The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 18, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 August 1912 — Page 7

Sully, Once King/Now Runs AuKIkR Summer Hotel

0 you renumber “Dan” Sully, the oily genuine Cotton King fiat New York ever knew, who only a few J a years ago was perched on the dizziest heights of audacious speculation, who cleaned up $3,000,000 in a few months, lost it in a few minutes, and vanished from the limelight? Well “Dan” Sully is now Tunning a boarding house. It is at Watch Hill, Rhode Island, Understand clearly at the start that the ex-cotton king is really running the boarding house. He isn’t just pretending to —sitting aloof somewhere •in lonely majesty, lending his name and prestige to the undertaking, dazzling boarders with tales of past grandeur No. The erstwhile czar of the cotton market not only superintends everything in the higher departments of the job, but he turns to and takes a hand often in other matters which most people in his place would delegate to others. Mr. Sully pointed to the sea, whose waves were roaring over the steep water fr ont of Watch Hill. “Over there to the left,” he said, “is Block Island. To the right is Montauk Point. Straight ahead the nearest land is the coast of Spain. That breeze comes direct from there." “When I was busy in the cotton market in New York,” he went on. ■“I found there was no place like this for resting. It rests the brain as no other place does, arid when you’re working in Wall street it’s the brain that ought to get rest. I used to run up here every Friday and stay till Monday morning. It made an immense difference to me.” On the subject of Wall street, that made and broke him, Mr. Sully is disinclined to talk. At best he is a man of few words, but on cotton and speculation in general he is Sphinx- j like “Do you want to get back to Wall street?” he was asked “Os course. I’d like to,” he answered “When a man’s been in really active work he wants to get back into it and stay in it until he’s s put underneath the sod.' But"—and here his jaws set firmly—“l’m not going back. I have no plans to do that. At times I hear eeltoes of the old days when I was there, but I don’t intend to try to have more of j them.” The house. By the way. is a fine | summer residence, built by Mr. Sully) himself a year or two before his ■ ■downfall on the Cotton Exchange. I and named Kenneth Ridge, after a son who died. It stands on an emi- 1 nence. the highest is Watch Hill. Be- ■ fore the owner’s financial downfall ) the house witnessed festivities which, ■ if houses can mediate, must lead it j to startling contrast. Six yearri ago. for instance. Mr. Sully gave a dinner and ball at Ken- ) neth Ridge to Admiral Robley D. Evans and a party of his officers. “They danced in this room,” he told the reporter, leading him into a spacious apartment. “Now, the boarders I have use it for a sun parlor. “I went Into the boartftng house |

France Leader of Fashions

Immense Revenue Accrues to That Country Because of Its Acknowledged Supremacy. Jules Heuret, a French writer, asserts that in fashion France is still ti ••rivaled. He has carefully investigated the state of affairs in Germany. • England, Switzerland, Austria and northern Italy, and has come to the conclusion that France stands first in matters of taste. Her jewelry designs and her models of furniture are the finest in the world, although England and Germany are selling well in both these directions, he declares. From fashion M. Heuret estimates <the revenue of the French at 150,000,000 francs. In Paris there are over 12,000 business houses employing from one to 100 working girls. For the whole of France th: total of such "Establishments reaches 96,000, to which may be added 15,000 lingerie firms, 4,000 houses where embroideresses and mender- are employed. Thus there are 115,000 shops where sewing is the industry carried on. More than a million persons earn their living in this way, 940,000 women and 75,000 men. To the aggregate of a million wage-earners by their needle must be counted 140,000 employers, large and small, of whom 26,000 are men and 114,000 women. This vast et'ergy does not provide the means of

Woman and Culture

'lhe lawyer may see no deeper than -his law books, and the chemist see no ■further than the windows of his laboratory, and they may do their work well. But the woman who does worn- I an’s work needs a many-sided, multi- i form culture; the heights and depths 1 of human life must not be beyond\the I Teach of her vision; she must have knowledge of men and things in many I states, a wide catholicity of sympathy.

Webster’s Suggestion. Frank Baldwin, a leather manufacturer, was recently at a banquet given to the Leather Manufacturers’ association, where he told the following story: ) “Webster and Rufus Choate dinlng wfth a friend who was for his powers of conversation am ability to hold on to the things in ■had. He owned a special brand ot Burgundy’ wine of which he was very proud He discussed its many fine points, but refrained from asking his

J 0 IMI WO 'tit! business on account of more busiriess troubles," Mr. Sully explained, when he and the reporter again settled them-

selves to enjoy the sea air on the veranda. “Last fall I went to England to see about some business matters there. 1 intended to spend the winter either there or out west or in the southern states. “Rut the plans that I had made did not turn out well and I decided to spend the winter right here in Watch Hill. It was the first time that I or my family had ever stayed here in the cold weather. But. when I built the house, put steam heat into it, so we were very comfortable. And right there the idea struck me. not only to run this place as a boardifig house, but as an all-the-year-round boarding house.” t In that idea something of the originality of the “Dan” Scully who evolved a “system" and played the cotton market to a standstill crops out again. Up to the present time nobody has ever thought of that wind-, swept promontory. Watch Hill, as a place in which to spend the winter. Yet. having done it once, “Dan" Sully was amazed at the mildness of the air and promptly resolv#! to make other people; besides himself, enjoy it. In fact, he already talks about Watch Hill as a sort of future Atlantic City of New England. “Out there” —again he waved his band toward the Atlantic ocean — “only a short way off the coast, is the gulf stream. It’s quite near enough to keep the weather from getting too cold here in winter. Yet everybody who has a house here or hires one for the warm weather never ) stays later than November, and the I hotels close early in September. I’m | going to show people that this is an ! all-the-year-round place.” “Are you doing anything besides running your boarding house?" asked the reporter. “Nothing whatever,” answered the ex-cotton king. Yet this is the man who. an obgcifre Providence cotton broker, sud-

wage eariaiig only for those occupied in the business; it resolves itself into a revenue of over 114,000,000 francs in the export trade of the country. When all the handiwiM. done for the use of the people living in France is added to the export trade, and

Have Control of Millions

Wealth That Aggregates $365,000,000 Is Intrusted to the Management of Four Women. Nejv York state courts have designated Mis? Christina Arbuckle, who is flged seventy-two, as administrator of the $35,000,000 estate left by her brother. Mr. John Arbuckle, the “sugar kind,” who died intestate last March. This makes four American women who have the exclusive control over enormous fortunes, the other being Mrs. E. H. Harriman, to whom the late railway magnate bequeathed $150,000,000: Mrs. Russell Sage, whose husband left her $80,000,000; and Mrs. Hetty Green, whose own estate Is valued at $100,000,000. These four women thus have the exclusive management of property of a total value of $365,000,000. The newest recruit to the ranks of feminine multi-millionaires has the

the strength that Springs from knowledge and the magnanimity which springs from strength. We bear the world and we make it. The souls of little children are marvelously delicate and tender things, and keen foreyer the shadow that falls fir- - them, and that is the mother’s <>st a 'roman’s. There was u g>eat man who had not a great •: it is hardly an exaggeration. The .first six

) two distinguished friends if they I wanted any. Webster finally wearied I of his lengthy discourse and turned to his friend Choate and said: ‘Look ere, Choate, suppose we try the wine and help stop the interest on • ' r ’” r The New Reading. Miss Mary Garden, lunching with a party of Americans at the open-air restaurant of Armenonfille In the Bols de Boulogne. <1 inned a very shocking French din.. -r

Y m I W 0

denly appeared In Wall street and began operating in cotton in accordance with a “system” that seemed to be infallible. This is the man whose methods completely mystified the wisest old stagers in the country, whose profits ran up as high as $600,000 in one coup—the man whose failure. when announced from the rostrum of the cotton exchange on March 18, 1904, caused the wildest panic ever known in the history of that institution. The “Dan” Sully who now takes people through his house and quotes prices on rooms to them was once worth $3,000,000. He lost nearly $2,000,000 of it in tWo minutes. According to him, he announced his voluntary suspension to the superintendent of the cotton exchange at 1:45 on the afternoon of that fatal March 18 It was not read on the floor of the exchange until two minutes past 2. “That delay of two minutes cost me $1,176,000,” Stilly said once, in telling the story. “If It had been read at or before 2 o’clock I might have come out all right.” As it was. when the smoke cleared from the field where he had met disaster, his liabilities totaled up to something like $3,000,000. At the time “Dan” Sully said to a reporter: “Three weeks ago I was worth $3.000.000. Now I’m not worth $30.” Such was he who now runs the Seaside boarding house and expatiates upon the glories of Watch Hill and its many advantages as a boarding place. Into all his laudations of the place he puts real ent’iusiasm; they would be creditable to the most < onsummate Boniface of tnem all “■Would you like to get back to New York?" Like a shot came the answer, with a gleam of the eye and a snap of the jaw: “‘Would I like to get back?’ Why New York is the only place In the world

when a note is made of the strangers who reside in the country, and of thoses who make purchases of clothing or ornaments as the; pass through, some idea may be gained qf what is earned by French needlecraft Hundreds of millions of pieces of silk, lace, embroideries, woolen stuffs, feathers, flowers and ribbons are sent into other countries every year because Paris is supreme in fashion.

same personal characteristics which distinguish the three others. She lives simply, enjoying the company of old friends, never flaunts her wealth, and gives her spare time to -charitable work, which she accomplishes as secretly as possible. Miss Arbuckle shares with her sister aud nephew the income of the estate which she now will manage, they being the late “silgar king's” only surviving near relatives. She assisted Mt Arbuckle in the maihagement of his fortune for a number of years before his heath, and is thoroughly familiar with (he details of its administration. Shle tends particularly to continue her brother's philanthropic work is connection with the Brooklyn church of which the late Henry Ward Beecher was pastor. Raw recruits are often done for

years of our life make us.- all that ts added later is veneer; and yet some say, if a woman can cook a dinner or dress herself well she has enough tui ture — Olive Schreiner. Safe Proceeding. “Some men are lucky. 1 know a man who cleaned out a bank and yet they never did a thing to him ” “I suppose he had considerable influence.” “He hadn't any. He was the Jan itor.”

“From the success this sort of people have,” Miss Garden said, “I’d revise the poet’s line to read: ‘Clothes make the man, and want of them the woman.’ ” In the Zoo. Zebra—We’re having a terrible time here. Gazelle—What’s the matter? . Zebra —The giraffe has a gone throat, the centipede has corns and the laughing hyena has gone off into ysterica.

Safety, Liberty and Sustenance By Rev. Parley E. Zartmann, D. D. Secretary of Extension Department of Moody Bible TEXT—I am the door: by me If any man enter In he shall be saved, and shall go Ini and out, and And pasture.—Jobs 10:9. The beauty and suggestiveness of this entire chapter are hard to de

scribe. T he j have been the charm and cheei of thousands of saints and havi been the call t« many a sinner tc forsake his wayi and find In Christ the threi great, blessinjfs promised in the text The most precious part of the chapter is the picture which it gives us of Jesus as the Shepherd. This work of

FdSW J

Jesus is set forth in three aspects in the Scriptures. In John 10:11 he speaks of himself as the “good” Shepherd who giveth his life for the sheep; and therefore he can be the door for the sheep. This answers to Psalm 22. In Hebrews 13:20 we read of him as the “great” Shepherd brought again from the dead, setting forth his work in caring for and perfecting the sheep; this aspect is also emphasized in Psalms 23. In First Peter 5:4, which answers to Psalm 24, we read of Jesus as the "Chief” Shepherd coming in glory to give crowns of reward to the faithful. The figure of the door not only is beautiful, but It illustrates a great necessity, for when sin had separated us from God Jesus opened the wall, placing himself in the breach, and so has become the door between darkness and light, danger and safety, sin and holiness, despair and hope, earth and heaven. “He shall be saved.” Here we have ) the certainty of the gospel giving us everything in one word. Salvation is the great inclusive word of the gospel gathering into Itself all the redemptive acts and processes. Therefore it was perfectly natural that Paul should say “I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it Is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth.” There is salvation for the past, covering the guilt and penalty of sin; there is salvation for the present, covering the power of sin; there is salvation for the future, covering the presence of sin when we are to be perfectly ,conformed to the image of Christ. No wonder the redeemed sinner cries “Hallelujah, what a Savior!” The figure of the text is a perpet- ) ual illustration of the efficiency and . extensiveness of salvation in Christ. He Is the door protecting us from the hands of the enemy, from sin and Its results, from the enticement of the flesh, from fear and pains of death. He is the Savior we need. “And shall go in and out.” What a beautiful illustration of the happy life of the believer and how aptly and completely it answers those who say that the Christian life is a life of bondage. To make such a statement is to ; confess ignorance of the very fundamental and primary blessing of Christian life, for it knows no fear and constraint but It experiences full joy and freedom indeed. The child of God is not bound by rule as a slave but is guided by love as a son, and the farther he goes in his experience the ! more he knows that there is no narrowness in. Christ. “And find pasture.” This makes one think of the confidence expressed ‘ in Psalms 23; the Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want, and to realize ; that that covers every need of the human soul. What wealth of provision and what generosity of supply one finds in Christ. Paul had tested this. In Romans 8:32 he says “He that spared not his own son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with Jilm also freely give us all things?” And in Philippians 4.19 we read, “But my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” There need be no lack of food and rest. The Shepherd wants us to be nourished, and sickly sheep are contrary to his will. We may find pasture in the willing, acceptable, and faithful doing of our daily duty; in cheerful giving to others; in the quiet an<fr*semetimes misunderstood discipline of our lives; in daily meditation upon God’s word; in communitm with God in a secret place of prayer. Our range is as wide as God’s love and the supply never fails, “For all things are yours; whether Psnl, or Apollos, or Cephas, or the world, or life, or death, or things present, or things to come, all are yours; and ye are Christ’s; and Christ is God’s.” The picture of Christ supplying our every need is carried into the future where we read (Revelations 7:16-17) “They shall hunger no more; neither ) thirst any more; neither shall the sun ' light on them, nor any heat. For the I Lamb which is In the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them untol living fountains of waters; and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.” The text gives us still further assurance when we are told that we shall find pasture. Christ gives all we need. The blessing of the Christian Hfe is not an attainment but an obtainVnent. David knew this when he poured out his joy in Psalms 23. Let this be your song*—*l shall not want." The text is really the gospel ln‘ a sentence. Note its simplicity—by me if any man enter. But also its necessity—by me. Just pass in by the way of simple faith in Christ to this three-fold blessing of safety, liberty and sustenance. You say you are a great sinner. No matter; you have a great Savior. Just enter by the Note the wideness of the gospel—any; man. The only condition is that you* shall iealize your need.

I WILLING HE SHOULD GO FAR —: One Man to Have Kid Transferred, but He May Have Had a Grouch. “What do you think of this scheme )f having the countries exchange chilIten?” asked the Sewickley man. “I don’t think afiything about it,” laid the Wilkinsburg man. “What is he idea?” “An English family, for instance, exshanges children for a couple of years with a German family. References are first exchanged, and all sorts of ■ things." "I see.” “Thus both sets of children get a :hance to learn another language and 1 jet acquainted with another country, i It’s quite a scheme." “It’s an elegant scheme,” declared ! he Wilkinsburg man. “My neighbors nave a kid that I would like to see j exchanged with some family in Sli seria.” ; ' i CHILD’S FACE ALL RED SPOTS 632 N. sth St., Terre Haute, Ind.— ' “My little nephew, a boy of four j years, had a breaking out on his face. It was little red spots at first, then he would rub and scratch and water blisters would form, and wherever the water would run another would come until his face was covered with them. He would cry and fret. His mother got some medicine, but it did not do any gooff. He would scream and cry and say it hurt. We hardly knew him, his litle face was all red spots and blisters. So I begged him to let me put some Cutlcura Ointment on them. The next morning I made a strong soap suds with Cutlcura Soap and washed his face in the warm suds, j The little blisters burst by pressing the cloth on them. After I had his face washed, I put the Cutlcura Ointment on and in a short time his little face was all red and dry. I kept using the Cuticura Soap and putting on the Cutlcura Ointment and his face got as well and it did not leave a scar. He was entirely cured in about one week and a half.” (Signed) Mrs. Arthur Haworth, Jan. 10, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.” How He Left. The servants were discussing the matter below stairs. “Master ,and mistress ’ad something of a row last night, I ’ear,” said the butlei® ponderously. “You should have heard ’em,” answered the parlor maid in a shocked tone. “Scandalous is what I calls it!” “They tell me ’e ran out, cranked ’is motor car and left in it.” “No,” said the maid, positively, “he didn’t leave in his machine; I distinctly heard the mistress say he left tn a huff.”—London Answers. Case of Mistaken Identity. President Taft was out fpr his afternoon walk in Washington one day when a flaxen-haired little girl ran out In front of him, held up her finger, end exclaimed, in a shrill voice: “I know who you are!" The president, thinking it not at all unusual that she should possess this information, but willing to gratify her, asked: “Well, who am I?” t “Aw,” she said teasingly, “you’re Humpty Dumpty.”—Popular Magazine. Job Not Satisfactory. “I’m a self-made man,” said the proud Individual. “Well, you are all right except as to your head,” commented the listener. “How’s that?” “The part you talk with is too big for the part you think with.” Fitting Crime. He—l know who egged you on to this. She —Who egged me on? He —That old,-hen. Exceptions. . Pater Familias —History repeats itself. Smart Child—Not when it’s my lesson. In a woman’s eye the most attractive thing about a man is her ability to attract him.

Children Cry for Fletcher’s ©nil' B SfH The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been ,'„.i in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of § A\n° HOL 3 PER CENT - as been made under his perAwgelablefttparalionrorAs- sonal supervision since its infancy, hey wJi Allow no one to deceive you in this, ij »®guieSiainadisaMdßGWds()f All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are but ifejß' Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho healtii of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment, ij nessandßestCoiitainsneittw What is CASTORIA . H Opiunt-Morplune norMhiErai. Castoriaisa harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare'j' Not Narcotic. goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It - —••■■■ contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotlo Enipeof substance. Its age is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms li i allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind ■ JMc/SzA- Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation KUSi and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA always Worms,ConvulsionsJeverisß >9 Bears the Signature of pqrili : ness and Loss of Sleep. * EBiiliß The Kind Yon Have Always Bought In Use Fob Over 30 Years BxttCopy ofWmppcr. TH « OO m^a N v. n«w vqrk c.ty.

INTERESTED IN HIM. J ■ ' Natica —You aren’t thinking of marrying Reggy. are you? Evelyn—Of course I am. Hasn’t ) he a future? ® Natica—Yes, to be sure. But why I jeopardize it? Mother’s Lingual Attainment. The mother of'U little boy in Kansas City. Kan., recites negro dialect stories charmingly. Her small son is quite proud of her accomplishment and frequently boasts of it. One day recently, when some of his playmates were vaunting the achievements of their several mothers, the little boy braggingly remarked: “My mother is smarter than any of yours; she can talk two languages” “What are they?” demanded his companions. “White and colored.” Moving Pictures Popular. In a recent number of the Daily Consular Reports are collected memoranda from cities and towns in various distant parts of the world showing the “’universal quality of the popular interest- which the moving pictures excite. England, Japan, Turkey, Mexico, India, Australia and the islands of the sea all have the same story to tell; wherever the cinematograph goes It finds an instant and sustained welcome. Births in the Air. The International Congress on Aerial Legislation, sitting at Geneva, Switzerland, is evolving a very detailed code of laws. One of its suggested paragraphs reads: “In the event of a birth occurring in an air craft the pilot is to enter the event in his log book and must notify the fact to the authorities at the first place at which he descends.’ Doctor Endorses Children’s Remedy. Dr. D. R. Rothrock, New Berlin, Pa., writes that he has used Kopp’i Baby's Friend with excellent results. He considers it the best remedy for children.* Invaluable in Teething Troubles, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea. 3 sizes. 10c„ 25c., 50c., at druggists or sent direct. Kopp’s Baby’s Friend Co.. York, Pa. Sample by mail on request. .. In the Hotel Lobby. Mary—That tall man has been divorced five times. Alice—Goodness! Who is he? Mary—He’s the man who invented .the safety match. The Paxton Toilet Co. of Boston, Mass., will .send a large trial box of Paxtine Antiseptic, a delightful cleansing and germicidal toilet preparation, to any woman, free, upon request. Hurry, Giris! Uncle Sam has just issued a little brochure on fattening Calves. Hurry, girls, as the edition will soon be exhausted.—Washington Post. A CURE FOR PILES. Cole’s Carbolisalve stops itchinff and pain—and cures piles. AU druggists. 25 and 50c. A woman can’t feed a man so much taffy that it will spoil his appetite for it Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup tor Children , teething, softens the gums, reduces intlammu- i lion, allays paia. cures wind colic. 25c a bottle, i Some men are dumb because their ! wives never give them a chance to ! talk. No thoughtful person uses liquid blue. It’s ! a pinch of blue in a large bottle of water. Ask for Red Cross Ball Blue, the blue that’s all blue. If It were not for the trusts whom would a man who fails in business blame for it?

MOTHER OF LARGE FAMILY I. ’ ~ Tells How She Keeps Hei Health — Happiness For Those Who Take Her Advice. Scottville, Mich.—“l want to tell yoe how much good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg*

etableCompound and t Sanative Wash have done me. I live on a farm andhave worked very hard. I am forty-five years old, and am the mother of thirteen children. Many people think it strange that I am not broken down with hard work and the care of my fam-

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ily, but I tell them of my good friend, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and that there will be no backache and bearing down pains for them if they will take it as I have. lam scarcely ever without it in the house. “I will say also that I think there ia no better medicine to be found for young girls. My eldest daughter has taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for painful periods and irregular- \ ity, and it has helped her. ■ “lam always ready and willing to speak a good word for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I tell every one I meet that I owe my health and happiness to your Wonderful medicine.” ! —Mrs. J. G. Johnson, Scottville, Mich.,» R.F.D. 3. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and today holds the record of being ths most successful remedy for woman’s ills known. i Legs raw with itching, burning eczema Pittsburg, Pa., May 23, 1912.—“A friend of mine had big red blotches form all over his legs, body and arms. It was pronounced a very bad case of eczema. Aftei two months' treatment he was suffering untold tortures, and would awake at night and find himself scratching, with hands all over blood. His legs were like a piece i of raw meat, itching and burning. For : two months he slept scarcely any, but would get up and walk the floor. He says 1 he simply felt as If he were burning up. After the case had lasted six months he began the use of Resinol Soap and. Ointment. He was cured, and' his skin was as clear as crystal.”) (Signed) W. D. Buchanan, 903 Deely St. Resinol samples mailed free Your druggist sells and recommends Reslnoi Soap (25c) aud Resinol Ointment (50c), but for- - sample of each, free, write to Dept, j UK, Kdsinol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day.x CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS responsible — they — not only give relief — they perma- j nentlycureCon- W’TTLE stipation. UIVER , lions use H PILLS, them for Biliousness, ( Indigestion, Sick Headache, Sallow Skin. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature P. P. c. PERFECT PILE COMFORT Resultof twenty-five years nersonal experience with ITCHING PILES. Weknow what Itha.don* for others and believe it will do the same for you. Price Fifty cents postpaid. Reliable agents wanted. T. & P. REMEDY CO. 107 W. 48th St. New York Ctt» aaetc WONDER REMEDY. The wonderful 20th Centura remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Toothache and all aches and pains, positive cure, used externally. ‘ 21 pp. dlairic Care t‘a.,lo Exchange Bldg.,Box 165.1n<liaaapoMi