The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 1, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 May 1912 — Page 2

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AR PER and I were hunting coyotes and bears in the backwoods of Oregon, writes Frederick V. Coville in the National Geographic Magazine. There were seven dogs in our pack. They had been specially selected and trained to hunt bear. Two were pure-bred

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Coxbounds, whose part it was to find the trail and lead the pack on it unerringly by their marvelous keenness of jseent. Nig, the old one. was scarred and partly crippled from enceunters with bear. Rover, two years ©M. though with less experience, was ia the prime of activity, keenness, was eM&srance. Ranger, the staghound, was tall and strong and, when the gsua&e was in sight,, very swift. In the' opee he could catch and kill a coyote. Tsge. the bloodhound, was the heaviest «rs the pack. His nose was keen, and oss: a bear trail he was true and tireless, and savage in the operations at the finish. In other game he had less ’ isterest, and when he slept he growled ®ndl dreamed of bear hunts. Jule was & radxed bloodhound and bulldog, and Bounce and Drum were her two msg pups, one yellow, the other brfnX.V. JFor two hours one morning we had rfirjSlowed the dogs without picking up a •fresh trail. We were passing from an cpeu ridge into a forest of fir and pine wtam the young foxhound, first sniffing •excitedly with his nose to the ground, rsssed the coarse hair between his .-’jfiMilders, bayed sharply and plunged onto the timber. The other dogs closed in behind and disappeared. <sarper tore after them through the “brash, scaling the slippery logs withnxt danger by means of his spiked tamberman's shoes,, and I followed as best I could. Approaching a little opening in the timber, I heard the araad of a general fight, Carper yelling. cursing and kicking among the dogs, then a rifle shot, and then anofhcr. When I burst through the chaparaa.l Carper was still yelling and fefc&ing the dogs away from the carcass of a porcupine, grazed by his first tax Set and ploughed open by the second. “Well,” said he, “we are in for ®t now.” The porcupine had taken a position beneath a log that was raised a little above the ground. As the dogs attached him he turned and struck them itsMrrific blows in the face with his •short dubbed tall, almost as muscular as a gorilla’s arm, and at every .stroke he left .a mark like a cushionIfiiS of barbed needles. Dogs less fierce would have quit sooner and suffSered less, but that bunch of bear-<-3ags 8 had behind them a thousand ■years of the fiery passion of the slayer. The dogs that could reach the porcupine bit him in the hack and tail till mouth and tongue were a bloody, quivering mass of barbs. Only by the fiercest onslaught on the dogs themseCves had Carper been able to open "tibera up so that he could shoot the jmeupine. The dogs were now pawing their taees and ploughing their noses along the ground in agony, breaking off some of quills at the surface and drlv tag-' the barbed points deeper into the fiesfc. The old dogs, who had been through a similar experience before, would come up and allow the quills to he pulled out as long as they could stand the pain, and then break away .to paw and plough again. When the fdw superficial quills had

Surgeon’s Work Well Done

Victim of Acpident Provided With Celluloid Jaw Almost as Good as the Original. A. remarkable operation, which Is rarely ever tried, was performed at •the Lebanon hospital, in the Bronx, Tipan’Gustav Dugnan, relates the New York American. The physicians declared that in a month their patient would be able to go among his trienrf.s, showing no traces of having met with an accident In which he Jost a portion of his lower jaw bone. Dugnan is a baker. One night about ten weeks ago he was attending: to an automatic oven when the door suddenly swung open and hit turn hi the jaw. It tore away the lower portion of his chin, and he was removed to Lebanon hospital. It was first attempted to heal the wound, tart fifxni the doctors saw that such a

Abyssinia Exploration

C&ilds i Frick, son of Henry C. ■Ftiiek, has recently sailed from Ix>n<fea with a view to making natural bistory collections in the Abyssinian rergion. He is accompanied by Lieut. (Cot Edgar A. Means, U. S. A., retired, .-associate zoologist of the United .‘States National Museum, as naturalist, and two other companions, one whom is a physician. The ‘our will be primarily through

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been removed the real work of saving the dogs’ lives began. We took off our coats, set our guns against a tree and went at the task. One by one the dogs were caught. Sitting upon the animal’s crouching body, Carper held the head between his knees, gripping ear and jaw in his powerful grasp, while I pulled out the quills. The main part of a porcupine quill is smooth and white and has the tough,’ flexible texture of the quill of a bird’s feather, but for a distance of about half an inch from the needlesharp point the quill is hard, black, slender and armed with innumerable barbs. The quills vary greatly in length, thickness and amount of barbing, the shorter and stouter ones having the longest points and most effective barbs, the larger, thinner quills gradually merging into the long, coarse hairs of the animal’s pelt. A long-pointed quill with the barbed portion fully imbedded in the nose of a dog often resisted the strongest pull that either of us could give, notwithstanding an excellent hold on the body of the quill between the thumb and the bent forefinger. The pain must have been intense. The most resistant quills were pulled either by the teeth or by improvised pliers made of a half-split stick, in the crack of which the quill was caught and tightly held. I was assured afterward by an old woodman that an imbedded quill could be removed more easily and with less pain by rolling It between the thumb and finger as it is pulled. To use his expression, the barber point would “unscrew.”* A minute examination of a quill-point did not show any spiral arrangement of the barbs, but it did show that the barbs are not rigid, but flexible, and I ha\e no doubt that by twisting as described the barbs would be bent to one side and the quill be much more easily withdrawn. The dogs varied in the manner in which they took their punishment. The yellow pup and the young foxhound had only a few quills, and they howled when these were pulled. The old foxhound was hard to hold and was inclined to be ugly. Jule complained, but allowed the pulling to proceed, although her jaws were reeking with blood and saliva. Drum, the brindle pup, showed his bulldog stock by submitting to the long ordeal with barely a whimper.

course would be impossible, and a section of the bone was removed. In order that the man might retain his original features a plastic operation was performed. Drs. Syms, Cohen and Benjamin took charge. First they made a wire bridge in the shape of the missing bone. For several weeks they permitted the flesh and skin to grow over nature’s substitute. The other_day they decided to remove the wires, in their stead placing a piece of celluloid. Then they drew the flesh over the artificial jaw and stitched the skin together. “It was one of the most remarkable operations ever performed at this hospital,” Dr. Benjamin said. “Although a small scar will always remain, his appearance will be practically the same as before the accident.

Abyssinia, but will extend into British East Africa, covering a portion of the area traversed by Colonel Roosevelt two years ago. The trip will include a visit to the vicinity of Lake Rudolf, discovered in 1888, by Count Telekl, but little explored. It is a wild and dangerous country, inhabited by intelligent but uncivilized Hamatlc people. Besides persona) effects, the pack train will be fitted

Ranger, the staghound, was in by far the most serious condition of any of the dogs. He had more quills in his face than any other, and some were near, though fortunately not in, his eyes. They' were liable at any time to work there, however, through his agonized pawing. We considered shooting him to end his misery, but Carper hated to do it. We concluded to go back to camp, get something to eat and decide the dog’s fate afterward. On the way back I asked Carper whether the dogs would not learn to let a porcupine alone. He replied that they would not, that the older dogs had been through the experience repeatedly, though he had never seen a pack quite so thoroughly done up, and that if they rafi across a porcupine the next day they would undoubtedly tackle him. Evidently dogs of this fighting quality are no more deterred by sujch an experience than is a bulldog deterred from fighting a second time because he has once before been bitten in a fight. After our meal we decided to give the staghound a chance for his life, though neither of us relished the prospect of lacerating his head to do it. His face was beginning to swell and he was dozy until we stirred him up. He was ready to ‘'fight us all. We tied him down under a log. and one man held his body, the other his head, while I pulled the quills with the steel pliers. By actual count we took 568 quills out of that staghound. Eighty-one of these were inside the line of his teeth, in his gums, the roof of his mouth and his tongue. At least thirty had been pulled out at odd times before the count began, and during the following days over twenty more worked out of his misshapen head at various points. The staghound lived and fortunately lost neither eye. It was a curious and a fearful weapon that nature had given to this otherwise weak and peaceable porcupine, with which in* defense of his liberty and his life he dealt a terrible retribution to seven powerful enemies, half of whom he would have killed had not still greater odds been matched against him.

As Fishes See Us. It has occurred to one scientist to try to represent by underwater photography the appearance of. the out-of-water world as viewed by the eyes of fish. The results are said to be most curious, depending upon the refraction of light by water. For example, with a box filled with water, having a photographic plate at the back and a pinhole covered with glass at the front, the situation of a fish looking out of an aquarium is imitated. With such an arrangement it has been found that all three sides and the complete ceiling and floor of a room could be photographed at one view. Placed at a point where three streets meet at a right angle, it gave a view looking down all three streets, including the ground up to the base of the tripod and the sky from the horizon to the zenith. From a balloon such a camera would photograph the whole visible surface of the earth out to the horizon on all sides.

with articles of trade for the people —such as American cotton cloth, wire, mirrors, bottles for ornaments, etc. Men are never so ridiculous from the qualities which really belong tc them as from those which they pretend to have. —Rochef oucau Id. The apple tree never asks the beech how he shall grow; nor the lion the horse how he shall take his William Blake.

HYGENEJHE TOPIC International Congress Will Meet at Capital in September. Elaborate “Exhibition of Health” Will Be a Feature —To Consist of Nina Sections —Twenty-Nine Countries Will Send Delegates. Washington.—For the first time tn the sixty years of its existence, since It was called into being in 1852, to /neet the great pandemic of cholera in Europe, the International Congress on Hygiene and Demography will bold its sessions in this country, at the capital, in direct response to the invitation of the president and the congress 3f the United States. The meetings will be held in Washington September 23-28. In connection with the congress there will be one of the most elaborate “exhibitions on health” ever assembled. The exhibit will be opened the second week in September and will continue three weeks. Even though the congress has behind it the history of giving formal Indorsement to such epoch-making dlsloveries as the Pasteur treatment tor rabies and the antitoxin treatment for liphtheria and giving to the world the knowledge which enabled medical practitioners everywhere to take advantage of these discoveries, it is anticipated that the fifteenth congress, In September, will mark a greater step in the advancement of , health than has any previous congress. Although fourteen other congresses, have been held In the various capitals of Europe, this will be the first time that the United States will have anything like appropriate representation. The governors of forty-three states already have appointed committees of representative physicians, health officers and authorities on hygiene to take part in the discussions and to arrange state exhibits in the general exhibition. The usual American representation at previous congresses has been from five to ten delegates, whereas at the coming meeting delegates from every city and town in the country* are expected, to the number of between six and seven thousand. Twenty-five foreign countries, too, have signified their intention of being represented at the congress and the exhibition. Last week hotel accommodations were arranged for a delegation of 300 fsom Germany alone. Whatever may be the announcements of medical discoveries at the forthcoming congress, which may parallel the von Behring announcement of diphtheria antitoxin in 1893 and the Pasteur antlrabic treatment In 1889, it is intended that the fifteenth International Congress on Hygiene and Demography shall bring about a standardization of hygienic methods throughout the United States and the

world. This purpose is well outlined in ,the formal announcement of the exhibition on health which the department of state has just issued and which specifies that “one of the pressing needs of the times is the standardization of hygienic methods and the co-ordination and the correlation of the work of federal, state, municipal and private health agencies.” The congress will be divided into nine sections, each of which will have its own program, and the work proposed for the various sections will be announced from time to time as it is determined. The exhibition will be held in a specially constructed building of vast area now being erected in Potomac Park. “The work of the congress is of special importance to the government and citizens of the United States," said Dr. John S. Fulton, secretary general of the organization. "The congress will bring together about 3,000 of the most distinguished specialists, and other thousands will be attracted by the exhibition. Problems of th£ greatest Importance to the United States will be discussed in the sections and illustrated in the exhibition, such as the cure and prevention of tropical diseases, the inspection of animals and meat products and federal, state and municipal organization for the preservation of public health.” President Taft, honorary president of the congress, will open the convention. REPORT ON INDUSTRIES. Manufacturing statistics of the United States collected by the census bureau for the ten-year period ending with 1909 show an increased tendency toward diversification in manufacturing industries. The report of the bureau Shows that the less important industries of the country showed greater percentages of Increase during the period than the more important ones, by far the highest percentage being noted In the automobile Industry. Exceptionally large Increases were credited to the copper, tin and sheet iron industries. Large decreases in the average number of wage earners was show.n in iron and steel, blast furnaces, sugar and molasses industries. The manufacturing industries of the United States employ as wage earners 6,615,046 people; the value of the products of these industries is $20,672,052,000 and the value added by their manufacture is $8,530,261,000. The number of wage earners increased 40.4 per cent, since 1899 and The value of products 81.2 per cent. These figures represent the totals of manufacturing establishments conducted under the factory system as distinguished from the neighborhood, hand and building industries. The slaughtering and meat-packing.

industry ranks first in gross value of products, with $1,370,568,000; second is foundry and machine shop products, with $1,228,475,000; third, lumber and timber products, witß $1,156,129,000; fourth, iron and steel, steel works and rolling mills, with $985,728,000, and fifth, flour mills and grist mills products, with $883,584,000. MANY PVES LOST IN FIRES. More than £427,000,000 in property was destroyed and 6,000 lives were sacrificed in fires, exclusive of forest fires, last year in the United States, according to Representative Jackson; of Kansas, who urged before the house interstate and foreign commerce com--mittee the other day his resolution to investigate all tiro insurance companies. This loss was thirty timqs aq great a loss as in all of civilized Eu-’ rope, he added. Members of the committee questioned the authority of congress td order such an inquiry, but George HJ Holt of Chicago, an insurance counsellor, and manager of the policyhold-, ers union, insisted that it was necessary if regulatory legislation were to l be enacted by the states. Mr. Jackson testified that the fire insurance Industry was a “natural monopoly,” with national and international ramifications. He said the! companies apportioned the Unlted ( States among themselves, and fixed, rates that, were unscientific and virtu-i ally .inexplicable, » “Then the companies actually bold; the country by the throat?” said! Chairman Adamson. “Practically,” said Mr. Jackson. “And the. consumer pays the tax?”' “Beyond a doubt. And the strong] man pays less than the weak.” > U. S. PRODUCES MOST SALT. “The- United States is practically! independent of the rest of the world, in the production of salt, and Michigan has played a leading part in this' enormous industry,” remarked J. H Kessler of New York. “Government; reports show that in 1910 this coun-j try produced more than 50,300,000 barrels of salt, valued at about $8,000,000} an increase in gross of about 200,00<1 barrels, but a decrease in value oi nearly $450,000. Six states lead in the] production of salt: New York, gan, Ohio, Kansas, Louisiana and Cal-j ifornla. “There are many uses for salt be-i side the common one in the kitchen and on the table. In the preservation of fish and meat and in the dairy business it plays an important part. It enters into many chemical processes and is employed in the manufacture of bleaching powders. Its value as a medicine is growing, a salt solution having saved many lives.” ,

BULLETS FOR 3</ 2 YEARS. There is now enough ammunition on hand to supply the United States army and navy and state militia for three and a half years, according to Brigadier General Crozier, chief of Ordnance of the army, who appeared the other day before the house committee on military affairs, which is drafting the army bill for 1913. General Crozier explained that of late the government had been contracting for enough ammunition from private companies to keep them running, as an “insurance” against war. “I am certain,” said the general,, “that the government arsenals and the private ammunition manufacturers can produce enough ammunition to supply our army as fast as it can be recruited.” At the end of the current year, the general added, there will be a reserve supply of 180,000,000 rounds of ammunition on hand and this figure will be increased 10,000,000 rounds before the end of another year. SMILES IN HIS SLEEPT While President Taft slept the artist painted! This is the story Artist Theodore Molkenboer is telling at the expense of the president. Artist Molkenboer came to Washington by engagement to paint the president's picture. The hour set for the work was after luncheon one day early in the week. The president sat down in a big arm chair in the library of the White House and the artist began his work. Glancing up he saw his subject was sound asleep. For two hours Artist Molkenboer worked and President Taft slept on. Finding that the chief executive would sleep, Mr. Molkenboer concluded he would go ahead and get the best results possible. The work shows a splendid likeness of the president, awake with smiles wreathing his countenance The artist refused to say whether the president smiled in his sleep. For Judge’s Eyes Only. Mrs. Doogan, a stout Irish woman, was plaintiff against the city in a suit for damages for personal injuries. She claimed that her leg had been injured. While she was on the witness stand she testified that the injury waa at a point just below her knee and that the scars of it were plainly to be seen. Josiah Williams, who afterward committed suicide, was the lawyer for the city and he demanded that she show the scars to the jury. ‘Not on yer life,’ shouted Mrs. Doogan. “If I have to show it at all I’l show it to no man but the judge himself." Judge Gates blushingly declined the honor.—Kansas City Star. Making It Personal. Jack (quoting Hamlet) —If thou wilt needs marry, marry a fool. Ethel—Oh, Jack, this is so sudden

OF SMALL CONCERN TO HIM Why Uncle Eph Refused Information ’ He Felt to Be Altogether Superfluous. When Robert H. Davis was young , and loose in the feet he once wan- i dered into a little Mississippi town. > It was a bright day in the early spring ■ and he walked down one street. By and by he came to the county jail— ' a two-storied affair, standing flush I with the sidewalk. “There was a ne- j gro pressing his face against the ■ barred window on the second floor,” said Mr. Davis, "holding on to the j bars and yawning. By and by an old | negro came limping along the street toting a whitewash bucket “ ‘Hello, Uncle Eph’m,’ says the one ' In the window. e j ” ‘Howdy,’ says Eph’m, limping on. “ ‘Walt a minute, uncle,’ says this ; lonesome negro in the window. ‘What j time is It, uncle?’ "Uncle Ephraim limped right on. He hardly looked up.§ “ ‘What difference does it make to you, niggah?’ he asked. ‘You ain’t goin’ nowheer.’ ” —New York Letter to the Cincinnati Times-Star. , THE TRUTH ABC’JT BLUING. Talk No. 9. This common article fools many. Think of it, large bottle, little pinch of blue, fill it up with water. There you are. Does it look good to you? Buy RED CROSS BALL BLUE, a pure blue. Makes beautiful, /clear, white clothes. . You will like it. Large package 5 cents. ASK YOUR GROCER (then he went. k I Myrtle—Have you ever tried to figure Out what Shakespeare meant by the words, "Stand not upon the order of your going?” George—No. Have you? Myrtle—Yes. The definition is “Don't wait for a house to fall on you. -

Useful Agent for Show. Al G. Field, the minstrel man, has another story which he is telling. He says that not long ago an attache of his show was sent out in an lowa town to give some handbills, or heralds, to boys for distribution. The man found only one boy willing to work. He didn’t deem it necessary to explain to the boy that the bills were to be distributed about town. He took It for granted that the boy knew. The youngster took the printed slips of paper and the man gave him a quarter and left Half an hour later the showman chanced to pass along the street and saw the buy standing on the sidewalk, crying. “What’s the matter?” asked the man. The boy gave a couple of final sobs and, wiping his eyes on his sleeve, said: “A man jlst come along an’ took one of my bills.” Women’s College for Buddhists. A university is to be founded by the Buddhists for the high education of women. A meeting is reported to have taken place at the Nishi-Hon-ganji temple, Kyoto, In which it was unanimously decided to carry on the undertaking as a work of the Women’s Association of this Buddhist sect. The cost for the institute is estimated at 280,000 yen. Relieves and Rests Teething Babies. Mrs. Burton Gary, Toledo, Ohio, writes that she has given Kopp’s Baby’s Friend to her babies when teething; finds it gives them rest without making them sleep. Invaluable t 6 mothers. Three sizes, 10c., 25c and 50c., at druggists or sent direct by Kopp’s Baby’s Friend Co., York, Pa. Sample by mall on request. A Soft Answer. He (triumphantly, reading from a newspaper) — “Suffragist speaker heckled by geese at a county fair.” Ha, ha! Even 'the geese are against woman suffrage, my dear! She (contemptuously)—That’s because they are geese.—Judge. He Was. Mistress —Why, Norah, what are you doing on that policeman’s knee? Norah —Sure, mum, he’s a-restin’ me! Cole’s Carbolisalve quickly relieves and cures burning, itching and torturing skin diseases. It instantly stops the pain of burns. Cures without scars. 25c and 50c by druggists. For free sample write to J. W. Cole & Co.. Black River Falls, Wis. Look for crosses; and while it is fair weather mend the sails of the ■hip.—Samuel Rutherford. ■ Good health cannot be maintained where there is a constipated habit. Garfield Tea overcomes constipation. Money sometimes talks when you want to keep it quiet.

Bree Color Plans f for any rooms yon want to decorate You can have the prettiest walls in your town, at the least cost. Our ■ expert designers will plan the work for you FREE. Get This Book 20 Pretty Rooms —we will mail you a copy Free. It tells how to biave the b.est decorating at least cost, is full of new color schemes and shows sixteen of the exquisite Alabastine tints, famous for their soft, refined JI M qualities. The Beautiful Wall Tint

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tonnn 22 cash prizes dZUUlhoo GIVEN AWAY TO THE BEST PLAYERS AT PYRAMID j THE NEW FASCINATING SOLITAIRE GAME I Pyramid can only be played xvith : Rayo Cards and the,players sending in the • highest number of records of different oom- | binations from which by successful manipu- ■ latten the 8 color sequences have been worked out in accordance with the rules and instruotions, will receive S2OOO, divided as follows: SI,OOO for Ist highest number of records $ 500 for 2d “ “ “ $ 100 each for next 5 highest numbers This money has been deposited with The Columbia Trust Co., 135 Broad.way, New York i to whom contestants must send their records. ] Contest is open till May Ist, 1913, allowing l ample time to become skillful at the game, i Each pack of Rayo Cards contains instruoi tions for playing Pyramid and tells how to ' preserve records for Prize Contest. Kayo Cards cost 50c. per pack and all order* enclosing money order for 50 cents will be I filled in order of receipt. RAYO CARD COMPANY 09 E. 42nd St.. New York City

44 Bu. to the Acre Is a heavy yield, butthat’s what John Kennedy of Edmonton. Alnerta, Western Canada, got from 40 acres of Spring Wheat i n I'JtO. Keports from otherdtstricts i n that province showed other excels I 111 b lent results—such as 4-EeAjCnJit-MGagMMto. -> t-u Vwl. SwF; | from 120 acres, or 83 1-3 I bu.peracre. '2s.3t.iand 40 S •1 li Ew I bushe lyi elds were numI erous. As high as 133 Id E l l K, * n | bushels of oats to the ■4B B 1 acre were threshed from e A Alberta fields in 1010. Silver Cup at the recent Spokane vU IxgMwISI Fairwas awatdrHt to t he — ■ - Alberta Uoveruirtenjfor A-\ \ Itsexhtbixof grains.grassesnnd I , l i ) vegetables. Reports of excellent yields for 1010 come also from Saskatchewan and Manitoba In 'Western Canada. Free homesteads of 960 £9 sS acres, and adjoining preemptions of 960 acres (at ’•> e S 3 per acre) are to lie had (li' J I** the choicest districts, tlf x; Schools convenient, cil- / l|’ • mate excellent, soli the |li very best, railways close at IH II M , band, building lumber hit I 1 cheap, fuel easy to get and 1 reasonable in price, water mSM easily procured, mixed farnrlnga success. Ava 1 Vkxf Write as to best place for setWx tlement, settlers’ low railway rates, descriptive Illustrated “Lastßest West” (sent free on application land other informa—tlon, to Sup’tof immigration, Ottawa, Can..orto the Canadian Government Agent. (36) GEO. W. AIRD, 2nd Floor Traction Terminal Bldo-. Indianapolis, Ind. Please wrtt. to the agent nearest you Girls Wanted Pleasant, clean work, agreeable surroundings, good pay, steady employment. Must be 16 years or over» A dormitory (for girls only) furnishes clean, light, airy rooms and wholesome, ample meals at cost. Everything sanitary. Entire dormitory under rigid supervision of Mr. and Mrs. F. Y. Gross. Inspection by parents invited. For references, write Secretary Y. W. C. A., Fort Wayne. Apply to Superintendent Wayne Knitting Mills Fort Wayne, Ind. if you visit our factory and buy one of our new 1912 S Amazing Detroit iW Kerosene Engines Sold on 15 days' trial. Only en- MjmfelKiliiaM M Eine made that runs successfully on Coal OU. (Tses Gascline. Alcohol, Benr.tne or fit f wSKSwwfywBMW any liquid fuel. (Also arti- MWw»(Sr(Bmdiin tleial or untural gaa.l SturtsifMPflWhWailMMfdvl without cranking. Only Jifl moving parts no cams-no SwyWQjßjfßjiAr '-W • procket s— no genre—no W Ap valves. Simple. Powerful and Strong. All sizes from » 2 to 20 H. in st<>ck. ready to ship at once. Will do any work where power is require,!. Thousands In nw. Seeing Is believlng-yoo know then what yon are getting, florae and see-us. Detroit End. Works, Jefi. and Bellevue Ares.. Detroit, Kicks PATENTS OF «I«eZZ CLEMENTS A CLEMENTS, htoi KtaW 13t Colorado Bldg. Washlojtog, C. •