The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 20 June 1912 — Page 7

tf~— -=*====*■ His Little Ij] Neighbor © I By DOROTHY DOUGLAS O [Copyright, 1912, by Associated Literary Press.) 'x, . All that was beautiful, all that was wonderful, all that was ascetic I—those 1 —those were in the scheme of Duane's life. The latter, asceticism, had not always been a part of the whole, but since bis removal to the picturesque little bungalow on the edge of the forest his, thoughts had dwelt more permanently In the clouds than on the more muniane earth. Duane was a great writer. The loves that had come and gone had . been inspiration to him and had left ao scar. A surfeit of the best music, the greatest paintings, the most beautiful of' women had been his and he longed now only for the quiet, uninterrupted solitude of his bungalow. He jo far cherished solitude for his concentration on his book children that he had engaged a servant who was both deaf and dumb. There was but one eyesore in Duane’s surroundings—the little tum-ble-down shanty on the lot next his swn. It was the only habitation within the author’s vision as he lay full lehgth on his verandi basking in the sun of an April day. That the shanty was uninhabited was the redeeming feature of the situation. Duane had often shuddered at the bare possibilities attached to its occupancy. A slovsnly housewife, a half dozen more , FLPtESBB tWk I WfeM ‘JOBWSrsf■ ' AJMSU V,-1-- v < ft' I AWwil Duane Had Often Shuddered at the Bare Possibilities of Its Occupancy. slovenly children, constant echo of wrangling and crying—these were the things pictured in the author's vivid Imagination. Duane sank back in his hammock exhausted by the mere contemplation bf a neighbor to jar his contentment. Gradually the fact stole over him that the habitual silence was being rudely broken. He sat up. A tumble-down wagon had rumbled up’" to the. gate next door and over Its creaking box was piled a collection of hideous furniture. , Duane shuddered as if a chilling wind had passed ovsr him. The shanty was about to become a home —a domicile for some fearful family of children and animals. In imagination Duane heard cats and dogs and perhaps a cock or two in the dawning of day. The hair on his leonine head fairly bristled as he jerked into a sitting position to watch the unloading of a scanty, meager supply of furniture. And while he looked his sensitive eyes caught sight, far up the road, of a woman with a birdcage in one hand and a dilapidated suitcase in the other. Duane puffed furiously at his big A calabash pipe. When she drew near enough for him to look at her without h’is being observed he saw a slip bf a woman in a drab gown that seemed to have been blown about her figure by a caressing wind. He tried to concentrate his mind on his new novel, but a jangle of confused imaginings crowded his brain. He attributed his mental discomfiture to the woman in the drab gown; he had always dreaded the advent of a neighbor, and now he was reaping the harvest of his forebodings. Duane was distinctly irritated, but over his .personal grievance there stole the m«w ory of a kind neighbor, who had onc% sent him a cup of hot coffee and some home-made bread when he arrived to occupy the house next to her own. He recalled dis-' tinctly his feeling of gratitude for the timely and much needed refreshment. Duane lay for a momeht thinking,

SHYNESS HARD TO ANALYZE j Psychologists Have Never Given a Really Good Explanation of Annoying Malady. Although shyness, like egotism, may be said to arise from .a pathological degree of self-consciousness, the presence of this elusive and illogical failing in an otherwise normal individual is by no means easy to explain; and if we are to judge by the way in which they ignore the subject, the psychologists find no less difficulty in its definition and classification. They are content for the most part to include it under the headings of “shame” and “modesty” in their analysis of the emotions, but this is by no means satisfactory. Shyness is, psychologically, much more nearly related to fear than to shame. That‘it does not necessarily proceed from even a sense of moral, mental or physical deficiency, still less from the actual existence of these, is well known, and it is this fact that makes the curious predilection of the malady for certain individuals one of its most aggravating features. Sneak-

when he drew himself half reluctantly from the hammock. A few’ moments later his deaf and dumb servant was crossing the garden to the shanty next door with a tray upon which a pot of tea. . a plate of sandwiches and K cluster of fresh roses were daintily arranged. “All women prefer tea, I suppose," muttered the author as he once more sank ipto his hammock. He looked up at Tanner, who had brought back a note from the little neighbor. “Thank you, very much,” it read. “I w’as longing for a cup of tea and my fire is not lighted as yet.” Duane returned then to thoughts of his book, feeling that he had performed his part. Later in the afternoon his reveries of wonderful music and ethereal women were rudely broken. His little, drab-colored neighbor had burst into song. Duane shivered. The tones, spontaneous and joyous, were halftone flat. After his first involuntary shrinking from discordant sound, Duane fell to wondering how any one could sing in a shanty which had neither beauty nor comfort to adorn it. “She must be happy,” he muttered, and was not conscious that a half sigh accompanied his thought. Later in the week, when he saw her working with a broken trowel in the meager soil beside the porch and humming discordantly over her efforts to produce at least the semblance of a garden, Duane sensed a feeling akin to awe that happiness existed where beauty and luxury played no part. He glanced from his little neighbor’s piteous attempt at home making to his own completed haven, with its wealth of beauty, luxury and comfort. Something within him ( stfapped. He was half irritated, wholly disconcerted, by a sudden lack of contentment. He brooded darkly over the mere fact that a stray alley cat had deserted his. own back door for that of his neighbor; he felt arrrieved that her canary in the broken cage on the porch sang more joyously than his own golden songster, and when one day a bevy of little waifs cams to her house and sent peals of childish laughter floating over the high privet hedge Duane’s state of mind bordered on jealousy. ' Tfie crowning grievance came when he discovered his great collie Rob j slinking guiltily back home after a stolen visit with the little neighbor, lie secretly suspected Tanner of having taken many of his choice slips over to the scanty garden next door, but Duane could find no place for condemnation. His new book progressed beyond his expectations. There seemed to be more warmth and vital life in its pages than in his former works. Contrary to his dark forebodings, a neighbor had not disturbed his train of thought. He had never spoken to the little drab colored Woman, nor had he attempted to fathom the spirit of happiness that seemed to hover over her every hour. During the heat of the summer, Duane was compelled to move his hammock from the veranda to the summer house at the foot of ..the garden. Enjoying physical movement after his hours of writing he carried the stepladder down to the vine-hung arbor in order to put the hammock screw into the high post. In the garden next door, close beside the privet hedge, the little neighbor started back suddenly. A loud crash smote her ears. She looked quickly in the direction whence the sound had come, then sped like a fawn up along the privet hedge to the spot where an opening permitted her body to squeeze through. When Duane regained consciousness there was a steady pounding beneath something infinitely’ soft upon which his head rested. He did not open his eyes immediately lest he lose the contentment that was his. Had he entered another land? Was an angel visitant stroking his eyes with rose petals? These were the questions that wafted over Duane’s mind before he tempted the illusion by opening his eyes. The little neighbor sighed in relief. “Your temple struck the stone coping,” she said. Duane could only look up in wonderment at the big drab colored eyes above him. They seemed fathomless and Duane strove to dispel a feeling of surrender that possessed him. While he looked a faint tinge of color swept into the cheeks that were neither rose pink nor yet softly white. In reality Duane drew up into a sitting position, but in his thoughts he had taken the drab figure close into his arms and was holding her there away from every one else in the world. He laughed whimsically at his own predicament, while the women of his imagination trailed by him in their beauty and wit and charm and laughed mockingly at the slim drab figure beside him. But the great author only looked through and beyond them to a future made suddenly big and wonderful. The little neighbor glanced up at him. Apparently she understood, for ' a slow smile dawned in her eyes.

ing broadly, we may say that shyness consists essentially in a state of morbid self-consciousness of one’s personal characteristics, whether physical or mental, in relation to the opinions of others. There is a certain amount of evidence to show that shyness is hereditary; but, however this may be, it is largely a matter of temberament in individuals, and finds a fruitful ally in a too active imagination. It is as protean as influenza in the forms in which it betrays its presence, and may exhibit itself in a thousand little gaucherles, which in extreme cases may render the life of its unhappy possessor a burden to him. It has been remarked, and with some truth, that this extraordinary affliction is largely confined to the Teutonic races. As a national characteristic, however, this abnormal aloofness and shyness has its compensations. It throws a man more upon his own resources; society ceases to be a necessity to him, and this may have been one of the reasons of the Anglo-Saxon’s supremacy as a nioneer in the untrodden regions of the earth. —The Lance*-

~~ii ir~~ Advertising n Talks n Jc OOCWCXXXDOOOO Tj WHAT GOOD ADVERTISING IS Buyer’s Viewpoint of Merchandise Must Be Considered First of Alt— Keep Everlastingly at It. Good advertising consists in telling the public in language that they can understand, what they want to know about the goods you have to sell. Failures in advertising follow the avoidance of this simple rule. It is all a question of viewpoint, says the Novelty News. Most advertisers and copy writers are too full of what they see in the things they have to advertise. They fail to consider the reader's viewpoint. It is a matter of only secondary importance to the buyer what you think of your proposition. With the buyer it is purely a question of how he (or she) can use what you have to offer. Nothing is more absurd than to advertise the “biggest,” “the best goods,” “the highest quality.” That’s what you say about it. The public want to form their own judgment. They consider themselves competent and if you want to sell them you must convince thgm by showing what you have to sell. It’s nothing to them that you say your goods are “best,” and of “highest quality.” Most of the buying public are from Missouri; they want to be shown. They want to see what you have to offer. Another common failing .is for large concerns to assume that they are too well known to need advertising. Everybody knows us, they say, and if they are in the market for our line of goods we will surely learn of it. No concern is so great that they don’t require advertising, none so well known that some new buyer in the field has not heard of them. It is sheer egotism to think otherwise. A product similar to Postum Cereal was made in Battle Creek long before Pbst went there. But the public didn’t know it. The concern that produced it thought everybody who might want it knew about it. But Post thought otherwise. Xnd because he was wisely otherwise, he made millions. Advertising did it. And don’t expect immediate, tangible and directly traceable results. Most advertising is a question of good publicity, of telling the people all the time. Those who place the largest orders don’t buy every day. They but at infrequent intervals, hence the necessity of “keeping everlastingly at it.” You may quit just when a large order is about to be placed. And the buyer when he does make up his mind to buy doesn’t remember the ad. you placed a few months ago. The salesman on the spot generally gets the orders, the advertiser who confronts the buyer when ready to buy, reaps the harvest That kind of advertising pays? Parables of 1912. It you toot your little tooter And then lay aside your horn. There’s not a soul in ten short days Will know that you were born. The man who advertises With a short and sudden jerk. Is the one who blames the paper Because it doesn’t work. I But the man who gets, the business, And who the other fellow beats, I Is the advertiser with the adlet | That you read from week to week. f We can help you toot your trumpet,. We can bring the people in. We can help you build your business. Are you ready to begin? Moral—He who toots his little trumpet Can withstand a sudden shock. For like the man in Scripture He builds his business on a rock. —Fourth Estate.

Don’t be a wheelbarrow man in a motor age. Scratch for business. The hen does it, and as a money producer she has got John D. Rockefeller beaten to a frazzle.

Patronize Home Merchant?. By patronizing home merchants you are rewarded by always having good enterprising merchants at home. Patronize them and they will benefit you in more ways than one. You are rewarded by seeing your patronage and the patronage of your influence in building up and maintaining your own town; patronize home merchants, home industry and home enterprise of all kinds in preference to those of any place. Spend your money at home with people who have interest In your town. By doing this the town is kept up., property is made more valuable, conveniences are enlarged and opportunities for financial improvements ate opened. The Lasting Kind of Advertising. “The advertiser who tells the truth —nothing but the truth always—may not cut as wide a swath at first as the advertiser who puts into his announcements some of the glitter and temporary pulling power of Insincerity,” says Jerome P. Fleishman, “but he gets business that sticks and grows—whereas the man who doesn’t live up o his avertlslng fools people once and drives them away forever.” Her Hat. Apropos the latest foreign limousine—the limousine with a roof that slides back for aviation meetings— Frank Coffyn, of hydroplane fame, said the other day in New York: “This car refflinds me of a conversation I overheard between two girls. “ ‘lt was an awfully smart crowd at the flying,’ said the first-girl. ‘I saw some awfully nice folks.’ “‘And who flew?’ the second in■piired t “‘Don’t ask me!’ said the first girl. Do yon think I was going to take off my new hat just to see a lot of aeroplanes?’

BEST WAY TO REACH PEOPLF Newspaper Advertising Will Accom plish Merchant’s Object Quicker Than Any Other Method. In an interesting address before th< | San Diego, Cal., Ad Club recently C. S. Holzwasser said among othei things: “Should you want to say somethin? to those whom you cannot ’reach bj the various methods we have, such as personal conversation or telephonic communication, they are best reachec through the medium of the newspa i pers. “Advertising, in my opinion, is the art of creating a desire in the minds of those whom you wish to reach to possess something that you have. Since everybody reads the newspa pers, it follows as a matter of course that if you advertise in the news papers, you reach the greatest num ber of people. I find that whenevei I I say something to my public in the i newspapers—when I have something real to say—l always get splendid re suits. I find, however, that when 1 talk in the newspapers and do not say anything—l may as well not have used the newspaper's at all. When J first started out to write advertise ments, we used to hear and read about a man named Charles Austin Bates. I believe this is the gist ol what he said: He said: ‘lf you want to attract a man’s attention in the newspapers you will call to him in 72-point type. After you have attract ed his attention, if he makes the start ; to come to you, tell ■■ him what you ; want to say in 10-point type.’ 1 ' would go a little farther than Mr Bates, and would say in a loud tone of voice, exemplified by the 72-point type, what I wanted to tell him. 1 would also lower my voice after 1 had attracted his attention,' but 1 would be very sure that I had some thing to say - which would interest him, before I called to him at all. “I find the nearer I approach the common sense in our, talks in the newspapers, the more successful we are. I also find that evasion of the truth or misstatements of any kind in the newspapers is the most ex pensive kind of advertising, from the fact that we do not get results and such methods of advertising have a tendency to reduce confidence in oui advertisements by the readers. Therefore, we advertise in the newspapers, plain statements of fact, .garnished a little by the elegancies of the English language, always telling the truth, the results are absolutely certain. “What is absolutely necessary in newspaper advertising is to be specific. To have something to say and to say it. As I have stated before, to say it in plain words which do not go over the various heads of the readers. We can assume that the proportion of educated persons to illiterates, or the proportion of illiterates who do not read the English language, is very small —practically nil. Therefore, if we have something to say, and we say it through the medium of the newspapers, we are bapnd to receive a very good hearing. 1 find that newspaper advertising, like every other field of human endeavor, is becoming an art, and embraces a great many units of this art. Advertising is no less an art than the practice of law or medicine. We can estimate accurately the results that we may obtain from a certain amount of space, which may be used in newspaper advertising. We know that where we specialize in any one of the units of newspaper advertising; where we present a good, logical reason for our readers to buy a certain thing, we obtain results. “We know the man who has made a specialty of advertising, for instance, windmills, has made a success of the selling of these windmills from the fact that he became a specialist in this one particular line of work, and brought the selling of windmills up to a very fine art Like the practice’ of medicine, which is divided into a great many subdivisions ■ each a department and study in Itself —so advertising has been brought to such a fine art that specialists in advertising have today reached a stage where they can advertise their particular specialty, and can reach the buying public, surely obtaining results every time. “I believe, personally, in specific advertising. I believe in advertising in the newspapers more than in anything else. It is the natural avenue, and the only one method we have for conveying such information as we desire to one another. While there are other mediums of advertising, in my career as a merchant (something like twenty-five years) I have reached the net result that the newspaper is the only one method by which I can surely create a desire in the people’s minds to buy something that I have on sale. “The newspapers practically form public opinion on every question which arises. They, every day, contain lectures on sociology, on business, literature, philosophy, on everything that is of interest to man or woman. Therefore as time goes on, and minds enlarge, people become broader and the newspapers are filling a still broader field. I cannot see where any other method of advertising can be likened in any.way with the advantages of those derived from newspaper advertising. I am quite sure, with the organization you have (composed, as it is, with a good part of the brains of the community—with the will to do and the knowledge to do it with—and the truth back of you), you cannot fail to bring results, even greater than you had perhaps aspired to.” Was Good for Murderer. “You ought to be glad that you will be electrified instead of hanged,” said a prison visitor to a convicted murderer. * . “Why?” asked the felon, in surprise. “YOu suffer greatly from rheumatism, don’t you?” “Yes.” “Well, electricity is the best known remedy for that.” —Epoch. Getting Near It. “If she told you her age you can surely figure out when she was born.” “Judging from what she told me her age was, I should say she was born on her fourteenth birthday.”

The Denial of Christianity and Its Results By Rev. William Evans, D. D., Director Bible Course of Moody Bible Institute, Chicago

TEXT—And if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain. Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised up Christ; whom he raised not up, if so be that tire dead rise not. For if the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised: And if Christ be net raised, your faith is vain; ye are not in your sins.—l Cor. 15:14-18.

In this passage, Paul uses the word “vain” twice, although a different word is used in each instance. In v. 13, the nature of the gospel is referred to —it is wanting in reality; in v. 17, the power of the gospel is referred to — it is barren in results. So fundamental, then, is the resurrection of Christ to Chris-

tianity that if Christ be not risen from the dead the gospel of Christ is wanting in reality, and barren in results, it is false and groundless, barren and fruitless; it is nothing, it does nothing. I. Our Preaching Is Vain. —Paul makes Christianity answer with its life for the literal truth of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. That the body of the founder of Christianity did not remain in the grave jifter the third day is fundamental to the gospel as Paul preached it. This great fact" was a fundamental plank in the platform of the apostle's gospel; It was the very key-stone of the arch of Christianity, the very core of the gospel as he had received and proclaimed it, and as the Corinthian Christians had received it. Take away from Paul’s gospel the fact that Christ arose from the dead and you have taken the very heart and core out of his message—then it is nothing but a painted story, a concocted tale; *or the resurrection of Christ was. not a mere appendage to, but a constitutive part of Paul’s gospel message. If It be true that no living Christ issued forth from the tomb of Joseph, then that tomb became not only the grave of a man, but of a religion., too, with all the spiritual hopes built upon it, and all the splendid enthusiasms it has inspired; then the whole gospel story Is a sham, and unreality, an imposture at its very heart; then the platform of the gospel falls to pieces, and the arch of Christianity crumbles into dusf. If you have no Christ risen from the dead, says the apostle, then on what does the religion of Christ rest, and what reason have we for preaching it? Then our words are empty sounds, the hopes we have aroused are idle dreams, our pleas are vain boasts, our proposals are vain things, our inare futile plans; indeed, our whose message and preaching is a sham, a delusion, a tissue: of falsehoods, an empty phantom, a wortbless fiction. ’lnstead of our message being the proclamation of a truth, it is the dissemination of a lie, for if Christ be not risen then in reality we have no gospel that is worthy of the name—our message is but a vain, worthless, empty sham. Is this credible? 11. Your Faith Is Vain.—ls Christ be not risen, if he remained in the grave, then you have put faith in the wrong person and in the wrong ichlng, for if Christ did not rise, as he said, then he was nothing less than a false prophet, a betrayer, a blasphemer, who had suffered death justly. It is utterly worthless and useless to put your trust in one whose word lias so utterly failed. To build your hopes on one whose most solemn assertions have fallen to the ground would be nothing less than sheer madness; such an act would not be faith but credulity; then such a person as the Lord Jesus Chrtßt disappears, and you have nothing left but a man like ourselves in whom to believe. 111. Yet In Your Sins.--It is here acknowledged that Christ alone can save from sins, but if he could not save himself from sin’s power how can he save the sons of men from its guilt and dominion? Christ himself distinctly taught that his death had redemption value, and that his resurrection from the dead would be proof positive of this fact. The apostle Paul, also, says that “Christ died for our sins, and was raised again for our justification” (Rom. 4:25.) But if Christ himself is still under the power of death, which is the wages of sin, how, then, can he release others from the payment of that debt? Then his death has no redemptive value. If Christ remained in the grave then humanity has no redeemer, man has no Saviour; the guilt and power of sin has not been removed, men are not pardoned, sinners are not justified, the sinning and sinful race Ils still under the guilt and conden ation of sin and exposed to the just wrath of a righteous God against sin and sinners. Then freedom from condemnation is unreal, the sense of forgiveness is a sham, the consciousness of pardon for sin is the greatest delusion. Then Christ’s death has wrought only imaginary changes, and deluded Its most faithful adherents. Then we have put faith In the wrong person—-he was not what he claimed to be, he did not could not do what he claimed to do; there Is, therefore, nb forgiveness through His blood, no life and blessedness through his name, and no justification and pardon on the ground of his work. The denial of the resurrection of Christ carries with it the removal of all hope and ground of forgiveness and pardon. If Christ bo not risen, we are hopelessly lost in cur guilt and sin.

Not Reliably mformed. The gentleman who wore evening clothes and the remnants of a jag at ) o’clock in the morning was clinging to the footboard of a crowded surface car in Chicago. As the car rounded a sharp curve with a jerk the person in Incongruous apparel fell quickly and heavily to the cobblestones. He was picked up by the strong hands of the conductor and about twenty passengers. “Collision?” he asked In a dignified tone of voice. “No, ’’ said the conductor. “Off the track?” further questioned the victim of the accident “No,” said the conductor. “Well,” concluded he of the jag, “If I had known that I wouldn’t have got off.” —Popular Magazine. Eight Lives Shy. “I have only one life to live.” “That proves, that you are not a cat, after all.” Many a little dog has to bark loudly to keep up his courage; and we wonder if our too self-assertive friends aren’t sometimes doing the same thing. . ; IT IS CRIMINAL TO NEGLECT THE SKIN AND HAIR Think of the suffering' entailed by neglected skin troubles—mental because of disfiguration, physical be- ■ cause of pain. Think of the pleasure of a clear skin, soft, white hands, and good hair. These blessings, so essential to happiness and even success in life, are often only a matter of a little thoughtful care in the selection of effective remedial agents. Cuticura Boap and Ointment do so much for poor complexions, red, rough hands, and dry, thin and falling hair, and cost so little, that it is almost criminal not to use them. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere, a ; postal to “Cuticura,” Dept L, Boston, will secure a liberal sample of each, with 32-page booklet on. skin and scalp treatment. Hundreds of people who would be horror-stricken at the suggestion of suicide by the rope-and-rafter method, are daily killing their best selves with the poison of self-pity. Cole’s Carbollsalve Relieves and cures Itching, torturing diseases of the skin and mucous membrane. A superior Pile Cure. 25 and 50 cents, by druggists. For free sample write to J.-W. Cola & Co., Black River Falls, Wis. Too Favorable a Description. “That man is a pinhead.” “You flatter him. A pinhead knows just how far to go.” A very successful remedy for pelvic catarrh Is hot douches of Paxtine Antiseptic, at druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet, Co., Boston, Mass. It’s a question whether women grow old, or merely catch up with their age. Red Cross Ball Blue will wash double as many clothes as any other blue. Don’t put i your money into any other. The wages of arbitration should be paid as peace work. Liver and kidnev complaints will be greatly helped by taking Garfield Tea regularly. A good memory is essential to a successful liar.

SWONA For Infants and Children. xraCTßpllThe Kind You Have |*lWS=fi|||| Always Bought « ALCOHOL-3 per cent * « Preparation for As- # iw J simulating theFoodandßegula- KfiftTS th.o V_ | ting the Stomachs and Bowels of j j M nj* a ikw>wMauiadiaß Signature //Ij) Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- fJ| Ip F ness and Rest. Contains neither nt Z(\rVjJ Opium .Morphine nor Mineral £l\.lf Sj Not Nah cotic *TvV & sap, of OM DrSAWt'iMrc/fSfi h> Pumpkin Sood • - u R W Abt-Stmu • 1 ■ ■ V I £' fahtUoSafa - 1/t ■ T* Anin Slid • ■ flkS * ■ am g ft in» 111 H'ormSt.d - 11 111 J 0 O > Jjk T » || $0 A perfect Remedy for Constipa- AXT 4I» II S H ij-W; tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, g ■ Ip k \‘c Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- I 18/ » ness and Loss of Sleep UVBI** Facsimile Signature of § Thirty Years NEW YORK. * hswffigipmnßifi under the Foodand) || ®|||| || Exact Copy of Wrapper th« o»ht*u» oommhv. h«w o»k !■— ® FOR PIMIf rVU CATARRHAL FEVER 1 111ftk £l I JLi and throajdiseases Cures the skin and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid given oa the tongue- Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy; M cents and SI.OO a bottle; 56.00 and SIO.OO the dozen. Sold by all druggist* and horse goods houses, or sent express paid, by the manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO, Chemists. GOSHEN, INDIANA < arb»laledy aSe |i n g The best dressing you can find for wounds, bites of Insects, abrasions, etc. D The Carbolic Acid helps to prevent infection: the "Vaseline” cleanses and soothes. (Sfe- —— Especially valuable where there are children. *KPLATED For sale everywhere in handy glass bottles. Be sure you get "Vaseline.** Our various “Vaseline” preparations make up a complete medicine i Uliufx c T o»l’’ u® k chest that should be In every honqj. Write for free booklet telling aU jW I about them. Address Dept. K. Hhjgr ryi, «■ Chesebrough Manufacturing Company 17 State Street (Consolidated) —JI

WE CURE MEN AND WOMEN of the Whiskey, Morphine and Tobacco Habits And leave no bad results, as the treatment Is purely vegetable. The best and kindest care is given our patients. Our 860,000 new building is fire-proof with all jnodern improvements and pleasant surroundings. We have treated Over fifteen thousand patients in the past twenty-five years. Reference given on application. Don’t put oft till tomorrow, but write at once for information. Address L. A. WORCH, Secretary Room 26, Lau Building, Fort Wayne, Ind. or ’ Plymouth Sanitarium and Hospital Plymouth, Ind. Not a Sobering Up Place, But a Cure

Don’t Persecute 9 Your Bowels Cut out Cathartics and purgatives. They an brutal, harsh, unnecessary. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS jfHP e Purely vegetable. Act Cft PTC DC gently on the liver, LfxJ i eliminate bile, and SJITTLE Boothe the Hiyrn . membrane of H I 7 trv bowel. Cu r M PILLS. Constipation, Biliousness, . Sick Head- CtT ~ ache and Indigestion, as millions know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature ; A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. This Is the agc-of research and experiment, when aQ nature, so to epeak,. Is ransacked by the scientific fol the comfort and happiness of man. Science has inr deed made giantstrides during the past century, ana among the—by no means least Important—coveries In medicine comes that of Theraplon. which has. we understand, been used with great success tn the French Hospitals and that it Is worthy the atten* tlon of those suffer from kidney, bladder oS nervous diseases.' chronic weaknesses, ulcers, skin eruptions, piles, Ac.,'we think there is no doubt. In ' fact it seems evident from the big stir. created 1 amongst specialists, that THERAPION Is destined I to cast Into oblivion all those questionable remodM i that were formerly the sole reliance of medical men. I It Is of course impossible to tell sufferers all we should like to tell them In this short article, but those wh|i are Interested and would like to know more about this remedy that has effected so many—we might almost sav—miraculous cures, have only to send addressed envelope for FREK book to Dr. I.e Clere Med. Co.. H.verstoek Road, Hampstead, London, Eng. and deetd< tor themselves whether The New French Remedy, “THERAPION,” IS what they requirS and which they may have been seeking In vain during a life ol untold misery, suffering, ill health and unliappincsß DAISY FLY KILLER 5 fii eß - Neht, clean on namenta.l, convenient JK cheap. Lasts all 8e a son. Jia Je ot metal, can't spill or tlf over; wlli not soil ol n j ur e anything. Guaranteed effect!v< Soldbydealeraoi 6 seat prepaid for 8L HAKOLD SOMERS. 150 DeKalb Ave,; Brooklyn, N. T FOR THEr LADIEJS. Wltatt visiting Fort Wayaa ” AKE Wayne Hotel : i ure of interurban ot steam trains. You'll find a very comfortable and handwm» ly arranged Ladies' Rest Room at tlib Hotel. UMIFORMR “•'ct: Villi the art of uniform making. Don't place youj i order until you have received our catalogue aha ■ samples, stale kind wanted. GEORGE EVANS & CO- Dept. X, 132 R. sth St., Philadelphia. Pa I CAN SELX YOU a Michigan Farm for halt of - what you pay for land in Indiana or Ohio. Nevej failing crops. Fine climate. Best location. Good roads, schools, etc. OTTO K. CISKY. POKJ HUKON, MICHIGAN. i . : ; ; : TUE NEW CniiTU Prairie lands are produo I nt nEvv wwU I tivo for wheat, oats, ric« and stock farms, climate agreeable, bargain price*! write for list. JN. J. KOULEuN, Almyra, Arkansa*. I ■■■' = 192 ACRES IN WAYNE CO., MO. 80 a.,cult.| hardwood timber; 5 r. house; barn: cribs: orchard, etc.; stock farm; near co. seat. Handy,Bui Bis,t'hiea<v wanted for outside work; can ear* SlirN I \ largesalarv. Address THE dobla Dl3* HULII I O TBIBUTING L0..U40 W. llttth St., N.Y. W. N. U., FT. WAYNE, NO. 24-1912.