Newspaper Page Text
The News
DOUGLAP GLEBBNEP, Ed and Piop
,3fe '..t‘. ! =
Rome Tribune: “How mean in Wil
lie Hearat to throw rocks at the coal
trust and win supreme court decision*
•gainst it Oh, Willie is so radical and
unsafe.”
The staid New York Herald gets this
off without a smile: “What Judge
Parker needs is weight,” said a South
ern senator, and Hoke Smith leaped on
the New Yorker's bandwagon.
Col, Livingston puts himself on rec
ord as Hie original Parker man. He is
also, according to our recollection, the
original Hearst man. As a matter of
fact, the Hon. Lon is the original It.
By the way, hasn’t the Atlanta Jour
nal yet heard of that decision against
the coal trust won by the heinous
Hearst? Why doesn’t it denounce it
as a political trick and a yellow peril?
“Mr. Hearst’s life long neighbors and
acquaintances continue to endorse him
as a clean and honorable man, politi
cally and otherwise. But, of course,
they know nothing about it,’’ says the
Home Tribune.
-«■*- ——
Kentucky proposes to disfranchise
her negro population by making chicken
stealings felony jifter June 15. A
felon loses his right of suffrage, ami this
is the most insidious blow yet -truck at
the XVth amendment.
Os course, Hearst must have bought
that supreme court decision against
the coal trust. But maybe if he were
president he might bribe that tribunal
to render a few more decisions in favor
of the people against the trusts.
The Times-Enterprise says: “Thom
asville affords an example of peace and
harmony to the Democratic world,
Parker and Hearst here dwell together
in unity. Only they are a firm of
plumbers and the junior partner spells
his name Hurst.”
It was only a few days ago that they
derided Hearst with having only one
congressional supporter and now they
sneer because they say only six con
gressmen are fo v him. Well, that’s a
pretty good growth in a few days. Be
sides, congressional cliques never yet
made presidents.
According to Admiral Walker it will
be necessary to go 120 feet below the
sea-level to get proper foundations for
the Boh io dam in Panama. As the
dam is to be IXI feet above the s-a-level.
it will be 210 led high. That’s pret
ty d ah, that is, it’s quite high, so
t o n<» k.
Occasionally, if inadvertently, the
Macon Telegraph gets a sound state
ment in the midst of its editorial wan
derings. Here is one of them : “It is
to be feared that neither Murphy nor
Hill has an eye to the party’s true in
terests. What these bosses are after is
personal ascendancy and supremacy in
New York State politics,”
The latest reason given by the At
lanta Journal for the nomination of
J’arker m that it would be gratifying
to Cleveland. The Ilemocratic party
has done so few things i i the last de- 1
cade that pleased the old man, that
now it is proposed to do this thing in
order to soothe the declining years of
tpe Stuffed Prophet of I’rinceton ,
Editor JbiieA, Os the Aberdeen (Miss.)
Examiner, says: “It must be remem
bered that the substitution of the blan
ket scarf roll, for the old knapsack,
now adopted by all nations, was intro
duced by the Confederates in the firs l
year ot the civil War: that they were
the first to employ torpedoes in war,
the first to build an iron clad and the
first to use submarine boats and torpe
doe>. The Confederate States was the
most progressive of all warlike pow
ers in the advancement of military
conveniences and appliances.
The New York Commercial says:
“It should be borne in mind that the
wasteful methods of planting, culti
vating and harvesting cotton in many
sections of the South, the deteriora
tion of seed and scarcity of labor are
conditions that cannot, be corrected in
a single season or in a dozen, even—
and the cotton-consuming portion of
the world’s population is increasing
with remarkable rapidity. Only some
thing very like a revolution in the in
dustry can put the price of cotton very
mui’h below the lowest quotations ot
last Friday, it would seem.”
The Philadelphia Record says:
•‘Senator Gorman says it is no answer
to tell the American people that the
president who has encroached upon the
legislative functions of congress in an
arbitrary pension decree ’is an honest
man Honest men, in the view of the
Maryland senator, are not so scarce in
this country as to make that a matter
of boast. The virtue of honesty does
not prevent its possessor from being
•wrong-headed, arbitrary and conceited,
and therefore extremely dangerous in
the position of president of the United
States.”
HEABST'B DEMOCRATIC VIEWS-
They my that if New York in
structs for Parker on the Ibth h«
will resign from'the bench and give
his views to the Public. But Hearst
has already given tull expressions
to his ideas ot what should consti
tute the campaign issue tor the
Democrats, and we reproduce them
jon another page this morning for
the edification of Georgia’s Demo
cratic voters. After reading them,
one can understand why the tiusts
are opposed to Hearst’s nomina
tion ; but no one can honestly
charge him with not having any
opinions or'platform, or say that he
is afraid to champion a people’s
cause, whether he becomes their
nominee or not.
A BTRIKINGOONTBABT-
Ju«t at the time that the supreme
court was handing down the decis
ion against the coal trust, won by
William Randolph Hearst as a pri
vate oitizn aft ir Attorney General
Kuox refused to prosecute the mat
ter, August Belmont, the most no
torious railroad and Wall street
trust promoter, race track gambler,
supporter of Palmer and Buckner
and instigator of the bitter war
fare that resulted in the assassina
tion of the Democratic governor of
Kentucky, was calling conferences
of the Demooratio senators and rep
resentatives in Washington and
telling them they must nominate
Parker.
Which is the yellow peril to the
country, the man who successfully
fights trusts or the man who Is rep
resented by not only the trusts but
i he wortt elements in American pol
itics?
THE TWO PRESIDENTS.
The contest between Parker and
Hearst in Georgia is largely a con
test between the daily and the
weekly press of the State. Most of
the dailies are lined up for Parker,
while those weeklies which retuse
to accept tneir opinions from the
nearest daily are mainly for
Hearst, thoubg it must be
said to their credit that
they are much more sensible and
conservative in their support. To
cap this lining up, it is to be noted
that lion. H. H. Cabsniss, of the
Augusta Chronicle, president, of the
Georgia Press Association, is ram
pant for Parker and the most bitter
against Hearst; while Hon. W. S.
Coleman, of the Cedartown Stand
ard, president ot t-ne Weekly Press
Association of Georgia, is a staunch
advocate of Hearst, though he does
not try to advance his cause by
abusing Parker. In his Ust issue
President Coleman says:
“Judge Parker might prove a
swift nag in a presidential race, but
he has yet to demonstrate it. With
out the New York delegation solid
ly and enthusiastically at his back,
he cannot hope to win the nomina
tion. A divided or uninstructed
New York delegation will place him
out of business, tor no New England
State is for him. Hearst will have
at his back Rhode Island, Mas
sachusetts, New Jersey, Ohio, Illi
nois, and a large majority of Wes
tern States. We believe that the
South will help to make his nomin
ation overwhelming at St. Louis.”
JUDGE PARKER’S STRENGTH.
“Is Judge Parker a strong man?”
inquires an exchange. According
to James Creelman, he is ; he is six
feet tall, broad-shouldered and has
an iron jaw, Tnese are some of the
arguments being put forward in hi 3
favor by his Georgia partisans.
According to Editor Rainey, of
the Dawson News, Parker does not
show up so well as a sprinter as he
does in the role of a Sandow. The
News says:
“Election returns of New York
iio not bear out the claims of the par
tisans of Judge Parker that he has
unusual and extraordinary strength
among the voters of his State, which
is acknowledged to tie a pivotal one
in presidential campaigns. In fact,
the very reverse seems to be true.
Nathan Cohen, of Albany, N. Y.,
calls attention to the fact that Judge
Parker’s vote in the last election
was 554,680, whereas Mr. Color,
candidate for governor on the Dem
ocratic ticket,received 655,398 votes
or 100,710 more than Judj e Parker.
Mr Bryan, for president, received
678 386 votes, or 123,706 more than
J udge Parker. The fact that Judge
Parker bad do opposing candidate
against him, the Republicans hav
ing failed to make a nomination for
the office for which he was running,
still further emphasizes his weak
ness as a leader. A candidate who
bad the field to himself and fell that
tar behind the remainder of the
ticket, who bad the fiercest kind of
opposition, would not be a very
promising leader of a great party in
a campaign in which there was real
desire for success
“The figures of the New York
election conclusively answer the
boasts of the judge’s partisans
here in Georgia.”
Didn't Call Him a Hog.
Representative Cooper, of Wis
consin, was explaining in the House
today the difference between bis
attitude od the Bristow report now
and his attitude on Wednesday,
says the Washington c.)i respondent
of the Philadelphia Lodger. Then
he was denouncing the report as an
assault on the reputations of con
gressmen and demanding an inves
tigation. Now he was taking a dif
ferent view, and was explaining
tnat his remarks of Wednesday
were humorous.
“That,” said Representative Wil
liams, of Mississippi, “reminds me
of old Myron Stubblefield, %ho lives
in my district. One day a tall,
brawny, broad-shouldered young
man, a regular giant, came in and
said: 'Mr. Stubbelt field, I under
stand you called my father a hog,
and I’ve come to ask you what you
mean by it, ’
“Myron looked a> the young man
end realized his immense size, just
as the gentleman from Wisconsin
has locked at the White House since
Wednesday and baa realized how
big it is. And he hastily replied :
“ ‘Oh, no, sir : I never, never cull
ed your father a hog.’
“‘What did you say?' demanded
the young man.
“‘AU I did, ’ said Myron, ‘was to
say that he had four legs and a
snout and tusks, lived in a sty and
ate swill; but I never, never,never
intimated for one moment that he
was a hog. ’ ”
Kot An Edifying Spectacle-
Thomasville Times-Enterprise.
The State has recently had the
amusing but not edifying spectacle
of seeing men supposed to be lead
ers in pubhc life engaged in a most
undignified scramble to get on the
Parker band wagon. The support
which finds its main spring in a
greed for a paltry office is not apt
to be of much value to their favor
ite nominee. Men are but children
of a larger growth and the quarrel
ing Parkerites prove it.
If these Parker clubs continue to
organizj every supporter of the
New York jurist will have an office
in some club or other, and be enti
tled to have his mime in black t\ pa.
He Had His Preference-
The districts of Clayton, of Ala
bama and Gr gas, of Georgia, ad
join, says the New York World
The two rtpresentative are great
friends, but there is considerable
jealousy between tbeir constituents,
One day last fall a Georgia man
wandered over to a small village in
Alabama. He sat around in front
of the general store and bragged
about Georgia. He said everything
in his St ite was better than any
thing Alabama could produce.
“By gravy!” he flu illy an
nounced “I’d a mighty sight ruther
be the meanest man in Georgia than
the best man in Alabama.”
“Huh'.’’said an Alabama man,
“1 guess you’ve got your ruther,”
rr- . - - —~ —
Putting It Politely-
Rome Tribune.
Mr. Cleveland has said that he
would not accept the Democratic
nomination, if tendered nirn, We
give Mr. Cleveland credit for being
sincere in this, and yet we believe
that- Mr. Cleveland would accept, if
convinced it was his duty to do so.
Now, then, we cannot oorcoive vic
tory possible under Mr. Cleveland,
and it is to prevent a fake appeal to
Mr. Cleveland’s possibly mistaken
sense of duty that we oppose Geor
gia Parke- Club No. 2 (Cleveland
ites), and its kind. That, s about as
politely as we know how to put it.
A Weak Bluff.
Albanj Herald.
If the people of New York and of
Georgia are for Judge Parker there
can be no harm in saying so and for
the newpapers that are booming
the New Yorker’s candidacy to
crow over it, but this thing of sup
pressing everything in the shape ot
political news that is not favorable
to Parker and manufacturing spe
cials representing that Parker’s
friends have everything fixed as
they want it in New York is getting
to be too bold to be successfully
played as a bluff
A Shining Example-
Albany Herald.
Senator Bu: ion is a shining exam
ple of that class of men who go into
politics for the sake of the oppor
tunities it affords. Some men se
lect political careers because of a
desire for power. Others are in
search of opportunities of obtaining
wealth, not hesitating to sell politi
cal integrity for gold. Some go into
politics for the sake of excitement,
and a few are inspired by u a desire
to serve the people honestly and un
selfishly.
— -- —II ■ ... . ■
The figure in the Background-
Rome Herald.’
Through all the talk about a Demo
cratic president al nominee the ligoie
of Grover Cleveland looms up big and
broad. He is one of the greatest of all
the gn at Americans and the Evening
Herald had rather see him nominated
than any man in the party.
The Clevelandites have all the front
seats on the Parker bandwagon. The
Albany (N. Y») Argus says: “Four
well known Cleveland Democrats,
Francis Lynde Stetson, Wheeler H.
Peckham, Peter B. Olney and William
B. Hornblower, are recent arrivals on
board the Parker bandwagon.” The
Bryanites can hang on by the tailboard
—if they like that kind of a wagon.
TO THE DEMO-
CRATIC VOTERS
Om the Sixth Congression
al District:
The Democratic Executive Com
mitttee of the Six’h Congressional
District having called a primary for
the nomination of a Congressman
on the 20 hos April, I beg to t-ay
that. I will very greatly appreciate
your vote in that primary for my
re-nomination.
While there is no opposing candi
date, it is important l h ar every
Democratic vote be cast for Con
gressman in thn coming primary, as
that will virtually amount to the
election, and the number of votes
oast- in the primary will be taken as
the real vote of the bixt-h Distuot.
A full vote will go far towards meet
ing the charges made by Repub
licans that the vote in the South is
suppressed in Congressional elec
tions, simply because the vote in
November is generally small, owing
to the fact that there is no opposing
Republican candidate.
Assuring you of my grateful ap
preciation o f vour confidence in the
past, and with every purpose to dis
charge my duty to you faithfully
and efficiently, I earn< stly request
that you see to it that the full
Democratic vote is polled.
C. L. Bartlett.
War Not Worrying Americans
American banxers are not worrying
over the war between Russia and Japan
I' ir there is very lit tie of our money loan
ed in eitln r country, but among the En
glish and French finan iers there is much
anxiety on account of their lar-e loans to
these countries There is also no cause
for worry among people who suffer from a
w. ak stomach or disordered kidneys so
long as they can obtain Hostetter’S Stom
a h Biter- This wonderful medicine
Immediately strengthens and stimulates
these organs and thus cures indigestion,
dyspepsia, heartburn, dizziness, kidney
troubles, rheumatism, constipation, bil
iou mess or insomnia. It is also invaluar
ble as a preventive of lagrippe, colds,
chills, or malaria, fever and ague. Try a
few 'oses in the spring. It will do you a
lot of g >od.
MADE THREATS AGAINST.
Life of President Greene Consolidated
Copper Company.
New York, April 9.—James W.
Goodman, machinist, was arrested
here today charged with making
threats against the life of William G
Greene, president of the Greene Con
solidated Copper company.
When Goodman was arraigned in
police court, Mr. Greene testified that
Goodman lay in wail outside his
(Greene’s) house today and that Good
man came up to him and said:
“You're the man I’m laying for.
Now, I am going to kill you!”
Mr. Greene said that Goodman lean
ed against him and he felt a revolver
in Goodman’s pocket. Goodman fol
lowed him to his office, Mr. Greene ha?
him arrested. According to'the po
lice, two revolvers were found in Good
man’s pockets.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundr jd Dollars Reward
for any cas« of catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Cata-rh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by his firm .
w Walding, Kinnan & M arvin.
Wholes<le Drugsirts, Toledo. O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the svstem. Testi
monials sent free- Price 75 cents per bot
tle. Sold by all druttgists.
Take Hall's Family Pills; for constipa
tion.
CONGRESSMEN IN CHARLESTON.
Twenty-Five Members Guests of Rep
sentative Legare
Charleston, S. C., April 9. —Twenty-
five members of congress are hero to
day as guests of Representative La
gare, o f this district, to visit the navy
yard and see points of interest about
Charleston.
They will spend the day here and an
elaborate program of entertainment
has been prepared for them.
Makes A Clean Sweep.
There’s nothing like doing a thin
thoroughly. Os all the Salves you
ever heard of, Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve is the best. It sweep* away
t»nd onres burns, bores, Bruises,
Cuts, Boils, Uloers, Skin Eruptions
and Piles. It’s only 25c, and guar
anteed to give satisfaction by Car
lisle Ar Ward and Brooks Drug
Store.
MISSISSIPPI IS STILL
ABOVE DANGER LINE
Crest of Rise Is Hourly Ex
pected at Memphis.
ONE LEVEE HAS GIVEN WAY.
While Situation Is Not Yet. Alarming
Precautionary Measures Are Being
Taken and Many Families Along the
River Are Moving.
Memphis, April 9. —The Mississippi
river, during the past 24 hours has
risen eight-tenths of a foot, showing
a stage of 38.6 feet, or 5.8 feet above
the danger line. From Cairo to Bar
field the river is either falling or sta
tionary. From the latter points f to
At the rate the water is coining
Memphis and below it is still rising,
down, the crest of the rise should
reach this city by tonight at the lat
est.
United States engineers today re
ceived reports that the small protec
tion levee in front of Luxora, Ark.,
gave way and the part of the town
princicpally inhabited by negroes is be
ing flooded. The main levee, how
ever, remains intact and unless this
gives way the damage will be compar
atively slight. Captain A. J. Nolte,
assistant United States engineer at
this point, is at the scene with the
patrol steamer Graham.
The local situation is not at all
alarming, although quite a large pro
portion of the people, principally ne
groes and the poorer classes of the
whites on Bayou Gayoso from Poplar
street to the river, have been compelled
to move. At Market and Fourth
streets the Memphis Street Railroad
company have begun the transferring
of passengers due to the water being
of such a depth over the lower por
tions of these streets as to prevent the
motor oars passing through it.
A number of manufacturing plants
in North Memphis have been com
pelled to put in false floors and will be
able- to continue operations if the wa
ter does not go much higher.
STEAMER ST. LOUIS WINS.
She Is Successful In Race With For
eign Mails.
Londoh, April 9. —This week’s race
with the mails was easily won by the
American -line steamer St. Louis, from
New York April 2. The steamer ar
rived at Plymouth at 3:08 A. M. today
and her post baggage reached London
at 9:17 this morning, w-hile the Ca
nard line steamer Etruria, from New
York, April 2, only arrived at Queens
town at 4:24 a. m. The olu-time rival
ry between the Great Western and tha
London and Southwestern railroadJ
which has been revived since the
American line began calling at Ply
mouth is greatly to the advantage ol
both passengers and mails.
The Great Western this morning, in 1
a record run, covered 245 3-4 miles in i
4 hours and 18 minutes, with two stops I
and arrived with the mails so fa!
ahend of time that the postal vans
had not arrived at the station.
The London and Southwestern land
ed its passengers in London at 9:35 a.
na., and the mails were distributed be
fore I o’clock p. m.
A QUEER REHEARSAL.
Crooks Experiment with Drugs to Stu
pify Intended Victims.
New York, April 9. —Half a dozen
men and one woman, alleged to hav«
been rehearsing the administering ol
drugs used to stupefy intended victims i
of robbery, have been arrested owing
to the death of one of the party known 1
as “Boston Frank.” i
According to a story told by one ol
the prisoners they were drinking beet
and discussing the use of knockoui
drops. All expressed a desire to learn
the best method and quantity neces
sary, so a small quantity of liquid con
taining opium was poured into the
beer. “Boston Frank” emptied his
glass and collapsed. The others drank
only a small quantity and soon recov
ered.
They were all imprisoned, pending
action by the coroner.
Verdict Set Aside.
New York. April 9.—-Although a jury
of the supreme court has returned a
verdict pronouncing James H. Tem
ple, ex-president of the bankrupt Wil
liam Campbell Wall Paper company,
not guilty of converting to his own use
some $40,000 of the funds of the com
pany, Justice Rogers set a'side the ver
dict and sent Temple back to jail in
default of $25,000 bail. The jnstica
declared he was not satisfied with tha
Temple explanation on the witness
stand and ordered a new trial. The
ru’ing of the court is unusual and
Temple's attorney will appeal.
Expedition Lost Four Men.
London, April 9. —The expedition
operating against the Okpoto tribe ol
natives in Nigeria, British Afri
ca, lost four men killed and 48 wound
ed in the fighting recently when they
lost their way into the midst of tha
British square. The Okpotoa resist
the British e-pedition’s advance. The
head of Captain O'Riordan, one of the
Britiah officers previously killed, has
been recovered.
NURSING MOTHERS!
“ A richer milk than
is good food for nur,i n g |
mothers. Scott’s Emulsion l I
the rich cream of cod liver 1
oil, and contains ten times as
much cream as milk does.
The nursing mother must
eat with the purpose of pro
ducinggood, nourishing milk
for her baby. A little Scott’s
Emulsion is often a very wise
addition to her daily diet. If
through nervousness or weak-1
ness her milk is a failure,!
Scott’s Emulsion will help!
make it a success.
The baby gets the benefit, ■
too, when the mother takes
Scott’s Emulsion. The same
remedy brings new strength
and nourishment to both.
We'U send you a sample free upon request.
SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl Street, New York
Well K .: jc. .'.'.ininter Dead.
Gadsden, Al ... April !).—Rev. Rob
ert A. Timmons i; dead alter one
year’s snffe-ing of complication ol
Bright’s disease and other troubles. Ha
was born in Heard county, Georgia,
Aug. 20, 1837. was a member of Hil
liard’s legion confederate army, and'
had been an itinerant Methodist
preacher in Alabama 43 years and a
presiding elder and was the first occu
pant of the superannuated home her®,
completed a few weeks ago. He is
survived by his wife and one son, J.
E. Timmons, of Opelika, and foul
brothers, Dr. H. C. Timmons, of At
lanta; Rev. R. E. L. Timmons, of In
man,, Ga.; Rev. D. F. C. Timmons,
D.D.. of Sherman, Tex., and Rev. T.
H. Timmons, of Thompson. The body
will be interred at Lafayete.
Change of Editorship.
Memphis, April 9. —Willis H. Tur
ner, former managing editor of The-
Chicago Journal will assume the gen
eral managership of the Evening Scim
itar beginning Monday next. Mr
Turner is a native of Kentucky and a
life-long Democrat.
Robbed the Orave.
A startling incident is narrated
by John Oliver of Philadelphia, as
follows : “1 was in au awful con
dition My skin was also yellow,
eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain
continually in back and sides, no
appetite, growing weaker day by
day. Three physicians had given
me up Th-n I was advised to use
Elec rio Bitt°rs ;to my great joy,
’he first bottle me de a decided im
provement. I continued tbeir use
for three weeks, and am now a well
man I know they robbed the
grave of another victim. ” No one
should fail io trv them. Only 50
cents, guaranteed, at Carlisle
Ward and Brooks Druer Store.
k- Wu.iVAJ
CATLETT ACQUITTED.
Wealthy Tennessee Farmer Goes Free 1
After Five Trials.
Knoxville, Tenn., * April 9. —This
morning at I/ondon. Tenn., Robert Cat'
left, th© wealthy Sevier county farm'
er. who had been tried 5 tim.es on th 4
charge of being an accessory in the
Whaley murder Jan. 7, 1896, in Seviei
county, for which Pleas Wynn and Cat
lett Tipton were hanged, came to an
end with Catlett's acquittal.
There is no further recourse in law
against Catlett.
Exposure to a sudden climatic change
produces coM in the head and cotarrh is
apt to follow. Provided with Ely’s Crerm
Balm you are armed against Fasal ( a
tarrh. Price 50 cents st drucedsta or El)
Brothers, 56 Warren Street, Xew York,
will mail it. The Balm cures without
naiu, does not. irritate or cause sneezing.
It spreads itself over an .rrltated and an
gry surfac . relieving immediately the
painful inflammation, cleanses ind cures.
Cream Balm qnbkly cures the cold.
Burned Himself to Death.
Columbia. S. C., April 9.—Friday
night at Edgefield the jail was dis
covered to be on fire. Jailer Faulk'
ner when aroused fount! the five was
in the cell of Josh Henderson, a ne
gro, who was under sentence for liK
for killing another negro in a church
last year. The negro was dead when
the jaiier reached him, having died
from suffocation. Henderson used
a small lamp to set. the fire, hfs purpos'"
being to burn a hole large enough to
make his escape, but before eccom
pllahing his purpose he suffocated.
I lift’s Pills
After eating, persons of a bilious habit
will derive great benefit by taking one
of there pills. If you have been
LINKING TOO MICH,
they will promptly relieve the nausea.
SICK HEADACHE—
and nervousness which follows, restore
the appetite and remove gloomy feel
ings. Elegantly sugar coated.
lake No Substitute.