The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 36, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 January 1911 — Page 2
Syracuse Journal SYRACUSE, - - j IND GETTING OUT IN THE WORLD High Record Exports of Manufactures I From the United States for 1910. Exports of manufactures from the United States In the calendar year 1910 will, lor the first time, exceed $800,000,000 in value. The September export figures seem to fully justify the prediction that the year s exports of manufactures will cross this line and surpass those of any earlier year. For the single month of September the exports of manufactures aggregated $70,000,000 and for the nine months ending with September $613,000,000, an average of $68,000,000 a month “ for that portion of the year for which figures are now available. The group of “manufactures ready for consumption” shows for the nine months of the present year a total exportation of $402,000,000, against $347,000,000 in the corresponding months of 1909; and the group “manufactures for further use in manufacturing,” $211,000,000, against $187,000,000 in the game months of last year: For the single month of September manufac tures ready for consumption show 8 total, exportation of $44,000,000. against $38,000,000 in September of last year, and manufactures for further use in manufacturing, $25,000,000, against $20,000,000 in the same month of laA year. Manufactures are the only impor tant class of exports which show i material gain in 1910, compared witl 1909. Exports of foodstuffs in a crudt condition in the nine months ending with September, 1910, show a tota of but $60,000,000 against $75,000,00£ In the same months of last year ; and foodstuffs partly or wholly manufao tured $180,900,000, against $205,000,00< In the same months of last year; and while crude material for use in manu facturing shows a slight gain, having been $334,000,000 in the nine months ending with September, against $322, 000,000 in the same months of lasi year, the growth is by no means as large I as that in exports of manufac tures, On ■ the import side, both manufao turers’ materials and finished manu factures |>how marked gains forth« nine-month period, but a decline oi I about $6,000,000 in crude material in • September, 1910, compared with Sep ! tember, 1909. Crude materials for us< in manufacturing show a total of $413, 000,000 the nine months ending with Septeihhtjr, 1910,. against $379, 000,0p0 in the same months of last year; manufactures for future use in manufacturing, $214,000,000, against j $182,000,000 in the same months of lasi year; and manufactures ready/or con sumption $277,000,000 in the nine months ending with September, 1910, against $248,000,000 in the earn* months of last year.—U. S. Consuls) Reports. Dogs In Commerce. The dumping of 20,000 pariah doge ' from Constantinople on the Island oi Oxla, in the Sea of Marmora, hai evoked ceaseless protests from al) lovers of animals throughout the civ ilized world. The British Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has en tered a solemn protest on the groundi that the banishment of the dogs hai been inhumanly carried out, that the fearful decimation by disease and madness will certainly be attended with serleus results, and that the en tire measure is unworthy of any government endeavoring to fall into line with the customs of western civlllza tlom The protest has been lodged with Sir Edward Grey. An enterprising Frenchman has opened a business in the bones and skins of the dead dogs. His object is to export the skins to Berlin, Paris and London, where, he imagines, they can be converted into gloves. The manager of Messrs. Dent ridicaled the proposition. “The dog’s bones may prove a valuable manurial ingredient," he said, “but the skin for gloving is impossible. It has long since been abandoned. Like the colt’s, it is not sufficiently elastic. Dogs’ skins may be, and are, used by fishermen as buoys, but the trade is limited and dying out The curing of dog’s skin is also too expensive, except for fanciful purposes. The gloves that are ’ called ‘dogskin’ are really made from sheep and lamb skin." —London Chronicle. Prevention of Cruelty. “Gee," says the first littlp boy, “I hate to go home! My mamma always wants to give me s, bath every evening.” “So does mine,” said the second litttle boy, “but I don’t mind it. My paipa is a doctor and she always gets •him to chloroform pie, so I never iknow a thing about it until it is al) ( over.” —Canada Monthly. Reputation Is Known. “I say, a man of the same name as wine has just been run in for fraud by credit Beastly awkward, you know.” “Don’t alarm yourself, my dear fellow. Everybody knows you can’t get money or credit at all.” To Be Just Himself. Mother—Ton have been very good this morning, Willie. Now what would toy little boy like as a reward?” Willie—l would like you to let me te nguahtr the afternooa.
Advertising pTalksq KEEP AT IT, SAYS CHALMERS Business Success Depends on Consistency and Thoroughness and Eye to Future, . Hugh Chalmers of Detroit, the man who quit a $72,000 a year job to enter the automobile manufacturing business and made good, told the Omaha Ad club at a banquet in that city the other evening of “The Principles of Business Success.” “It is easier to make goods than to sell them,” said Mr. Chalmers, so the principles of business success, as far as his mind was concerned, are involved in successful salesmanship. Advertising and the personality of the salesman were the two points emphasized. % "Advertising and publicity are the two greatest builders of confidence known to the business man,” he said. "A salesman can talk to only one or two people at the iame time, so It might properly be said that salesmanship applies only to the Individual, while advertising reaches the public as well, because by advertising you can reach hundreds and thousands and millions of people, while the salesman can reach only one or two at a time. “Keep everlastingly at It. If I were dead sure that we had all our 1910 output sold and clear up to 1912, I would not spend a dollar less in advertising. My being in business is not confined only to the time up to 1912, and I am a firm believer In keeping oversold. You have to deal with human nature, and it has always wanted and always will want those things which are hardest to get. , “You shut off the source of supply when you stop advertising. You must Send the best possible appeal to a million minds and you mast keep on appealing.” As for the salesman, Mr. Chalmers ; said the first essential was health, and ! the others, honesty, initiative, thorI ough knowledge of his business, tact, Industry, sincerity, a mind receptive to suggestion, and enthusiasm. “One thing has always helped me ip my business,” Mr. Chalmers said tn closing. “I make it a point to keep before me the ten most important things I have .o do. Every morning my stenographer has on my desk the ten most important things which I > must attend to." HOW HOMER ARRIVED. When Homer first set out to write. His modesty was such That, though his stuff was pretty good, I It never caught on much. I Until one day a friend remarked: “Old man, if you arS wise, you’ll drop this shrinking violet style And start to advertise. He took the tip. . . . The Argos Mail Next week came out with this: OLYMPIC GAMES. WHAT HOMER THINKS. EXCLUSIVE CHAT. (DON’T MISS.) He gave his views on every point That vexed the Grecian mind: His name each morning ift the press You never failed to find. Bo when the Odyssey appeared. It sold like anything. The Spartan serial rights brought in The ransom of a king ... And Homer, fingering his cheeks, Went out and slew. It’s said. Two oxen to the God of Booms Before he went to bed. —London Globe. The Advertising Argument. Argumentative advertising produces the largest volume in the total of a year’s business, provided the distribution of the article advertised has been thoroughly made. Let the argument be as strong and conclusive as possible, using illustrations, whenever in glod taste. Selling goods by advertising is dependent on your ability to influence the judgment of the reader in your favor; and, to do this successfully, the reader must feel that he has full opportunity for the exercise of his own judgment, even though his decision has unconsciously been brought about by the persuasive and logical character of your advertisement. —Frank A. Arnold in Suburban Life. Advertising That Pays. It is almost invariably the case that an advertiser will come back to the newspaper after he has tried every other medium. From the smallest to the greatest, the advertisers are finding out that the newspaper which goes into the home day after day and becomes in reality a member of the household, is the only medium which reaches and catches the attention of all classes. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• • A good ad makes the best • 2 salesman. • ,•••••••••••••••••••••••••• Narrow-Minded Policy. Here’s a merchant who says, the moment his sales percentage stuml ,bles: “I must cut down my advertto--1 Ing.” Would this same merchant take In 1 bls sign the moment It begins to rain?
; THE RETAILER’S LIMITED J ; POSSIBILITIES. : J BY GEORGE S. BANTA, B. A. * • Many a retail business today J • is merely keeping the proprie- • • tor out of the poor house. He J 2 turns his stock of dry goods, • • or his groceries, or his hard- • • ware, once or twice in the • • course of the year. He pays • • for his goods after his custom- • • ers have paid him for them. J 2 While he bought at a high • • price he sells at a very narrow • • margin of profit and as the • J years go by he finds that he is J • working himself out and gradu- • • ally is getting together enough 2 • so that he may be able to live • • a few years, of his old age, • • without work-—on what he has • 2 “laid up.” • • The whole difficulty with the J • modern retail business is in the • • small profits made. This must • • always be so because retailing • • a competitive busi- J • ness. No rr-an can have a • • “snap” in it because others are 2 • always ready to step in, and, if « J his margin of profit on any par- * • tjcular goods looks tempting. • J promptly sell more cheaply. « • The only way to get rich (of • • course we are all above such a a • base ambition) in the retail * J business today is to multiply • • sales. The profits, as pointed J 2 out, can never be great on indl- • • vldual sales and the whole se- J • cret of success must lie in buy- • • Iny at rock bottom prices and J • then making numerous sales • • so that in the aggregate the J • day’s business will show some- • J thing worth while. And this is * • the point where advertising • J comes in. Your competitor ( • cannot reach your advertising • • because that is a part of your « • business personality. He may • • sell the identical goods that you • • keep, yet advertising enables • • you to reach and make many • • customers, who, but for the J • force applied in this w>y would « • never buy the article you sell ® • at all or else would buy it of « J some one else. J • Look at the wonderful ad- • J vertising done by modern de- * • partment stores. What seems • 2 often like lavish waste is spent 4 • qn advertising little notions • J and articles which have only a « • very small profit in them far • J the merchant. Yet the depai a • ment store man is one of the ’ 2 few retailers who is really ma- « • king money today and if you J • took his advertising away from • • him you would deprive him of J • his Midas touch. » • • • ««****»•«•*•*««••«•«*»«**« NEWSPAPER AS A SALESMAN Modern Method of Shoppers Is to Scrutinize Advertising Before Leaving Home. The majority of retail store custom ers, before starting out on shopping forays, study the newspaper advertising. This habit is a great time-saver. The shopper escapes fruitless visits to many stores, and needless bothering of clerks, by learning in advance where she is likely to find what she wants. She gives very little attention to the places that fail to inform hei as to their offerings. Many women, too, having become personally acquainted with the store people dislike to enter their places of business unless they feel fairly sure of buying. They avoid this embarrassment by learning in advance through the newspaper where they can probably supply their needs. Thus it is that many sales are practically made before the buyer leaves .her home. It has been proved over and over again, that the trade will pass stores with a main street'location that fail to advertise, to hunt up poorly located shops on back streets that are well advertised. A merchant might as well close his shutters in business hours as to fail to meet his competitors in the field where ■ they are doing the heart of their business—the newspaper advertisement M 1 > The surest way to commit 4 J I business suicide is to cut down x 11 expanses by nutting down your J I ; advertising. J til I Newspaper Advertising Best. The latest organization of business men to discover that the newspaper is the greatest of all advertising mediums is the Ohio Retail Shoe Dealers’ association. A Springfield, Ohio, die patch, giving an account of the recent meeting of this organiaztion, says, among other things: “Newspaper advertising was da dared to be the best trade-bringing medium for the trade in a resolution adopted by the Ohio Retail Shoe Dealers’ association, which closed Its annual convention here today. “Many of the members stated that they had tried other forms of adven tlslng, but that the results from newspapers overshadowed all sthei kinds.” —Birmingham News. Truth In Verse. "Just a card” is all you care forHldden, lonesome, and unread, Like the sign upon a tombstone Telling folks that you are dead. Wake up. man. and take a tonic. Bunch your hits and make a drive. Run a page, and change your copy. Advertise and keep allval **
, DIX* LONGS FOR HIS WINTER CAMP , camp at NEW YOKJX. —John A. Dix, governor-elect of New York, somewhat wearied by his strenuous campaign and the following activities, is turning longingly toward his winter camp at McKeever in the Adirondacks, and doubtless will seize the first opportunity to flee thither. Mr. Dix is an enthusiastic sportsman and delights in the ' days which he spends each winter in the camp up in the mountains when the country is covered deep in snow.
HA TES A STEAMSHIP
Mariner Who Is 102 Despises Steam-Going Vessel. Captain Jackson Tells of Sailing Ship Days and of Fierce Storms That Swept Decks of Craft He Commanded. London.—Nearing the close of his one-hundred-and-second year, Capt Daniel Jackson gazed mournfully across the rain-swept gardens of the Tooting home for the aged as he compared the gale then raging, with the hundreds, he experienced in the days when men went to sea in ships of wood. Strangely enough it was the present storm that had brought him his sorrow. ■ “It’s only a little capful of wind,” he said, “just enough to make a good craft swing along like a war horse. But it’s brought me more trouble than any gale that has blown since I made my first voyage to Archangel, more [ than ninety-three years ago. It’s only i a little capful, yet it stayed me from j performing the lab’t service my dear i Bister Maria will ask of me. “She had sent me a message from the Wandsworth infirmary, saying that she wanted to see me very, very I soon, because she had something to tell me. So I buttoned up my coat on Wednesday afternoon and started to walk over there, but the little capful was too much for me and the rain swept into my eyes. ‘Never mind,’ I said, ‘I shall see her tomorrow.’ Next , morning they told me Maria was dead!” Tears rolled from the tired old eyes , as Captain Jackson’s thin, twisted fingers beat upon the window pane, , and it was many minutes before an- , other word escaped him. He told of i gales in many seas, fierce storms that had swept the decks of the ship which he had skippered when a boy of nineteen. > “Well I remember my first day of
Keeps His Timepiece Fast
British Monarch Deliberately Has ! Watch Set Ahead —Father Addicted to Same Hab>t. i London. —Modern human beings liave an extraordinary predilection for ' “fast” time. Even the late king gave way to this ! little weakness, and every timepiece, i Including the church clock, at Sandringham, was kept deliberately half an hour fast. This custom, in fact, still Is kept up by King George. This “fast” time habit is, in the opinibnof a well known medical man, a I form of self deception and “a praisei worthy, but often unconscious, attempt co rectify a very common | punctuality.” | “The number of clocks and watches I In England that are kept fast is ex- [ traordinary,” he said. “A slow watch ir clock is uncommon, and usually the result of an accident. But everywhere ( fast time is to be seen—outside rail , way stations, in railway refreshment rooms, in public-houses, and in private , residences. “In my opinion the psychology of I this habit is as follows,” continued the doctor. “A man distrusts his ability to ' oe punctual, and to rectify this adrances his watch, or allows it to reJ main fast, deluding himself that after ! a. short time he win have forgotten chat his watch is fast, and so will unwittingly be punctual. “Again, a man acquires a sort of subI conscious feeling that he could never hope to be punctual unless his watch were fast. He feels that he can keep ip to time when he is calculating by i fast watch, but never if he has to jalculate by a correct watch.” Numerous persons admitted having watches that were fast Said one man: *1 always keep my watch fast—anything from five to twenty minutes —as I am terrified that t may get slow should I put it back to Jhe right time." Another: “My watch always gains • few seconds a day, and I let it go on
* command,” he said —and for the first time the droop of his lips lifted. “I was rigged in a new suit one of the owners had given me, with the pockets lined with S7O and a $75 watch in my fob. We sailed in ballast from Lynn to Sunderland, and when Mr. Taylersofi, another of the owners, came aboard he asked me to direct him to the captain. , That was the best day of all, I think, for when I made him really believe that I was the captain he chuckled for hours. “Then he cracked me a hearty blow on the back and told me I must skipper a ship for him round the Horn to California. Thirty-eight times I sailed Mr. Taylerson’s ships to California, but one day, when I was walking with him up the main street in Sunderland, he fell dead. “My connection with the service ended soon afterward, but by that time I’d saved close on $5,000, and with that I became an owner myself. It was a sad day I bought my ship, for at my wife’s desire I let her brother captain the vessel instead of looking after her myself. She was ! lost on the first voyage, and I hadn’t a penny of insurance. “I was a ruined man and getting on
Census Quiz Jars Germans ■»— ‘—
—— -a I Subjects of Kaiser Perplexed by Some Searching Questions —Total May Be 65,000,000. Berlin. —Germany is in the throes of a census which will not end for many weeks. When it is over the fatherland expects to wake up and find itself the possessor of 65,000,000 souls, or a gain of 4,500,000 since 1905. The German population experts are deeply impressed by this week’s announcementoAbat the United States has over 90,000,000 inhabitants. The American rate of increase during the
gaining for about a month or so. Then I put it back to the right time. Why don’t I always try to keep it right? Because it is too much bother, and because I have grown accustomed to having it fast and feel strange when it is right.” A well known business man said that he always kept his watch exactly two minutes fast, first, because it had a tendenv«y to lose, and, second, because it made for greater punctuality and avoided the risk of missing trains by half a minute or so. Most business men of his acquaintance did similarly, he added. The secretary of the Magneta Time company, limited, which has control of 60,000 clocks in the United Kingdom, said that in his experience almost every one preferred to keep their clocks fast and requested that they should be set for this purpose. PROPOSAL OVER PHONE WIRE “Hello" Girl'Receives an Offer of Marriage Intended for Some Other Woman. Kansas Qty, Mo. —A telephone operator at the Union depot had a proposal from a man she never saw and doesn’t even know his name. Although she didn’t reject him, there is little likelihood of a wedding. A woman had just been in a booth and had hung up the receiver. The person at the other end of the line still was waiting. The girl operator “went in” on the line to tell that the party at her end of the line had hung up. “Won’t you marry me, then?” asked a masculine voice at the other end. “Hadn’t thought of it,” was the answer. "I’m the operator.” “Oh.” And the man hung up suddenly, probably afraid that ’'central” would hear hfan btefla
in years; so I settled down to be a landlubber as best I could. I came tc Clapham in 1863 and set to work as a blindmaker. All went well for some twenty years, but by the time I had come to be seventy-five, I commenced doing odd jobs. So I worked on till my ninety-ninth birthday, when I came to live in this home, where every one is kind to me. By now the captain’s pipe was filled, and, puffing vigorously at his beloved shag, he offered his opinions on the sailors of today. “Nice sailors they are to call these little squalls gales,” he said. “It’s the steamboats .that have done it all. In my days a sailor was happiest when thO seas swept the deck and his ship tors before the wind. I never could abide a steamer. I only once went to sea in one, and that was when I came honrj from Australia as a passenger." A tew weeks ago the delightful old captain met with an accident which would have proved fatal to most men many years his junior. Slipping, he fell backward against a piece of furniture and fractured of his ribs. “It hurt a bit at the time,” he remarked, in the most casual fashion, I “but I’m quite as strong as r again. My chief failing is my sight. Till a few months ago the hours with a pipe and a paper were my happiest. Nowadays I must have the pipe only and i let some one else have the paper/’
last ten years is double the rate at ' which Germany is growing. The census of Germany is not tak- > en by official question askers, as in j the United States, but by means of a series of intricate blanks which every householder in the country is obliged to fill out. Millions of otherwise in- | telligent Germans spent last weekQ wrestling with the mysteries of the census forms. These are some of the searching questions which the kaiser’s perplexed subjects had to answer: "If you don’t know the exact date of your birth, how many full years old are you?” “What’s your main occupation in life?” "Were your babies nursed on their mother’s breast or by wet nurses, or from a bottle?” “Are you subject to epileptic fits?” “How many of your house windows look out on the street?” “What was your mother tongue— German, Dutch, Friesan, Danish, Wailonian, Polish or Lithuanian —and what are the namep of the various rooms in your dwelling?” “What is the religion of your ser | vants?” "How many bathrooms have you?” “Do you cook with gas or other fuel?" , “What rent do you pay?” German economists cherish amtt tious hopes for the future of Ger many’s population. One authority says there will be 150,000,000 by 1980. An other expert, Prof, von Schmolter of the University of Berlin, peers intc , the distant future as far as 2135, | when he sees a vision of 208,000,000 “Such increase,” he writes, “should, will and must come if we wish to re main a great and powerful nation, but we must have fruitful colonies abroad to take care of the surplus.” "Beef Soul Celebration." Seattle, Wash. —Steamer reports tell of° the ceremony of the ’’beef soul celebration” which took place in Tokyo recently for the purpose of appeasing the souls of thousands of cows and oxen filled during the recent war to supply the army in Manchuria. It was estimated that 130 a day were slaughtered. A monument was erected “to prevent the souls, of these slaughtered animals rising in retribution against the butchers.” Trained Rooster Dead. Winsted, Conn. —“Jed,” the famous Plymouth Rock rooster owned by Irving J. Woodward of Meadow street,, was found dead the other evening. Th* chantider had been “broke” to bar ness and taught to ride on a bicycle “Jed” was given a respectable buria by ’ young Woodward and Ms hov friends s
COLDS Cured in One Day “I rexwrd my cold cure aa being: bet» lar than e Lite Inauxance Polley.”—. MUN YON. As a rule a few dotes of {Munyon’s Cold Cure will break up apy cold and prevent pneumonia. It relieves the head, throat and lurgs almost instantly. These little sugar pallets can qe conveniently •arried in the vest pocket for ulse at any time or anywhere. Price 15 cenlts at any , druggists. f I If you need Medical Affvice write to Munyon’s Doctors. They svill| carefully diagnose your case and give you advice Sv mail absolutely free. Address Prof. Munyon, 53d and Jefferson Stress, Phila-, Ulphia, Pa. Why Rent a Farm tnd be compelled to p*y to your landlord most ts your hard-earned profits? Own your own ■ Secure a Free Homestead in Manitoba, Sasks-ftpewan or Alberta, or] purchase land in M,e of these I districts ».rtd bank a Ufv I profit of SW.OO or MiIJHWKI §12.00 .u acre A I ©very yeai.J Land puHhased 3 e A yesrs ago at 810.00 an a c,B has rfc-ntly SuSKI changed bunds at 325.00 an acrb. The ?r °T' crcwn >,r ‘ these T ”1a n1 s warrant the advance. Yen can, Become Rich WlSVr6i®m by cattle raising, forming and grain growing in provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Free homesl-tad jand preemptlon areas, vs well as land held t y railway ttnd' land comTati® s will provide homes tor rr-lllions. ■ u&MhRJ Adaptable soft, I healthful « climate, splendid schools ■ i and churches.good railways. ” For settlers’ rates, L d<-seripiive Uteratnre”Last Best West,” how ■ to reai tithe country add other pnr64. -1 vft.-fSa. tlculars, write to Bupft of liamlgration, Ottawa, Canada,oi ty the Canadan Government Agert W H. Refers, 3rd fleor Tractiotl TeroM Btdj.. ItxUaa*. or (aiiaii n (i.'e.c«at Ment. C, rdner Eiriidinq, Tol-do. 3hlo. (U»e address nearest yon.) 88 Lazy liter I **l find Cascarelfs so good thaf I wouid aot be without them. I was trout-led a neat deal with toipid liver and headache. Nowsincf taking Cascarets Candy Cavhai* tic I feel very much better. I shall cer* i iainly recommend them to my frieadfi aa the best medicine I have ever seen. ” Anna Bazinet, Osborn Mill No. 2, Fall River> Maaa. Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. Nevev sold in bulkJ Thekenuine tablet stamped CC C. Gua|rant«id to cure or your money back. 928 tpisasf I BEST,MEDICINE —■ i| 11 1 ■ 1 iin——■ hi| L> Greatly Changed. In a little torrn in Maine where it 19 still the Custom for the ijesldents (o attend the funerals of thpse rthom they may have seen only a few L’mes in their lives, regarding tqe event as a sort of social function, the umder ( taker was. somewhat puzzjed at the ; actions of one r oman, who gazeF in I the coffin, shook her bead sadly nnd I returned to her *teat, saying: “How . changed!” only to repeat the process several times. After this had been gone through three or four times the undertaker realized what w*s the trouble, and stepping up to the caller, said: “Madam, I think you mustl have made a mistake. This Is John Sawyer that we are burying from here. Marla Brown’s funeral is being held from a house in the next block.” Mrs. Rqosevelt an Economist. Mrs. Roosevelt is said to have kept her gowns from one year jto the next and even the third year, knd yet was always beautifully dressed, ■ The bestdressed woman in London Is said to be Mi’s. KeppelL who wears -her gowns more than one season, having them made ovsr for the second year, as her income does not 1 allow of a great variety of gowns. Civilization. ; Missionary—-You claim to be civ ilized, and yet I find you torturing your captives. . Native —Pardon, but we do not call this torturing now. We are merely hazing him. x 1 Stop guessing! Try the best and most certain remedy for all painful ailments— Hamlins Wizard Oil. Thei way it re- ' lieves all soreness jrom strains, cuts, wounds, burns, scalds, etc., is wonderful. [_ * Household Hints. By taking one hobble, skirt and sewing up one end of it a very pretty ragbag may be made in which to-put the others. — ■ Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar-coated, easy to take as candy, regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not KripeA collapsible conscience may be more comfortable than an one, but it works as much harm. Try Mrs. Austins Famous Pancake Flour, sure to please, all grocers. Yon csnnnt truth and fight Ireedom in thinking
