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Show r hur Docs iy In Health and 36. r fG TO TBY. phur will recall to v days when our there gave us our ar and molasses p. al spring and fall cand cure-all and, fashioned remedy it; , but the remedy itablc, and a large taken to get any fall the beneficial fa palatable, con-lat con-lat a single grain than a tablc-sulpliur. tablc-sulpliur. earch and experi-t experi-t the best sulphur hat obtained from llphido) and sold the name of Stu-s. Stu-s. They are small ts and contain the jiple of sulphur in d, effective form, ire of the value of " in restoring nnd .'igor and health: on the liver and 1 purifies nnd cn-le cn-le prompt elimina-il. elimina-il. kknew this when lphur and molasses 1;. but the crudity ary flowers of sul-jj-than the disease, frrith the modern tions of sulphur, alcium Wafers is and most widely ural antidote for bles and cure con-ho con-ho blood in a way patient and ph3"sl- Is jwhilo experiment-ledicB, experiment-ledicB, soon found i Calcium was su-rm. su-rm. He savs: "For 1'od troubles, espe-Ifrom espe-Ifrom constipation 3n surprised at the i Stuart's Calcium itffcring from boils n deep-seated car-atedly car-atedly seen thQm r in four or five clear and smooth, lcium Wafers is a ud sold by drug-eason drug-eason tabooed by ; I know of noth-!e noth-!e for constipation, bios, nnd ospecial-n ospecial-n diseases, as this 3who are tired of i-called blood "pu-fcStuart's "pu-fcStuart's Calcium aorc palatable and I ind address today kage and see for S57 Stuart Bldg., r compauied bv no public explanation,, exposed ex-posed him to suspicious and injurious conjectures such as must naturally arise when a man in public, oflico is abruptly dismissed by his Government with what is obviously intended to be discredit. The correspondence shows the lamily rclntions of the President and- tho Sto-rers Sto-rers from the time Mr. Roosevelt was Governor of New York just after the Spanish-American war Some of the Jlooaevolt letters to Storer Sto-rer were addressed "Jlv Dear Bellamy,' Bella-my,' and to his wife, "My Doar Maria," Ma-ria," and Mrs. Storer addressed tho President as "Dear Theodore." Mr. Storer assorts that Koosevclt himself while Governor of New York, urged the Storcrs to use their influ-encf influ-encf with the ATatican for Ireland's promotion, pro-motion, believing the prelate's well-known well-known patriotism would aid in solving the problems connected with the Catholic Cath-olic church in the Philippines. Tho later letters of Mr. Roosevelt as President Presi-dent arc published evidently, to show the President 's alleged inconsistency. Eoosevelfc Is Severe One letter of the I'resident to Mrs. Storer dated December 11, 1905, after the efforts of the Storers in behalf of Archbishop Ireland began to aitrnct attention, at-tention, contains the following pas-sn pas-sn ges t "Your direct or implied complaint of and reflections upon my own personal conduct give me no concern, but 1 am verv gravely concerned at the mischievous mis-chievous effect 3-ouv letters must have in misrepresenting the position of the United States Government and by the far-reaching Governmental scandal your indiscretion may at any time cause. "Your letters not only convey a totally to-tally wrong impression of my attitude, but" they are such as you have no business busi-ness whatever to write, in view of tho position of your husband in the diplomatic diplo-matic service. . "The letter of Cardinal Merry Del Val to vou of November 23 is a rebuke re-buke to "vou. expressing plainly his belief be-lief that, you have been unwnrrnnlably oflicions in matters with which you have properly no concern. Jfc should of itself be 'enough to show you how exceedingly unwiso and improper your "action in writing to him was. "I am indignant that tho wife of an Embassador in the United States scr-vico scr-vico should have written such a letter, should have given the impression undoubtedly un-doubtedly conveyed in that letter and should have incurred such a rebuke. "You don't seem to realize that it is out of the question for me know-ingl- to permit the wife of one of our diplomats to engage in ecclesiastical intrigues to influeuco the Vatican." Promise Is Demanded. After referring to the rqport that Mrs. Storrer was known in Europe as tho American Embassadress to Rome, Mr. Roosevelt closes thus: "I must, ask you to give me this positive pos-itive promise in writing if Bellamy is to continue in tho service, and if you even unintentionally violate it I shall have to ask for Bellamy's resignation, for I cannot, longer afford to have tho chance of scandal being brought on the entire American diplomatic service and on the Government itself by such indiscreet in-discreet and ill-advised action as yours has been." "I cannot trust myself to express fully the feeling of indignation with which I read tho letter to Mrs. Storer," says Mr. Storer. "Though I was in the public service, ser-vice, I felt and still feel tnat I had lost none of the rights which a man has to judge of the propriety of letters addressed to his vrifc, and to resent an improper communication. ''I did not then know whatxT have since learned, that tho lottcr was not even written for my wife's eyes nor niino alone, but ha'd been shown to others before it was sent, and thus U6ed to make a case against a lady, a trusting friend, who could not be heard in her own defense. "Mj' wife wns doliboratelj accused of having quoted isolated sentences from the President's letters to convince other persons that ho was doing exactly ex-actly what, as he asserts, ho had ex-plicitlj' ex-plicitlj' stated in writing that he would not do. Based on No Evidence. "This charge of Bhameful conduct was based on no evidence which could oven have misled the writer into a hasty judgment, but was in answer to a letter which, whether approved or not, at least furnishes no such evidence evi-dence oither in itself or in its incisures. in-cisures. "The tone of long suffering and outraged out-raged patience, tho careful omission o allmeution of anything that the writer had himself done and authorized to bo done in tho matters complained of, tho quotation from the letters written at the time of my orrnnd to tho Pope, without any of tho facts and circumstances circum-stances related above which would givo those letters their true character or show that they were an angry complaint bocauBo what he had directed to be done had become known these things with the abusive personal characterization characteriza-tion of my wife and the assumed indignation in-dignation with which it had been in fact permitted and encouraged whoro not expressly directed, seemed to mo put the letter outside the limit of anything any-thing justifiable even in a stranger." " Wnat a sense of outraged friendship it aroused in us can perhaps be understood un-derstood by anyone who has read even tho small part of the private correspondence corre-spondence given above," In concluding his letter, which is dntcd at Cincinnati. November, 3 006, the former Embassador says: "I writo this letter without the knowledge of Archbishop Trelaud." |