The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 February 1913 — Page 7

JNIIIMIONAL SJNMSOM Lesson <By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening Department The Moody Bible In- • stitute of Chicago.) LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 16 ' THE CALL OF ABRAM. DESSON TEXT—GEN. 12:1-9. GOLDEN TEXT—“I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and be thou a blessing.”—Gen. 12:2. The Bible does not profess to a be . a chronological history of the world. profess to reveal the steps of the redemptive process of God whereby fallen, man shall be justified in his eight. So it is that we find little record of those hundreds of years between this lesson and the events re? I corded in that of last week. We do, however, find all that Is essential in the history of the plan of salvation. The cleansing of the earth by water was not for long, since we soon see men relapsing into sin. 1. “Get thee out of thy country,” vv. 1-3. In this lesson we behold God again selecting a single man who £hall be the head of a race. We do not of course infer that Abram received an audible call, though God could certainly speak as he did on other and numer- l bus occasions. God calls today by these inward impulses and desires, by the voice of duty and conscience, by the force of circumstances, and by the word. The Bible Is God’s greatest organ of speech. Man, feeling the conscious presence of God, obeying to the full his revelation, will “see" God and hear him “speak” not through the atmosphere, but with an inward revelation that will direct his life now even as It did Abram’s. Abram’s Journey. From Acts 7:2 we learn that the call first came tp Abram when he was In Mesopotamia, on the right bank of the Euphrates river, and that his obedience to that call was only partial. Abram got out of his own country, but not into the land promised unto him. He journeyed probably 500 miles to the northwest but got only as far as Haran, r hlch was not the promised land. It took, evidently; the death of his father to move him from that |flace, Acts 7:4. Abram went not knowing the kind of a land, nor was he told where It was to be, Heb. 11:8. His call was threefold, (1) “for thy country," (2) “thy kindred,” (3) “thy father’s house.” Thus we see that God demanded a complete separation from the old life, associations and affections. In this Abram is a great type, Isa. 55:7. But in this connection we find the record of another and a wonderful covenant of God with man (vv. 2,3). How marvelously God has kept this promise. Through Abram came the Messiah who has so wondrously blessed the I earth. We need also to remember that | the descendants of Abram are today | God’s chosen people. Every child of j God has his “call” to separation, 2 Cor. i 6:17, 18. Abram left his idolatrous ( companions, so-we, too, must forsake our Idols. - “The dearest Idol I have known, What’re that; idol be Help me to. tear It from tliy throne And worship only thee.” . | We are told that Haran means “a I parched place,” and so today Abram I has many like him who start for the : land of promise only to have their ' purpose killed by the scorching heat ■ of testing and trial as they reach the - Haran experiences of life, and many like the father of Abram did in Haran. 11. And Abram departed,” vv. 4-6. “To obey is better than sacrifice and to hearken than the fat of rams,” I Samuel 15:22. Abram had just enough faith to obey. We do not read that he asked enlightenment; he saw not the land, but he heard the call and staggered not at the promise. He was fully persuaded that God was able to perform and therefore it was reckoned unto him for righteousness, Acts 7:20-22. But he did not go alone. Already God had begun to redeem his promise (v. 2). Abram’s character was such and his name of such import I that his nephew Lot accompanied him. Lot, 'wo we ver, did not possess that same faith nor a like character. Lot -went “with him” and not, like Abram, (with God. Abram also took his own family with him, and “all their sumStfmce” v. 5. Nothing was left behind to tempt him to return. “And they went forth into the land of Canaan,”) a type of the life into which j we are called in Christ Jesus. Thus at once another part of the promise is "’fulfilled, 111. “And the Canaanite ’ was in the land,” vv. 6-9. All was not so easily settled fQr Abram. "Man that Is born of woman Is of few, days and full of troubles,no life Is devoid of its testing, Eph., 6:12, R. V;, and so as Abram journeyed he met with enemies. His Place of Rest. Passing on from thence he reached a place of rest (v. 8). This is a beautiful lesson on consecration. Here is Abram at “a mountain on the east of Bethel” (house of God). Notice he is on the east of Bqthel facing westward, the direction In which he has been journeying, having Hal (ruins) at his back, and “there he bullded an altar unto the Lord and called upon the name of the Lord” (v. 8). Let us all remember to turn our backs upon the world, and as we face the house, the altar of God,render him undivided, whole-hearted worship and service. God’s appearance to Abram was again in connection with obedience. God is just as ready to assure us as we jour- ‘ ney through this humdrum, toilsome journey of life, ever ready to meet us and to make us glad by the way. Notice that Abram in a strange land did not neglect God’s altar like many a present-day pilgrim, nor to give testimony of his faith for “called upon tho name of the Lord.” Like the Christ who “had not where to lay his head,” so Abram was a “pilgrim.” For the older classes consider such questions as, Every Man’s Life a Plan of God; Our Debt to Judaism; Our Treatment of Others Who Are Pilgrims, Strangers, e. immigrants. |X>r younger do not omit Lot

Stories.k l? CAMPajm ANDWAB* NOTED RAID AROUND ATLANTA Important and . Interesting Paper Written by Col. William L. Curry, Columbus Pension Agent. Col. William L. Curry, United States pension agent, Columbus, 0., and who served as a captain in the Ist Ohio cavalry, has written a very important and interesting paper on Kilpatrick’s raid around Atlanta in August, 1861. This was read before the Ohio commandery and found of such interest and importance that its publication was requested by the editors of tie U. S. Cavalry Association Journal, which has published it in full. Colonel Curry points out that during the last two years of the war the cavalry came under the command of young men. who at the beginning were generally enlisted men. The raid was ordered July 20, 1864, to destroy the enemy's communications by burning bridges, filling up tunnels and cuts, cutting telegraph wires and destroying railroads and army supplies. The expedition was composed of five brigades and two batteries. The whole command numbered 4.800 men. all veterans of long service. The expedition started from Sandtown August 18. and the infantry all along the line made demonstrations to mask the movement. This did not, however, deceive Hood, who detached Cleburne’s division of infantry to attack the cavalry, and Kilpatrick had to fight it at Lovejoy. At the very outset the enemy’s cavalry was encountered and a stubborn resistance made. The West Point railroad was reached near Fairburn, and Long’s brigade dismounted and began tearing up the road. The brigade destroyed about a mile of track, when attacked by the cavalry and artillery of the enemy on both the rear and left flank. The brigade was ordered to mount and gallop forward to join the First brigade, under Minty, which had crossed the track and had the advance. A lively fight was on at once, which was directed by General Kilpatrick. During the battle Kilpatrick’s headquarters band, mqunted on white horses, were playing patriotic airs with all their might The enemy was soon driven in confusion toward Atlanta, but the fighting was thenceforward almost continuous. The country was thickly wooded and bad for cavalry to operate in. Jonesboro "was taken after a sharp skirmish, and a great amount of clothing and cavalry stores destroyed. The sky was lighted up with burning timbers, buildings,, cotton bales, and again the headquarters band was in evidence playing national airs while the destruction was going on. The command was now in the rear of Hood's army, and, as Phil Kearny would say, the fighting was lovely all along the line. Finally the command was entirely surrounded, with two of Cleburne's brigades in the rear, the cavalry brigades of Ross, Ferguson and Mar- ; tin, about 1,000 state troops and Cle- | brume's remaining brigades on the | flanks and two brigades of cavalry ! with a division of infantry and a six- : gun battery completing the line. Alto- I gether there were five brigades of in- I fantry, 18 pieces of artillery and 6 [ brigades of cavalry surrounding the division. Kilpatrick was a born cavalryman, and determined upon a saber charge to get out of the trouble. He massed all his troops, put the artillery in the rear and ordered sabers drawn. The troops were formed in columns of fours to strike the enemy’s line at different places. The enemy had formed two or three lines with infantry behind barricades of fence rails and logs. The lines were quickly formed, and 4,500 sabers rang as they were drawn from their scabbards and flashed in the sun. The bugles rang out “Forward! Trot! . Gallop! Charge!” in quick succession, and the columns swept forward Under the spur with loud yells, scaling fences, jumping ditches and barricades. Nothing could stop the yelling! troopers, and in an instant the men were sabering right and left among the enemy. It is estimated that from 600 to 800 prisoners were sabered. At one time the command had over 1,000 prisoners in its hands, but these nearly all escaped. The Confederate line was smashed to pieces wherever struck, and the whole command galloped i away triumphantly, with Long's brigade covering the retreat. Cleburne followed up furiously, and Long had a fight with him of nearly an hour before driving him back. In this. Colonel Long was severely wounded. The whole command moved rapidly toward McDonough, marching all night in a drenching ’rain. They did not get the order to unsaddle until between 2 and 3 o’clock on the morning of Aug. 21. The saddles had been on continuously since the evening of Aug. 18. I Not Loaded. An Irish/recruit, being rebuked by the sergeamt for striking one of his companions, said: “I t’ought there was no ha-r-rm in it. I had nothin’ in me hand but me fist.” Modest (?) The lieutenant,,wishing to give to a reporting soldier a cigar, opened a fresh box. “Oh, don’t trouble about opening the box, sir; I can do that when I get to my post,” said the soldier. All Settled. “I can’t decide whether to marry Hal or Robert,” said Miss Prinkle. “Which one has the more money?” asked her practical friend, Miss Plodgitt. “Why, Hal has.” “Then, my dear girl, fate has already decided the matter for you.” Atrocities. Binks —I hope this Balkan war will cut out those Turkish atrocities. Jinks—Ditto here. I never could smoke the blamed things.

GRAND MARSHAL OF THE SUFFRAGIST PAGEANT ® ® I lit //-aOt, A I |iWBI fW W /If IB .Ji AmpWw ’ ' 'fi ''ll Mrs. Richard Coke Burleson is to be grand marshal of the suffragist pageant that will be held in Washington on March 3. She is seen ber% standing by the horse she will ride, and in evening costume.

CUPID IS GIVEN AID

Miss Winthrop Will Build $15,.000 Trysting Place. Woman Sees Woes of Street Corner, Case and Dance Hall Courtships In Gotham and Becomes a New York. I—There’s 1 —There’s no use in denying the fact that young lovers of New York City have a pretty hard time in getting away with it. Anyhow, ten- , der-hearted Miss Gordenia Winthrop | of Washington, after five years of | lorgnetted investigation of some of the rather distressing social condl- | tions of the town, says it is so. Forthwith she decided something really : ought to be done—hence a rather interesting announcement from Miss Winthrop. But before launching into Miss Winthrop’s solution, let’s see just what is this problem of the young lovers of : New York. The answer is: “Where are they going to do their courting?” Or, rather, that leads up to the anI swer, and in the meantime proposes a i few questions. I With a few million people trying to I occupy the narrow confines of Man- ! hattan Island, it goes without further i elaboration that every family cannot i place at the disposal of Sal and Jane ; a parlor each for the entertainment of | their young man friends over an evening’s call. Moreover, a large percentage of “the ether half” in New York City cannot afford a single parlor for the whole family. So when Freddie makes a “date” with Sal. Sal must make answer to Freddie something to this effect: “All right, Freddie; meetcha at the corner of Hundred and Twenty-fifth and Eighth.” Freddie arrives duly, we will say; likewise Sal. Presently the popular street corner under the glaring arc lamps and in full sight of the passing throng becomes as inviting tor a continuance of the tryst as Broadway for a rest cure. There’s little in the way of a choice for Freddie and Sal. They might walk a while, yes; but more than love’s young dream is necessary to make a . lovers’ lane out of a New York street. 1 There’s the Case de Something around [ the corner. The lights are dim there; i nobody is his brother’s keeper ; across | that threshold. So we can’t approve ' of Sal and Freddie going there. They have another choice, and only about one more. It’s the noisy dance hall down the avenue. The brassy music mimics sadly the sighing of the evening’s breeze of the country lane, which Is nature’s own trysting place for the village lad and lass; the thick, smoky atmosphere of the dance hall is a poor substitute, surely, for the open sky that falls to the’lot of young lovers away from a great city’s congestion. No; the dance hall will not do. For the solution of the problem of ; the courting couples of New York we j may turn gladly to Miss Winthrop’s | announcement. The fair philanthropist has viewed the problem—viewed ' from afar, perhaps, but still close i enough to see the temptations which mock the lot of the young lovers of the city; to see that love’s young dream unfolding in a dance hall or case may result in something very different from a storybook ending; to see, finally, that the city is sadly deficient in proper courting places for the young whose homes offer no such accommodations. Miss Winthrop’s proposition is this: She will establish at her own expense of $15,000 a house, conveniently located for the working class, where the young people may meet under

VIOLIN WINS SI,OOO CHECK Admirer of Girl Also Promises to Defray All Cost of Her Education. New York.—The happiest girl 1b Brooklyn is Miss Josephine Bandes, fourteen years old. She is the proud possessor of a check for SI,OOO, which an admirer of her violin playing handed to her after listening by chance to an air she played In the rose room of the Hotel Astor.' t

the supervision of experienced chaperons. “I have been over every section of this country studying its social evils,” Miss Winthrop said, “and I think I have found now what will be a great remedy for the young in this great city.” LOST U. S. WOMAN FOUND Taken to Hospital In Italy She Explains She Was Overcome by illness and Had Fainted." Rome.—Mrs. William Mansfield, the American woman, whose disappearance has caused much anxiety to her ■ friends and occasioned an investiga- | tion by the Italian authorities, has been found in Venice, according to a dispatch to the Giornale d’ltalia. Mrs. Mansfield arrived in Venice a fortnight ago and took a room at a boarding house, which she left The police came upon her lying unconI sclous in the street and removed her to a hospital. On regaining consciousness the woman said that she had been overcome by illness and had fainted. She remained in the hospital all night and left in the morning. The police say she told them she belonged to a wealthy New York family, and that the name of her husband, from whom she was separated, was William Mansfield. Mrs. Mansfield left Salo, on Lake Garda, about two weeks ago after cashing an American check for S6O at a bank. She said she was going to Verona to buy paint brushes, but there is no trace of her having stayed at any hotel in Verona. Apparently she went direct to Venice.

NAME IS LOST 51 YEARS

Minister’s Search for Identity Is Rewarded Through Publication • of Small Item. Springdale, Ark. —Rev. David T». : Leonard, erstwhile Rev. David Johni son, “Little Davy” to the few w’ho re- ! member the frightened, bedraggled I youngster they sheltered when, one i day in 1861 federal artillery capsized i a houseboat at Ozard Landing, on i Arkansas, has come into his own. For the first time in fifty-one years he greeted relatives and learned what he never knew before —his name. With telegrams in his hand from the families of three brothers and sisters in the south urging him to meet them, the minister sat at the home of his sister. Mrs. J. C. Johnson in Springdale, told his part of the disconnected story, matched data with j some of the pioneers and ended by legally renouncing the name David Johnson. David's parents moved from his | birthplace. Knox county, Tenn., two j ; years before the war, to Coop Ridge, ; i near Fort Smith. Ark. When mother | I and father died, neighbors placed ■ David and four brothers and sisters > aboard a houseboat in charge of a slave, and started them for their old home in Tennessee. Following the capsizing of tfie boat David disappeared. The other children were taken aboard of a/ passenger boat at the landing and on to their found by a farmer a few miles from Ozark, sobbing oh the river bank. He" was 3 years old and his name, he said, was “Davy.” Some months later, James Johnson and his family of. Greenville. Tex., came through Ozark and adopted the homeless boy. The Johnsons journeyed to Kansas City, lived there four years, and then

The girl violinist is a member of a society, the purpose of wnich is to . procure musical education for talented youngsters who have not means of their own sufficient to develop their talent. A young man who recently inherited a fortune overheard Miss Bandes I playing and was so charmed by her . performance that be made inquiries about her, with the result that he • drew the SI,OOO check and told the i child he would see personally that all expenses were paid so she had

THIEF LEAVES FAKE WHISKY Burglar Breaks Glass in Saloon to Get Colored Water and Throws Loot Away. St. Louis.—The crash of breaking glass attracted patrolmen to the sai loon of Charles Croslck early in the) morning. A plate glass In front of the place had been broken. But there was no sign of a burglar. The police found a bottle In the halh way. It was a quart bottle such as is used to contain wrisky. The corkj was out and lay nearby. Part of the contents had been spilled. The rest reflected a nice, ruddy glow. Taking it to the saloon, the police asked Cn> sick if it was his. “Yep; that’s all the fellow took, too,” was the reply. “It’s colored water.” The police imagined the lock of dls-i gust on the face of the burglar when he sampled the whisky. t NEW PAPER IN NEW YORK Gotham Writers on Strike Get It Out —Say It Has Circulation of 100,000. New York. —A newspaper made its appearance on the streets of this city,, and, according to its publishers, enjoyed a first issue circulation of 100,000 copies. It was written and edited by the Jewish newspaper men who are on strike and is four pages, seven columns to a page. Most of its In-, i formation was about its makers’ strike against the Jewish dailies. The strikers themselves became newsboys in the streets. A second issue was promised for later and the writers‘who walked out demanding more money and shorter ) hours say it will be published at intervals until the strike ends. They \ named it the Jewish Press.

went east In the wagon to Tennessee. At Jasper, Marion county, Tenn., David grew up and in 1891 was ordained a Primitive Baptist minister. From the moment he learned to read and. write he devoted his spare time in the search of relatives and a name. The Johnsons tpld him "all they knew of' his history, but he found names and dates at Ozark forgotten when he to learn of his stay there. Two llljlpths ago he received*a letter from family of Thomas Leonard of Kroppel, Tex., saying they had recognized in his story, told in an Arkansas paper, the connection with their own family history. The letter directed him to Mrs. Johnson and when he came to Springdale the identification was made complete. Mr. Leonard now lives at Elkmont, Ala., is married and has eleven grown children. BANDITS’ FALSE COW FEET ■ Imitation Hoofs Worn by California Robbers to Delude Pursuers—Are Found in Cache. Long Beach, Cal.—What is believed to have been a safe blowers’ cache, discovered at the edge of a swamp near here, yielded several ingenious contrivances apparently intended to divert pursuit after the commission of a crime. They were a pair of imi- ' tation horse hoofs carved out of pine and fitted with straps so that they could be adjusted to a pair of shoes;, an imitation cow’s hoof fastened to a cane evidently was intended to be used in conjunction with the others to give the impression oil a man on horseback driving a cow.

the finest musical education obtainable. Saw Comet, Never Returned. Atchison, Kan. —Clinton Smith, who was granted .a divorce from his wife, Elizabeth, testified that on the night of May 24, 1210, she went out “to look at a comet” and never returned. The poor man must go out and weather the storm, but lhe rich man can stay at home and storm the weather.

,HOUDAYING IN THE WINTER AN IMMENSE AMOUNT OF MONEY SPENT BY WESTERN CANADIANS IN WINTER SEASON. w An unusually large number of Western Canada people are leaving or preparing to leave to spend the in California.” The above item of news was clipped from a ’ Western Canada paper early in December. In the same paper were items of news conveying the intelligence that hundreds of Western Canadians were also taking a trip abroad, spending the Christmas sea- ■ son “at home,” as they yet term the 1 old land. The Scandinavian element participated largely in the holiday business of the railroads and the steamships, but they all had return tickets. Early in December the east ‘ bound trains and boats were loaded, and an estimate furnished by the rail- | road people gave upwards of twelve thousand as the number who' would make the Christmas holiday visit abroad. This does not mean that these people are leaving to avoid the cold- | ness of the winter, nor for any climatic conditions whatever. They have come out to Canada and have done so well that they can afford the I hundred andofifty or two hundred dollars or more that it takes to carry : them across and back. When they I came to Canada they did not have i that much money all told, but now they are wealthy and on their return will bring some of their friends with them. Then there are those, too, who on ; their wheat farms have made sufficient money, that they can afford to take a holiday, and what better winter holidaying ground could they have than California? How many in other farming districts of the continent could afford the money and the time that these people can? —Advertisement One Ray or Sunsnine. “John, you are sure it is safe in this yacht?” “Yes, my love.” “And you know how to sail it?” “My sailing master does.” “How long will it take us to Cross?” “About two weeks.” “Oh, dear, there’s so much to worry about on a yacht.” “There’s one thing that needn’t cause you any wory.” “What is that?” “The cook can’t leave until we get to Liverpool.” — Louisville Courier Journal. Surprise for Mother. A Chicago school teacher tells with great gusto of the shrewd little “colored brother” who once arrived at school provided with a most unusual excuse for tardiness. “I couldn’t help bein’ late, please, teacher,” he bubbled, shrilly. “Somepin happened to us las’ night. My maw, she went ter bed wit’ a headache, and when she wakes up dis mornin’, dere’s two little quins (twins) one on each side ob her, and —she won’ know nuffin ’bout ’em-tell she wakes up. An’ my maw, she so s’prised, she cain’t get up ter get me ready for school!”. Surely a! Good Cook. Mrs. Champ Clark was engaging a new cook. The applicant, a nice look- ■ ing woman, made a fine impression on Mrs. Clark. After the usual preliminary questions, the speaker’s wife asked: “Can you really cook?” “Can I cook!” exclaimed the applicant. “I should say I can cook!” “But are you a good cook?” “Am I good cook!” echoed the woman. I go to mass every morning.”— The Sunday Magazine. Compromise. Senator Fletcher of Jacksonville, apropos of the recent peace conference in London, said: “Such conferences usually end in a ' compromise, and the people concerned depart homeward with sour smiles. “A compromise, you know, has been accurately described as an agreement whereby both parties get what they don’t want.” , Sure. “Don’t you think that we should have a more elastic currency?” asked the Old Fogy. “It’s elastic enough.” replied the Grouch. “Why don’t they make it more adhesive?” When you have a lawsuit to lose you can afford to hire a cheap lawyer. A DIFFERENCE. It Paid This Man to Change Food. “What is called ‘good living’ eventually brought me to a condition quite the reverse of good health,’ writes a N. Y. merchant. “Improper eating told on me till my stomach became so weak that food nauseated me, even the lightest and simplest lunch, and I was much depressed after a night of uneasy slumber, unfitting me for business. “This condition was discouraging, as I could find no w r ay to improve it. Then I saw the of Grape-Nuts food, and decided to try it, and became delighted with the result. “For the past three years I have used Grape-Nuts and nothing else for my breakfast and for lunch before retiring. It speedily set my stomach right and I congratulate myself that I have regained my health. There is no greater comfort for a tired man than a lunch of Grape-Nuts. It insures restful sleep, and an awakening in the morning with a feeling of buoyant courage and hopefulness. “Grape-Nuts has been a boon to my whole family. It has made of our 2-year-old boy, who used to be unable to digest much of anything, a robust, healthy, little rascal weighing 32 pounds. Mankind certainly owes a debt of gratitude to the expert who invented this perfect food." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. “There’s a reason.” Ever the above letter* A new one nppenra from time to time. They ■re RcnuKhe. true, and full of human Interest. Adv. T

WOMAN SICK FOURTEENYEARS Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Elkhart, Ind.:—“l suffered for fourteen years from organic inflammatiotv

female weakness, pain and irregularities. The pains io my sides were increased by walking or standing on my feet and I had such awful bearing down feelings, was depressed in spirits and became thin and pale with dull,heavy eyes. I had six doc- •

1 1 if ” 1 V ~

tors from whom I received only temporary relief. I decided to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial and also the Sanative Wash. I have now used the remedies for four months and cannot express my thanks for what they have done for me. “ If these lines will be of any benefit you have my permission to publish them.” — Mrs. Sadie Williams, 455 i James Street, Elkhart, Indiana. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills we know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials on file in the • Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to prove this fact. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s VegetaIble Compound will help you,write to Lydia 11. Pink ham IVnedicine Co. (confidential) for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. Stiff Joints Sprains,Bruises are relieved at once by an application of Sloan’s Liniment. Don’t rub, just lay on lightly. ! “Sloan’s Liniment has done more good than anything I have ever tried tor stiff joints. 1 got tuy hand hurt so badly that 1 had to stop work right in the busiest time of the year. 1 thought at tirst that 1 would have to have my hand taken off, but I got a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment and cured my hand.” Wilton Whejslkk, Morris, Ala. Good for Broken Sinews G. G. Jokes, Baldwin, L. 1., writes : —“I used Sloan’s Liniment for broken sinews above the knee cap caused by a fall and to my great satisfaction was able to resume work in less than three weeks after the accident.” SLOANS LINIMENT Fine for Sprain Mb. HENir®-,A. Voehl, 84 Somerset St., Plainfield. N. J., writes :— “ A friend sprained his ankle so badly that it went, black. He laughed when I told him ihat 1 Would have him out in a week, i applied Sloan’s Liniment and in four days ho was working and said Sloan’s was a right good Liniment.” ■; Price 25c.. 50c., and SI,OO Sloan’s Book / oh horses, cattle, \ sheep and J . “vS/ poultry sent free, w: z A/v Address __l \ Dr. Earl S. V B Sloan XsSSEA Boston, Mass., Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently but firmly to Cur2U'Tnt itipation, H LY, s c digestion, jaj Sick XVl"—* and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature A SOUND INVESTMENT A company of prominent business men in New < Jersey have acquired all the rights, titles and foeruulae of several HI«H F.WKXT Ht hUIXKS, which are well known for their wonderful curat.Vw qualities. Modern business methods, thorough publicity, tne best of inf’-edients. carefully compounded, and pw» up In attractive shape, together with t he merit, virtue and efficiency of the goods, aro certain to Insure largely increased sales. TIIKBK IS SO MOKE PKOFITABIE BCSISESS THAN THE haxcmcttkuhi of patent medicines and, this undoubtedly. is one of the best Investing proposition* offered this season. ONLY S3O .000.00—7 CIMVIATIVB PKEFEBKED STOCK W ILL BE 0H E KEO AT 810.00 PBR SHAKE Investigate at once. BOX 431, NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS If you feel “out of sorts”—“ran down” or “got thn blues,"suffer from kldn«y,bladder,nervousdlsease% chronic weaknesses, ulcers, skin eruptions,plles.&c, write for my FKEH book. It is the most instructive medical book ever written; It tells all about these and you can decide for yourself if 11 is the remedy for your ailment. Don’t send a cent. It’s absolutely FRKK. No‘‘follow-up”«lrculars. Dr.LeClewMed. Co.. Haverstock Hd., Hauipatoad, lewbm. EreH*w&n Clsnnres and besutffiM ths hskt nouDotet b hsxwriaxit growth. Never Tails to Restore Orsfi Hair to It* Youthful OelM. Prevents hair felling. soc.endnwatgre.rgteta FREE TO WOMEN—PI SO’S TABLETS are recommended as the best local remedy for women’s ailments. Easy to use, prompt to relieve. Tire wrrtt «nd «a »*»• "Causes of Diaeaaes in Women” THE PISO WBPAIY. MX I* WAMEBg Me