the single gold standard, for which that paper, while still retain ing i:s democratic party connection, had stood in the two 'preceding cam paigns. Its defection was as "goldbuggery," but. such a denuncia tion could deceive but few. if any, in the light of the palpable straddling the democracy was attempting. The re sult of the poll showed how close to the line of thinking by many thousands of democrats the Chronicle had shaped its course. Disaffection was as marked in one factions camp as in the other. Everyw here, it seemed, democrats had reached the conclusion that in voting for such an organization they would be voting for uncertainty, hesitation, doubt, weakness, delay and every form of public calamity to be invited by bad government. That the breaking up of the party was not Qn factional lines tfi£ an nouncement made some months agfl that the Cincinnati Enquirer, for years the organ of the quant it iative money theory, without reference to the quality of the quantity, must no longer be con sidered a democratic party organ, was strikingly j n evident, the Enquirer, too, liau become convinced that- the party, as now constituted, cannot be relied upon for the carrying out of any policy in government. The resignation of John R. McLean, the owner of the Enquirer, as a member of the national democratic committee was sent to the Ohio state democratic convention. It is followed by an announcement that the Enquirer will soon declare its formal adhesion to the republican party. Whether this is done or not, its deser tion of the democratic pary may be im mortal, but just now it looks much like Dr. Holmes' immortal one-hoss shay on the morning when it went to pieces: "All at once, and nothing first, Just as bubbles do when they burst." Policy of Wisdom. It has never been argued that in all things the tariff would result in cheap ening prices at home. If we desired to put our workingmen, wage earners, on the same basis as those with whom they come in competition in foreign countries this difference in prices might easily be overcome. But the country has repeatedly decided that it is best to keep the wage earners pros perous, that it is wiser to make it nec essary that they pay higher prices than those for which foreigners might fur nish the goods, if thereby they were given opportunity to earn the money with which to buy. There is no profit in having the necessities of lifo for sale at a low figure, if busiaess is slack and men cannot get the price.—Portland ((Me.) Express. The Right Remedy. The American protective system has won because it has stimulated inven tion and domestic competition and thus helped workers and capitalists. When so perverted as to help capitalists and to bunco consumers, the remedy is not to upset a system that has enriched our people, but to remedy its perversion un der trust conspiracies. It is important that we recall the great panic we had in American industry under "tariff re form" in 1893-1890. A short memory in this exigency will imperil our eco nomic prosperity. Free-traders would be too glad to divert attention from trust legislation to free-trade. But the American people are not likely to bite cheese on such a trap.—Lewiston (Me.) Journal. fit is the pjtrty of protection that has made this country what it is, and the protectionists can afford to wait. A demonstration is all that is needed to show that America cannot prosper by purchasing abroad with the roman tic hope of selling abroad.—American Economist. exercising his advisory powers with the Equitable, we wonder if .Mr. Cleveland would accept. Mr. Bryan as a good risk? — Washington Post. t 'Mr. Bryan recently had occasion to assure a correspondent that the masse 3 who constitute the bono and sinew of the democratic party would not again permit a retreat from the high ground of IS9G and 1900, and in cidentally he remarked that his paper was offering club rates for subscription of four or more. Thus we see that Mr. Bryan has developed shrewd business iiT-tinets, even though he Li sti 1! a re- I&rmcr.—E ilXalo Express. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1905. TRADE CONDITIONS SOUND Industry at Home and Trade Abroad Indicate the Continuance of Prosperity. A bit of good news comes from the Pittsburg district, one of the greatest centers of the steel and iron business not only of the United States, but of the whole world. It is to the effect, states the Troy Times, that there will not be the customary summer shutdown and that operations will continue unbroken and with a full force of employes. It lias been usual to discontinue work in the steel mills for a month or two at this season and that programme has been regarded by wage earners as quite the regular proceeding. With work going on the advantage in the way of addi tional ins<jm§ wilj Ije readily apparent. Ther6 will be no closing of the estab lishments even for repairs, as whatever is necessary to be done in that line will be looked after as well as possible with work at full blast. Additional significance is given to this statement because wages in the steel in dustries have been kept to a high level, and in very many instances have been considerably increased of late. Thus it appears that the relations be tween the employers and their men are of the most amicable sort, and that good feeling and satisfaction exist on both sides. The situation is assurance of continued prosperity and enlarging ac tivity. The mills are kept busy and the men are getting good pay because there is a great demand for iron and steel. This demand, of course, is largest at home, but it is not. confined to the United States. On the contrary, as the official figures show, we are exporting more manufactures than ever before, and iron and steel articles form a great and increasing proportion of them. At the same time, there are many crude products which American mills cannot t urn out in proportions sufficient to meet all home demands, and these have to be procured from abroad. This helps to account for the large imports of steel billets and also of other articles which are necessary in order to supply domestic requirements. The work of transforming these into finished Ameri can products gives employment to thou sands of persons at American wages, and so there is a direct benefit to the mass of handicraftsmen, most of them skilled in their calling. Looked at in this light there is no cause for alarm at the big imports, which for the 11 months of ilie fiscgi year with May ? \ . t'Jf" amounted to $1.<>27.000,000, the largest in our history and $18,000,000 more the imports for the same per'.od last year. Exports were also l»Vge. the to tal fgr the 11 months mentioned having open $1.307,000,00& against $1,3C7,000,- JOO in 1904.. Industry at home and our trade abroad both stand on the soundest footing, with everything to indicate that present con ditions are likely to be maintained in definitely. The steel business continues to be a reasonably accurate barometer, and it points to fair weather. SEVERAL TARIFF TRUTHS. Facts Which Show That Protection Is the Foundation of Pros perity. Every once in awhile we are compelled to listen to the lugubrious wailing of some unhappy mortal, generally a seek er after leadership in some organiza tion with socialistic tendencies, that the high tariff not only tends to increase the cost of living to the poor man and farmer, but actually brings about that undesirable result, and he reenforces his contention and clinches his argu ment with some alleged statistics show ing that the cost of living is anywhere from 25 to 50 per cent, greater than it would be if the tariff schedules were revised in a more or less radical man ner. It is true that the cost of living is greater now than it was during the period from 1890 to 1599. but a careful analysis of the figures fails to show that the tariff has much to do with it.says the Wheeling Telegraph. Taking the prices of the ten-year period from 1890 to 1899 as 100. we find that in 1904 the increase in farm products are repre sented by the figures 126.2. food 107.2 cloths and clothing 109.8, fuel and light ing 132.(1. metals and implements 109.6, lumber and building materials 122.7. drugs and chemicals 110 and miscel laneous articles 111.7. It will be noted that the highest Increase, that in fuel and lighting, is upon necessities with which the tariff has practically nothing to do. The next greatest increase is in products of the farm, where the tariff cuts very little figure indeed, while metals and implements, where we would naturally expect the greatest increase, if the cry of the anti-tariff howler was warranted, would be at the head of the list, whereas the truth is it is next to the bottom. Against, this increase should be set the gain to the working classes in the larger opportunity afforded for employment, and it will be seen that the hue and cry against the tariff and even the trusts has very lit tle of substantial basis. It should be realized that any blow struck at the prosperity of the wage workers and file farmer will hit the general progress of the country a hard knock. The figures here given are front the department of lalx>r, and are official. C "Ohio democracy seems to l>p per manently wedded to the ideas of Bryan, of Tom Johnson and of the'socialistic ally inclined section of the party. The state convention was dominated by such influences, and the "conserva tives" had no show whatever. This «eems to exxplain why such anient suporters of old-time democratic prin ciples as John R. McLean and his Cin cinnati Enquirer are abandoning the Bryanized party and coining out for the republican cause. Evidently they regard the democratic organization a3 hopelessly wrong-headed,—Troy Times. POPULAR SCENIC ROUTE. Buffalo & Susquehanna Railroad Company. Condensed Time Table in Effect Jane 4, 1905. READ DOWN. READ UP. Sun day Week Days. | Daily ! Week Days. Only ™ P.M. A. M. A. M. A. M. |P. M P.M. STATIONS. A. M. A. M.; P. M. M P.M 618 8 18! 11 18 518 I,v Addison Ar 10 13 1 443 850 600 900 12 00 ti 00 Knoxville : 930 400 806 814 9 1" 12 14 614 Westfield ! 917 I 347 55 6 471 947 12 47 647 Gaines Junction.... 8 4li ; 311 725 10 00 100 Ar. T Oaleton T LV 823 7 « 700 10 20 500 700 Lv. } "ttieton, ■ /Ar 880 j 300 707 740 11 00 540 .Cross Fork June 739 '6 23 800 11 20 602 Hulls ' 7 18 602 820 11 40 620 Wharton J 656 J 540 12 15 Sinnainahoning....! 5 00 12 20< Driftwood 4 52 , 1 02 M9dix.JK.un ! * 08 1 23) | Tyler 342 1 31 Penfield ; I 333 2 00 Duliois I 3 00 I jt>. M. P. M. ; P.M.' i A.M. P.M. P.M.' 1 A. M. P.M A.MLP.M 8 20, 1( 620 i Wharton 650 j j 15 20 11101 829 il2 00 629 Costello ' 644 | | |5 08 10581 8 38 12 15 I I Ar F 1 Lv 6 35 I I [5 00 10W| 1 00, 6 38! 8 00] I Lv ( > AUSUN /Ar | 3;I0 950 805 2 oo! 705 845 .... Keating Summit . .. A.M. ! 2,20 910 740 r. M. J JA. M.i I : j I j I jA. M. P. M. A. M. *• M.i P. M. I | 830 330 Wellsville I 1 806 2Z46 858 352 Genesee I 741 218 9 09, 4 01! West Bingham, | 7 30; 206 9 27) 4 15 Newfield Junction. j 7 18! 1 50 I 10 10 455 Galetou 630 1 05, 11 05 ! 625 I...Cross Fork June ... ! 7 3oj 16 40; CONNECTIONS. Additional trains leave Galeton at 8:15 a. m. atid 6:25 p. M., arriving at Ansonia at 9:21 a.m. and 7:00 p. m. Returning leave Ansunia at 9:15 a. m., an 1 8:10 p. in., arriving at Galeton at 10:09 a. M , and 9:05 p. m. At Driftwood with P. R. R. At Dußois with B. R. P. Ry. At Keating Summit with B. & A. V. DIV. of Pennsylvania R. R. At Ansonia with N.Y.C.& H R. R. for all points north and south. At Newfield Junction with C. <ST P. A. Ry., Union Station. At Genesee with N. Y & Pa., Ry. Union Station. At Addison with Erie R. R., Union Station. At Wellsville with Erie R. R. for points east and west. At Binnamahoning with P. R. R.—P. & E. Div. At. J. MCMAHON, Div. Pass Ag^., Galeton, Pa. W. C. PARK. Gen'lSupt., Galeton. Pa. E. A. NIEL, Traffic Mgr. Buffalo, N.Y. C. PETER CLARK. Uen'L Mgr. Buffalo, N. Y. BJODKM M-POI.KA.DQT.CANS.M ■at aftWis the timeToPaint.o o Memonmdum.— P Above all, USE GOOD PaTnT! U [ ] . - The oil I linseeJ oil I Just pure linseed is the "life"—the one great requis- 112 MR " e good paint for which there is no substitute—and the sure way to get the w pure, fresh linseed oil is to buy the oil and Mh£®eA,. E nou**Z M//vr FEJJ separately. For every gallon *' Kinloch Paint buy one gallon of lintecJ oil. *,"•* ■ Tnis makes two gallon* e.-paint, ready for use. You then know that the paint MS? you're putting house is alive—"the genuine oil is in it,"and paint is not 4__ KT paint unless it contains 50* of really pure oil. Wc will further explain .he virtues ■ ■I of Kinloch Paint if you will call and see us. L FOR SALE BY E E HURTEAU & FORBES I G.SCHMIDT'S,' G.SCHMIDT'S,' HEADQUARTERS FOR FRESH BREAD, ll gopalar §j* M rj nui | « CONFECT | ONER y Daily Dslivsry. All orders given prompt and * skillful attention. WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY TheTh*v«i(ood th.twt of YE» OTDHEIfI Mt a »art cur«d thousands cn 1 \ I nHnil AM 0 /Jl *Ww of Nervous Diseases, such W mi ** r asDeWiltr.Difslnesfc.Sleepless- B API IU I Bess and Varicocele,Atrophy,&c w jT 112 SljciS I /V¥TUey clear tho brain, atrrnf then \ the ofreulatioß, make dlgettioa /fr\ Perfect, and Impart a healthy §£&>- iSfe vigor to Ike whole be!n|. All drains and losses sure checked permanently. Unless patients are nreperiy cured, fthoir condition often worries them Into Insanity. Consumption or Death. Mailed sealed. Price $i per bo*; 6 boxes, with iroa-cisd legal guarantee to cure or rcfuAdtht money, Ij eo. Send for free book. Address, PEAL MEDICINE CO- Clmtu4a %» Wm sa.le by &. G. bodsea, Drmggltt, PA. - Hotel Between 12th atid 13th Sts.. on Filbert St. I Philadelphia, Pa. Three minutes WALK from tlie Heading I Terminal. 11 1 Five minutes the Penn'a H. I European Plan SI.OO per day and upwards. | American Plan $2 oo per day. FRANK M. SCIIEIBLEY. Manager. ■ |nMain"ii»!:.Deai(sg ! A Bnfe, certain relief for Supprmsed I I Menntruatton. Never known to fall. Hufe! I I Buret Rpeedy! Bat<Bfaction Uuaranteed I lor money Refunded. Bent prepaid for K I 81.00 per box. AVlltsend them oil trlel, to E, 1 be paid for when relieved. Ham pies tree. B 9 UNiTED MEDICAL CO., Box 74, LANCASTGft PA. B Bold in Emporium by L. il'aggart an, K. C. Dcdson. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kldnevs and bindtier right. 1 12; [A 0 Vv A DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT Iffej JOFT'J v; ';> JVY XA>~ V.VS PGR PKSPARED ONLY AT TUB LABORATORY OP £i3 \gk X<SN£s LJ E. C. DsWITT & COMPANY. CHICAGO* ILL, Bold by K. C # Dodson, Druggist. o promptly obtain U. B. and Foreign <j 112 Bend model, sketch or photo oi invention for r 112 free report on patentability. For free book, 112 * Howto BecureXf) Jtnr R3flD!/C? writer S The Place to Bay Cheap i ) J. F. PARSONS' > frfwlwem Safe, upep'l v regulator; rontf. T> nigglst* or ranil Uooklet free. DU. LAFKANCO, Philadelphia, l'a. TIMB TABLB Ho. «. COUDERSPOR7 & PORT ALLEGANY R t Taking effect Ma y »7Ut. 1901. EASTWARD. n°T rrcTi STATIONS, r. M.», M. A. M. A.M. Port Allegany,.. LY. Sls 7 03 11 9t Qolcmat) .7.. »S M *° »li «1 Burtvllle, »8 90 1 II 1147 toilette, » 49 1 iSi.-,.. 11 Kft KVOw"on'« *8 45 .... •" *ll 5» fit OA, 3 58 7 S5 12 05 Olmsted »« 05 *7 88 «12 09 Hammonds, 1 00 °° ;"12 18 n~ 112 Ar. 4 20 A. *. 7 45 12 18 OM-eereport. j Ly 61# g 9Q! j North Condersport '8 15 00 ! *1 flfc Frlalt's 8 25 .... >6 10 *1 1* Coleebar*. >« it *6 171 1 W Seven Bridges, *8 45 .... # 6 21 »1 *4 Raymonds'*, *7 oo .... »e HO 185 gold. 705 1 8 38, 1 41 NewAeld °o ! 141 Newßeld Junction, 737 16 45 150 Perkins, *7 401 I*6 48. »15» Carpenter's, 7 18' *° •] 67 Drowell's 7 00|..... |»6 53! *8 »1 Ulysses Ar 805 ..... t 05l 2 1C ia, | r. v. WB9TWASD. r i | s r s r STATIONS. | j ! —— A. M. P. M.IA. K. ; Ulysses, LT.I 720 !» #lO Orowell's, i«7 27 *2 82!" 9 19' Carpenter's, 00 84 • 9 22 ..... Perkins, I*7 82 *2 37 • » 23 NewfleldlJunctlon I 7 87, 2 42f 982 NewfleM, *7 41 2 46! 00 !,...« G01d,..., 7 44 2 49' 9 40| ..... Raymond's »7 49, 2 54;* 947' ..... Seren Bridge 91 *8 03* lO 02 ~..« Oolesburg, *8 04 ' 3 09 *lO 10 F rink's. «8 12 »8 17.*10 40!....« North Ooudersport, 00 (*3 26 *lO 35; .. . I Ar. 8 15 8 80 10 45 Coudersport, I I jr. ( LY. ( 28! 600 130 Hammonds, .... °® !°° j OO I Olmsted, »8 88 *6 86; *1 81 ..... Mln». 837 6 10) 1 87' Kaqwlton's 00 i«6 171 ! Bcilelte 847 8 211 151 Burtville 854 628 2 011 Coleman, *8 84 °° [.....' Poi t Allegany «M It 40, 4 25! (•) Flag stations! (®*j ¥rains"Xo not stop ~ ' ♦) Telegraph offices. Train Noa. 8 and 10 will carry passengers. Tains 8 audlO do. Trains run on EasJ»rc giaMard time. ' At Ulysses with Fall Brook R'j Psr poltii north and south. At B. A 8. Junc tion with BuSalo i:SossjuehannaH. R. north for Wellsville, south for Saleton and Ansonia. At Port Allegany with MT. N. Y.AP. R. R., north for Buffalo, Olean, Bradford and Bm«thport; south for Keating Summit, Austin, Emporium end Pen&'a R. R., poluu. B.A. MoCLCRE >3en'lßupt. Ooudersport, P»„ I Who is I Your | \ Clothier? ! I I If it's R. SEGER & CO,. | you are getting the right g | kiud of merchandise. There 8 I is no small or grand decep- g tlon practiced in their store. I Sustained success decjon- I strates that there ia I "growth in truth"in the j retailing of NEW AND UP-TO-DATE CLOTHING AT POPULAR PRICES. R. SEGER & CO. j For Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Fine Commercial Job Work of All Kinds, Get Our Figures. 9 inTf IT A surs if jon uss 5 I PILES Supposllonj I m b Malt TboapMßf t rg H thrj *9 all tou olsins for then." Dr. S. 11. bevors, K ■ Ito«k. w. T«., writes : "Th«y §!»« vclrersal taiit K I ftcllon. Dr. nD. UoOlll, Clarksburg. Tcnn., writes: K ■ •' ID a praetlct «112 93 yaars, I have fouai BO rero«4V to B| g >T l>rus«*«t». hahtlW HUPY, LAWCA»TtR, PA. fl Sold In Kiuporius by i> t Tagg&rt and a. O Dotlaou. EVERY WOMAN Sometimes noeds a reliabla monthly regulating mediciuo, A DR. PEAL'S YROYAL PILLS, Are prompt' I ..in In result. The genu ine (Dr. iv .iscppoint. 81.00 per bojv Bold' druggist . waodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Foley's Kidney Cure taakes kidneys and bladder right. BAN TJ ER SALVE the most healing ealve In the world.