Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 December 1907 — INVITES A TEST. [ARTICLE]

INVITES A TEST.

B. F. Fendig Asks Catarrh Sufferers to Try Hyomei on His Guarantee,

B. F. Fendig invites all who suffer from any form of catarrhal troubles to get a Hyomei outfit from him with his absolute guarantee that if it does not give perfect satisfacion, the money will be refunded upon request

There is no other treatment for catarrh that in any way resembles Hyomei, none that gives such quick curative results and lasting satisfaction, no medicine that can take its place, none that can be sold on a guarantee like this, to refund the money unless it cures. Catarrh is a germ disease and can be cured only by breathing Hyomei, so that the most remote air cells an the nose, throat and lungs are reached by its antiseptic healing powers. In this way all catarrhal germs are killed, the irritated mucous membrane is healed and catarrh is driven from the system. This wonderful medicated air treatment does not drug and derange the stomach, but is breathed through a pocket inhaler that goes with every dollar outfit. The ususual way in which B. F. Fendig sells Hyomei attests his confidence in the remedy.

DEPENDABLE FRUIT TREES. Persons wanting first class apple and pear trees, true to name and replaced if they die any time within twelve months, should see the undersigned. For 14 years I have been the agent of the Greening Nursery Co,, of Monroe, Mich., and I can guarantee their goods as strictly high class. Let me know if you contemplate buying any kind of nursery stock. Sam’l Yeoman.

A NOBLE GIFT. Miss Cordelia P. Monnett has donated a thousand acres of land to the Chicago Training School for City Home and Foreign Missions at 4949 Indiana Ave. It is situated near Rensselaer in one of the best parts of the famous oom belt of Illinois and Indiana. Miss Monnett has already gone to her new home in the School at Chicagß. She will receive a suitable annuity in cash as long as she lives.

At Miss Monnett’s request a building will be erected as one of the Halls of this rapidly growing school, in memory of her mother, Mrs. Mary Delamar Kinnear Monnett, who died in 1880. The building will bear the following inscrip- ■ tion “Mary Delamar Kinnear Memorial Building, i erected by her daughter, Cordelia P. Monnett.” Mrs. Monnett was a woman of strong individuality, and left the impress of her rare

character on all about her. Her memory is deeply revered by this devoted daughter, who now rejoices in consecrating her wealth to the building which shall at the same time nobly demoralize the memory of a remarkable woman and be most valuable in advancing the practical work of God on earth. The Chicago Training School has rightly been called a wonderful institution. It began its work in the humblest way. Opened in 1885 in a small rented house, few people knew of its existence, and the number of its really interested friends could be counted on one’s fingers. But friends gathered about it, the number of its students increased and property was gradually acquired. At the present time its annual enrollment is considerably over 200. It now owns property to the value of nearly a quarter of a million dollars. It has trained about twenty-two hundred women and has given to the mission field, home, foreign and deaconess, more than thirteen hundred women. It was the pioneer in woman’s religions schools and has done much towards the creation of a sentiment for special preparation for women iu religious work. It was established under great stress of soul on the part of its founders, and from the first day to the present, not a dollar has been paid out for salary. Its specially trained teachers, six of the twelve resident holding bachlors* lor doctors’ degrees, donating ‘their services on the deaconess

basis, Its graduates include hundreds of the very best workers in Methodism;such women as Emma A. Robinson, General Secretary of the Junior Epworth League, and Isabel Horton, Author of “The Burden of the City.” “To him that hath shall be given.” This was not a new law creatby a dictum of Christ, but a statement by the Master of a fundamental principal of human experience. We have all known illustrations. “It’s the first thousand dollars that cost.” is a business proverb. In the light of this principle the Chicago Training School is entering upon a time of larger things than ever before. It has from the first been the leading religious school for women not only Methodism, but American Protestantism. With the new Monnett Hall as a dormitory for about a hundred more students, larger chapel and library facilities are urgently needed. The endowment fund, which at the present time is onlv $17,000 must be largely increased. The money for these improvements is not pledged, indeed, it is not in any way assured, but because of the great need, it must come. A multitude of small gifts has for many years attested the loving interest felt by many devoted men and women in this institution where deaconesses and missionaries are given practical preparation for their work, an institution which indeed, twenty years ago gave the - Deaconess movement itself in modern aggres* sive form to the Methodist church of America, but the time has come now for the larger gifts. The School has its magnificent Harris Hall in which building alone there are two acres of floor space. It is now to have beautiful Monnett Hall. What other name will be memorialized by the chapel? What other loved one’s name will be carved over the library entrance. [The above article was sent The Democrat by J. S. Meyer, Supt. of the above school, with request that it be published in our columns. Ed.]