The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 24, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 October 1912 — Page 6

mV Wh ™XJPw JNE LESSON WAS SUFFICIENT • Jttle Willie Was Caught Swearing in Street and His Father Sought to Reprimand Him. When Willie’s father came home to nipper there was a vacant chair at he table. . "Well, where’s the boy?’’ he asked. “William is upstairs in bed,” the inswer came with painful precision rom the sad-faced mother. “Why, w-what’s up—not sick is le?” (An anxious pause.) “It grieves me to say, Robert, that iur son, your son, has been heard <wearing in the street. I heard him. “Swearing? Scott! I’ll teach him 14 swear,” and he started upstairs in he dark. Half-way up he stumbled »nd came down with his chin on the op step. * When the atmosphere cleared a litle Willie’s mother was saying sweety from the hall: “That will do, dear; you have given lim enough for one lesson.” Favorite Fiction. “I Thought I Needed a Little as a Tonic, and Unintentionally Took Too Much.” “I Don’t Like the Taste of the Stuff. >ut I Drink It Because I’m Afraid of he City Water.” “It’s Lucky for Him That He Didn’t Say Another Word; I’d Have Smashed Him if He Had.” “My Only Reason for Selling the House Is That the Neighborhood Is Setting Too Stylish and Exclusive.” “Yes, Ma'am; It’s This Morning's Milk.” “I Can’t Imagine How I Got That ?orn; My Shoes Are Just as Loose as They Can Be.” Optical Illusion. “I must congratulate you on your ooy Josh,” said the old friend. “I hought from what you said he. was nclined to put on airs and despise - work.” “Well,” replied Farmer Corntossel,” anything happened to make you change your mind?” “Certainly. He must be a great help to you. I saw him the other evening going down the road with a big straw hat and overalls and carrying a pitch’ork over his shoulder.” “Oh, yes,” replied the farmer with & sigh. “Your mistake is only natural. Josh was going to a costume ball.” A Busy Mother. “I’ve been away for a whole month, and yet you didn't so much as drop me a line,” said Mrs. Whoofer in an Injured tone to her .friend, Mrs. Wip- * kins. “Oh, my dear,” said Mrs. Wipkins, brushing her hair out of her eyes and shifting her youngest jewel to a more comfortable position, “before I could have dropped you a line, I would have had to drop the baby, and of course I couldn’t do that.” DIFFERENT VIEWPOINTS. - rlAlOrrfl The Optimist—Yes, I cast my bread upon the waters and — The Pessimist —Had it come back to you damp and moldy, I suppose? Masculine Memory. Sinks —What’s wrong? Jinks —My wife gave me a letter to mail this morning. .L..' “And you forgot it, eh? Well, It Isn’t too late. “No, but I mailed it. I kept it in my hand and fixed my mind right on It until I got to a box and then dropped it in. I was bound she shouldn’t have anything to complain of this time.” “Then what’§ the matter?” “It has just occurred to me that I forgot to put a stamp on it.” Puzzled. “I »m forbidden,” said the campaign ommittee’s treasurer, “to accept con‘ributions from any man who is corrected with a large and profitable corporate enterprise.” “That is as it should be,” replied the .uealist “Yes. But I don’t see how we can ,-et anywhere if we must depend for funds on people who haven’t any money.” Division of Labor. “Look heah. George Abram Washton. Lunkum, if you isn’t gwine ■ help support you’ah' fambly, I’so .wine to get a divorce. • “Who’s supposin’ dis fambly? Didn’t solicit all dat laundry wuhk? You only wash and iron dem, dat’s all.”— Browuinr?

DON ALTERED HIS TACTICS Spanish Grandee Had Sudden Change of Heart When Heiress Decided to Give Money Away. An heiress was engaged to a Spanish grandee. ! “Don Guzman,” the girl said, thoughtfully, one morning as they were, walking in the Row, “Don Guzman, society declares that you are marrying me solely for my money.” “They lie, my love,” the young grandee answered, fixing a fresh cigarette in his long amber tube. “Nevertheless,” said the girl, “their cenSure hurts me. I won’t have them say such nasty things about you.” “But how will you stop them?” he asked. “By giving my entire fortune to the missionaries,” she replied. “I shall make my fortune over to the missionaries at once.” The grandee settled his shining hat more firmly on the back of his head, and set off at a great pace in the direction of Hyde Park corner. “But, Don Guzman,” cried the girl, “where are you going?” “I am going,” he called back, “to see about becoming a missionary.”— London Opinion. —. Puzzle for the Expert. A case concerning motor driving was on hand, when the chauffeur declared that when driving at 40 miles an hour he could, if necessary, pull up in ten or twelve feet. “Um!” said the judge. An expert was the next occupant of the box. Said his lordship: “If a motor car were traveling at 40 miles an hour, and the brakes could be put on in such a manner as to stop it within ten or twelve feet, where would the driver go?” “Depends very much on the sort of life he’d been lining,'” said the expert. / NO HORNS NECESSARY. IIRSI AW®

Wickson —I wonder why nature developed the sense ot smell so much stronger in animals than in man? Suppose h man had the scent of a deer? Dickson —It would be great. ,Then he could jump when he detected the scent of gasoline two miles away. The Confidence Game. “Well, George,” she called from the top of the stairs at 1 a. m., “what was it this time? Did your lodge meet or was it necessary for you to stay in town to discuss business with somebody who had to catch a midnight train, a friendly little game with some of the boys, or was it an extra rush of work at the office. He clung to the new’el post for. a moment and, blinking, looked up at her. Then he endeavored to moisten his lips and said: “Mary, if I didn’t have confldensh in you, I’d think you were shushpicious of me—hones’ I would.” Where It Started. First Colonial Matron (mother oi fifteen) —These new fangled women’s clubs doth make one laugh. Second Colonial Woman (mother of seventeen) —In sooth, you are right! The Idea of Mistress Prudence, mother of only three children, presuming to make an address at the Dorcas society on how to raise a family!—Puck. Star Position. “What’s become of Snappersby?’’ “The star sport writer?” “Yes.” “Snappersby has the'greatest job of his career.” “Ah, with the big leagues, eh?” “No, he is helping to make out the batting averages of a fly-swatting club.” With the Movies. Freedom, represented by a beautiful girl attired in classic draperies, shrieked when Kosciusko fell. “Don’t strain your lungs,” said the man who was operating the picture machine. “If you simply move your lips, we’ll get all the effect we need.” Prefers a Horse. Mrs, Flynn—They do be afther sayin’ that old man Kelly has got lomother ataxy.” Mr. Flynn—Well, he’s got the money to run wan av thim if he wants ter, but fer my par’rt, I’d rayther have a good horse anny day.”—Judge. A Misdeal. Weary Traveler— my friend, there’s no meat in this sandwich. Waitress —No? Weary Traveler—Don’t you think you’d better give that pack anothei shuffle and let me draw again ?—Judge Unanimous. Lawson —What did the convention of barbers say when you addressed them? Dawson —Why, do you know, 1 hadn’t been talking three minutes before they all began shouting “Next!” Getting Back. “Every worm has his turn.** “How now?” “All those nature fakers who get put into the Ananias class are find Ing something disparaging to say tbout the habits of the bull moose." Indications. ( “Did that singer ever belong to the . national game?” , “What makes you ask?” "I notice hig voice is in such a baee i MWI pitch.”

WILSON ON HIS WESTERN TRIP "- e> — —' ww «Illi I n I 1 a x OUR photograph shows a characteristic scene during the western campaign trip of Woodrow Wilson. Here the governor is on the rear platform of his private car greeting the citizens of Marion, Ind.

RANGER REAL HERO

Fire Fighters Face Great Dangers in Forest. How Pulaski, by Coolness and Bravery, Prevented the Loss of ThirtyFive of His Crew in Cour d’Alene. New York.—Prof. Welling, tanned and toughened by his summer’s work in the Coeur d’Alene national forest reservation, held his eastern visitors spellbound with stories of the fight he had helped to make against the fearful forest fires, says the Youth’s Companion. He had gone out, with two others, under government commission, to study the forest and, coming back in August, they had met the fires and spent almost a month in fighting their way out of them. “There are real men among those forest he went on. “In fact, there is no place for anything that is not genuine up there. The most thrilling story of heroism that I have heard In a long time is the story of Ranger Pulaski. It did not happen in the part of the reservation where I was, but I can vouch for its truth; for I have talked with some of the men who were with him. “Pulaski had forty men under him, and they had been fighting a big fire for hour*. Suddenly the wind rose until it blew a gale. The fire got beyond them, and it became a question of saving tfee lives of the men. They were many miles from a railroad or a clearing. “Pulaski remembered that about a mile from where they were working was an abandoned mine shaft that ran back about forty feet into the hillside. He ordered the men to snatch their blankets from the camp and run for thjs shaft. Once there, they packed themselves like sardines into the hole. Pulaski placed himself at the opening and stretched a blanket across it. “In a few minutes the fire overtook them. The blanket at the opening caught and Pulaski jerked it away. Again and again this was done, and when the supply of blankets ran low he held the burning fragments across the mouth of the shaft with his bare hands. “The suffering of the men from the heat and smoke was pitiful. They were fairly maddened by it, and some of them made a wild attempt to push their way out of the shaft. For a while Pulaski held them back by sheer physical strength, for he was an unusually strong man. But he knew that he must soon be overpowered and that the men, in their frenzy, would rush out to certain death. He drew his revolver and told them that he would kill the first man who attempted to break away. The men knew that he meant it, too, and that knowledge brought them back to reason. /“‘lt wasn’t more than twenty minutes before the worst of the fire had passed the shaft. When it was safe to crawl out they found that five of the men were dead from suffocation, but the other thirty-five were all right. Pulaski himself was blinded and burned, but his sight was partly restored. He lost five men, to be sure, but with less courage and presence of mind he would have lost them all. I take off my hat to such a man. He is a real hero:” Winston Is Fearless. London. —Winston Churchill, first lord of the admiralty, denounced the efforts of the suffragettes to break his meeting here as “woman’s uncivilized antics.” Tubers and Tomatoes on Same Stalk. Red Hill, Pa. —Elmer Clemmer grafted a tomato and potato stalk, and as a result the plant bore eight potatoes and three tomatoes of excellent flavor. ROYAL SUITE FOR MANUEL King George of England Offers ExSovereign of Portugal Living Apartments in Kensington Palace. I.ondon. —King George has offered to King Manuel a suite In Kensington palace. Thus another foreign royalty becomes more or less a burden on the taxpayers of Great Britain. At present Manuel occupies a house at Richmond. If he accepts the rooms in Kensington palace he will have as fel-

LIBERTY BRIDE GETS WORK Mrs. Washburne Gets Employment on Magazine as Part of Pre-Nup-tial Arrangement. Los Angeles, Cal.—ln conformity to her part of a prenuptial contract that caused comment from all sections of the country, Mrs. Charles Washburne, until a few days ago Miss Heluiz Chandler, obtained a position with the firm by which her husband is employed. The company publishes a magazine, and Mrs. Washburne will do illustrating for it. A part of the prenuptial contract, which, as a whole, provided for the greatest personal liberty on the part of husband and wife, specified that each should earn an independent livelihood, and should share the expenses of maintaining a home and of caring for children, should any result from the marriage. “The account of my mother being prostrated and moaning over the disgrace I have brought upon her are merely trash,” said Mrs. Washburne. “I have received several telegrams of congratulation and commendation from my mother since my marriage.” MUCH CEMENT FOR CANAL When Latest Million Barrels Is Used Total Cost Will Have Reached $6,500,000. Washington.—When the latest million barrels of cement purchased have been used in construction work on the Panama canal the amount of cement employed in the building of the big ditch will have reached a total of 2,200,000,000 pounds. The cost of this item of construction reaches $6,500,000. if the barrels which contained the cement could be placed end to end they would extend 2,300 miles.

NO FAITH IN EGYPTIAN GODS

“Reincarnated Daughter of Pharaoh” Says She Has Rejected Artist Ott’s Faith. St. Louis, Mo.—Mrs. Ralph Chesley Ott, “reincarnated daughter of Pharaoh,” who is suing her noted artist husband for a divorce, now denies that she ever had faith in the old Egyptian gods. She adds that when her two children came she utterly lost all faith in her husband's fantastic belief, and row, if she can recover her through the courts, she will be satisfied with realities and forget the dream-talk and theosophy of Mr. Ott. Ott is now in Springfield, Mo., with the two young children, and is expected to file a general denial to his wife s divorce charges this week. Accordii g to their stories, the was the Princess Amnera 5,000 years ago, and he was an artist in the employ of her haughty fa’her, Pharaoh. As in their modern romance, it was a case of love at first sight when the princess and the artist met for the first time in the queen’s chamber o" the Great Pyramid. Ott’s modern meeting of his 5,000-year-old ideal was at University City, after he had returned from a commission to study Egyptian architecture for E. G. Lewis. She was then Miss Jane Schauffert, an artist’s model. In discussing her alleged erstwhile tenets, Mrs. Ott denied the authorship of the article in regard to her faith, which were published over what was claimed to be her signature and she vilified the poor old gods of Egypt. Os her husband and children, she declared that she had heard nothing since she left them with relatives of Mr. Ott in Springfield. Among other things in her divorce

low residents the duke of Argyll and Princess Louise, Princess Henry of f Battenburg, mother-in-law of King Alphonso, and the countess Granville. KITTEN GIVES AN ALARM Leads Mother to Where Child Hangs Head Downward on Amusement Pier. Venice, Cal.—A kitten saved twelve-year-old Olive Henderson, of this # place, from probable death.

FALSE TEETH LEGAL TENDEf Bartender Accepts for Beer it Lieu of Nickel From Man With Thirst. Kansas City, Mo. —Into Tony’s placA at 402 Main street came the man witi a permanent thirst. He sidled up tc the bar and in a husky whisper an nounced to Jerry, the red-headed bar tender: “Say, 80, I got to have a drink an there’s no use discussin’ any compro mise. I’d rather drink than eat an my stomach craves food. Jus’ to show you I’m all right, even if I hain’t got no money, an’ I’m sincere an’ all that, here’s my false teeth fer one bowl o! suds man’s size an’ shy th’ collar. D< I cash ’em in?” “You do,” replied the bartender, ant took the man’s upper lower mas ticators without so much as a “bat o the eye.” ’ “I’ll be back and redeem ’em to night,” assured the jag. “If you don’t I’ll fit another man tt ’em,” warned Jerry as he wrapped the molars in a piece of tissue paper ant rang them up in the cash register as “five cents.” FEEL PULSE AROUND WORLt Harvard University Physicians Wit) New Instrument Get “Long Distance” Heart Beats. Cambridge, Mass. —That it is possi ble for a physician to note the hear, beats of a patient who be on the other side of the world is the asser tion of Dr. Percy E. Brown of the Harvard Medical school. An in strument devised for that purpose has been installed jn the Harvard Med ical . school. D<>ctor Brown says: “With the proper attachments the heart beats could be registered arouni the world. All the patient has to dl is to place the hands in warm sail water and the electric current, witt the hands the positive and negativ< poles, is carried by wires to the in strument, which shows the hearl beats." *

petition Mrs. Ott alleges drunkenness and cruelty, stating that on severs, occasions her husband had slapped her in the presence of company. It Is also stated that on one occasion the elder Mrs. Ott, her mother-in-law, or dered her from the house. PIANO IN WRECK SAVES LIFE Forms a Barrier That Fences Mai in It at Time of Crash of Trains. Sheridan, Wyo.—His piano fencing him into a small open space in his ca of household goods was all that savei J. S. Doyle of McCook, Neb., from be ing crushed to death when a Burling i ton train in which he was on his wa; 1 home crashed into some empty car ; north of Sheridan. One of the seven horses in the ca was killed. Doyle was badly bruise* and cut, but after his injuries wer dressed in the Sheridan hospital hi was able to continue his journey t< McCook. i NEW SEA SERPENT IN VENICE I Looks Like a Shark and Has Fac Like .Gila Monster, and Everybody Sober. Venice, Cal. —One of the queeres deep-sea creatures ever seen here wa brought in by a fisherman. It is fiv> feet in length, black and green moi 1 tied, with a tail like a shark. It ha : a dorsel fin and four feet shaped lik those of a parrot. Its mouth resent bles that of a Gila monster, while it head is a replica on a large scale c that of a California horned toad.

The child and the kitten had gon | for a walk and after a time the kitt® returned alone. When it drew the al tention of the girl’s mother it start® iway, but returned and renewed It. ries when she failed to follow. Whe. . started again the mother followed. The kitten led the way to the en. >t an amusement pier, wtrere the chib was found hanging head downwarfrom a large spike in a pile. She ha. fallen from the pier and her clothin} had caught on the spike. She wai escued barely conscious-

MESSAGE SENT BY MOUNTAIN Invaluable Lessens There for Those Who Love Nature and Will Calmly Listen. It is not your highest mountrin. always, that is the fittest palace of a god; or that has most mountain sweetness or mountain dignity. One could mention some that have but a thousand feet of stature, physically speaking; and yet, it would be an insult to call them mere hills. There is no savage impatience with them; their breasts are dearer than a mother's. Time was when they towered above the clouds, and were proud Himalayas for immensity; when they were all soaring unapproachable crags; repellent; concerned only with the heavens. But men and mountains drew together, and subtle ties of sympathy were formed. Ages upon ages passed over the peaks, smoothed the jagged rocks, rounded .and calmed the brows, filled the chasms, and mantled all with ferns and grasses. The mighty mother set heather to bloom there, for symbol of the soaring, purple dreams that are within; she strewed them with the gold of her gorse, to say that the immemorial Wisdom, though the stems of it be thorny and your fingers shall bleed before you pick them, has for bloom a yellow and most Sunbright gladness I Purple dreamings of unsatisfied asI pi ration; golden delight of arcane, ever living truth; green wizardry of the ferns and rushes—it is these things that ray out from the mountains I love and extol. Yes, there are mines there; but they do not penetrate the mountains, except in the merest material sense. It is the gorse and the heather and the bracken, the foxglove and the bluebell, the music and murmur of hidden waters, that proclaim the inward being of the mountains. It is the lone, august, and tender thought, the peace that seeps into the mind there; the compassion that fills i the, world when night, a blue flower, unfolds her splendor eastward, and the roses and daffodils of the shnset wane in the west—by these One may I know the god in the mountain, and not despair for the world. Or w’hen the lark rises from the heather in the morning, it is a word of the mountain message that he is concerned to proclaim.—From the Theosophical Path. As to Biographies. The announcement comes from London that a biograph of Mr. Lloyd , George in four volumes is to be pub- : lished this autumn. It Is the latest manifestation of a curious modern tendency to give to the world biographies of people while, they are still alive. A biography used to be regarded ac the crown, posthumously awarded as the crown, posthumously awardto a great man gone past recall, and a record of his deeds for the benefit of succeeding generations. An old man, at the close of a long and interesting life, might beguile the leisured autumn of his days by inditing his memoirs, and nothing is more fascinating reading than such an autobiograph well done. But the modern world is too impatient to wait; it is too impatient even to ivait till it is quite certain that a man in ths popular eye really deserves a biography at all. We remember, a few years ago, glancing at an “authorized” life and appreciation of Mr. G. K. Chesterton, and it seemed a foolish thing to publish the biograph of a writer of thirtyfive. It seems also a foolish thing to publish the biography of a statesman of forty-nine. We say this in no disparagement df Mr. Lloyd George, although the four volumes that are to be devoted to him at least suggest comparison with the three volumes in which Lord Morley managed to compress what was most vital in the long life of W. E. Gladstone.

To Perfection. Some one, referring to a paragraph | about there being one thing each of , us could do to perfection if we could 1 only find it, says “I wonder! For my- > self I don’t believe it. I do not believe 1 that all have gifts. I think the world : is full of singularly stupid people.” In answer to this and in my support I : can scarcely do better than quote our , old friend Emerson. “Do that which ,is assigned thee and thou canst not hope too much or dare too much. There is, at this moment, there is for me. an utterance bare and grand as : that of the colossal chisel of Phidias, or trowel of the Egyptians, or the . pen of Moses or Dante, but different from all these.’’—New York Press. Bad Books and Bad Children. “It is time that parents realize the immense importance of the reading habit upon the mines of their children. It is durinr childhood that lasting impressions are made. Childhood is ‘the period of plasticity.’ the period of adjustment. ‘Go with mean people, and you think life mean,’ said Emerson. Read impure books, and books which give false views of life, and character is blackened. Many a boy has taken his first steps toward a criminal career from a bad book: many a girl has bogun the downward way to ruin through the influence of corrupt literature.” — Suburban Life Magazine. Dishpan Shrinkage. Race suicide has resulted In one commercial contraction that not even Mr. Roosevelt ever counted on. It has caused dishpans to grow smaller. “Where are the enormous dishpans of yesteryear?” queried a woman shopper. “The kind that you could pile all the dishes used by a'family of twelve into at one time?” “They don’t make them any more.” said the clerk, “because there are no families of twelve. Smaller families I mean fewer dishes to wash, and the size of the dishpans has shrunk accordingly.” Constancy. John D. Archbold is a master ot irony. Mr. Archbold, talking to a group of reporters on the Cunard pier in New York, said ironically of a certain politician: , “He is noted for his constancy. His • constancy, though, suggests the Chinese proverb about the constancy of women. “ ‘A woman’s heart,’ says the Chinese proverb, ‘is like the moon. It changes continually, but it always has » man in It”*

LIVE STOCK AS HOME GRAIN MARKET MAKERS. In talking with Professor Hunziker, Chief of the Department of Dairy Husbandry at Purdue, on the subject of Live Stock on the Farm, as profitable market makers for the farm grain products, the Professor gave the following interesting table on possible corn consumption by dairy cattie alone, in Indiana. He said; “I have not the necessary statistics within to estimate what portion of the corn crop of our state is consumed by dairy cattle or that by beef cattle,. but take for instance. as an estimate, according to the United States census report for 1910, the corn crop in Indiana averaged 39.3 bushels per acre. It is estimated that with this yield, that the acre will produce about , ten torts of corn silage. The average cow eats during the year (about eight months) six tons of corn silage,' containing about twenty-three and one-half bushels of corn. The average cow possibly receives four pounds of corn meal daily eight months of the year, amounting to fourteen bushels of corn. Thus the total corn consumed per cow in the State would average thirty-sev\ en and one-half bushels; as we have 066,000 dairy cows in Indiana, the dairy consumption would, amount to about i 24,975,000. •bushels annually. The man on the farm who is figuring like any man who is engaged in commercial pursuits must, is no doubt winning success as a result, and the man who takes advaniage of such a splendid education as that afforded by" the National Dairy Show at Chicagoeach year, will have laid before htm the latest result of the work of his fellow men in every department of dairying that will make for an increase in profit from his operations. The National Dairy Show at Chicagoaffords a Ten Days’ Short Course in everything of value to the man who is trying to win. The show begins, October 24th and lasts until includfng I November»2nd. Cattle, Machinery. Instructors, Practical Demonstrations, Everything dtovr to date, and worth inestimable vatoe to the man who wants results from Ms work. Adv. Butterfly Farm. Business men from New York areto establish in Red Bank. N. J., the first butterfly farm in the world. They will raise butterflies of all varieties, specializing in specimens of brilliamt coloring and highly decorative appearance. The product of the farm is to be sold to society women, who thus will be enabled to satisfy their whimfor having butterflies about their conservatories and priors. One Problem Settled. Mrs. Stronghead had just thrown a paving stoue through a drug store win- ! dow, merely to prove that she was antitied to a vote (says Judge), and had been marched off to jail. “Thank heaven,” said Stronghead. “That set--les the where-shall-we-spend-the-sum-mer problem, anyhow.” New China Currency. The new Chinese dollars of the Chinese republic are objects of much curiosity among the natives. They carry English on the obverse side and Chinese on the reverse, with the picture of Dr. Sun Yat Sen, founder of the republic. Km. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children: teething, softens the gums, reduces intla,tnmation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. Adv. . - If well thou hast begun, go on. It is the end that, crowns us, not thefight.—Herrick. YOU CAN CURE CATARRH By using Cole’s Csrbollsalve. It is a most efiective remedy. AU druggists. 2o and 50c. Adv Never do anything concerning the rectitude of which you have a doubt. —Pliny.

Wfitifanorek it Shoe PaKshe/S FINEST QUALITY LARGEST VARIETY They meet every requirement for cleaning and polishing shoes ot all Kinds and colors. ’WO GU T EDGE, the only ladles’ sh-'o dressing that positively contains Olu. Bkicijs and Polisbes ladies* and children's boots and she-s, shiuea without rubbing, 25c. ’’French Gloss,” MJe. STAR comoloatibnforcleunlag and poiislnngall kinds of russet or tan shoes, 10c. “Uanli v ” site Sse. BABY ELITE combination forgentlemen who take pride in having their shoes look Ji?. Restores color and lustre to ail black shoes. Polish with a brush or cloth, 10 cents ’’Elite”.site cents. It your dealer does not keep the R:nd you want, send us the price in stamps tor a lull sire package, Charge spa id. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO;, 20-28 Albany St., Cambridge, Mass. Jhe Oldest and Largest Manufacturers <?/ Shoe l-’oliskcs in the World. FRIEND [■ ".F t. w'l 1.1 TEETHING DURING HOT WEATHER Is the niost critical time of your baby’s life. The regular use of KOPP’S BABY’S FRIEND prevents Cholera Infantum, convulsions ami all ailments to which, babies are subject at this time. 5-12-12. Grand Rapids,'Mi-h. VbeKopp'r Baby’s Friend Co., York, Pa. gentlemen: _ 1 am well pleased with TOtir BAKVS FRIKN'r Java used several bottles.large size. wltbutSr-naliy good and satisfactory results. Thanking you lor th« Sample you sent uie and wishing you success, 1 am, yours very truly, lit. I>. 8. Hatfield. AT DRUGGISTS. 10. S 5 and SO VENTS Free sample by tuail'on request by theKOPP'S BABY’S FRIEKD C9.,YORK, pa. isamssiK ■