The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 October 1913 — Page 7

Groraum Discover®

S that will-o’-the-wisp of the physicist, the gas coronium, at last in the grip of the , chemist, as was stated in a cable dispatch from London the other day? Have Sir William Ramsay and his

fellows actually found earthly su stances from which this elusive an extraordinary light element can e produced? If so aviation, or more accurately the range of the dirigible a loon, will be enormously increased. But this is only one aspect of a very ■wide field of possible services and significance. The discovery of coronium is another example of the astonishing reve lations which have come with the development of the spectroscope and its union with photograph/. By means of this wonderful instrument physicists have been able to detect and render visible the unseen of millions of miles away. As Professor Mendenhall expressed it a few years ago. “By this device man is put into communication with every considerable bodv in the universe, including even the invisible. The goings on of Sirius and Algol, of Orion and the Pleiades are reported to him across enormous stretches of millions of millions of miles of space, empty save of the ethereal medium itself, by this most wonderful wireless telegraphy. And it is by the vibratory motion of the invisibly small that all of thills revealed; the infinitely little has enabled us to conquer the inconceivably bigBut the spectroscope would be incomplete were it not for the exceedingly ingenious apparatus called the bolometer, invented by the late Prof. S. P. Langley. The sensitiveness of the bolometer is so exquisite that it responds to temperature changes of a millionth of a degree. The bolometer is an eye that sees in the dark. To quote Professor Langley: “Since it is one and the same solar energy whose manifestations are called ‘light’ or ‘heat,’ according to the medium which interprets them, what is ‘light’ to the eye is ‘heat’ to the bolometer and what is seen as a dark line by the eye is felt as a solid line by the sentient instrument.’’ Here is an example of how this apparatus revealed to Professor Langley what had been considered far beyond the pale of the recordable. He’ was using the bolometer up on Mount Whitney and was working away at the known spectrum, patiently measuring the heat of the various lines. He j stumbled upon a great discovery. “He went down the spectrum, noting the evidence of invisible heat die out on the scale of the instrument until he came to the apparent end of the invisible, beyond which the most prolonged researches of investigators up to that time had shown nothing. “There he watched the indications grow fainter and fainter until they, ; too. ceased at the point where the French investigators believed they had found the very end of the end. By some happy thought he pushed the indications of this delicate instrument into the region still beyond. In the still air of this lofty region the sun- | j beams passed unimpeded by the mists I i j) of the lower earth, and the curve ot 1 | I heat which had fallen to nothing began to rise again. There was something there’ For he found, suddenly, unexpectedly, a new spectrum of great extent, wholly unknown to science and ■whose presence was revealed by the bolometer.” Thus the way was prepared for the detection of coronium. During the solar eclipse of May 28, 1900, Professor Abbott, with the aid of Professor Mendenhall, was able to —! measure the heat of the corona, and that was probably the first time that it was really shown to exist. Here, again, the spectroscope, photography and the bolometer rendered great service. The sun as ordinarily seen is bounded by the so-called photosphere and is really but a small part of the true sun. Outside the photosphere is an envelope composed mainly of hydrogen, and outside of this there is another envelope which hsfs been called the corona. The beautiful photograph taken in May of 1900, which accompanies this article, illustrates this part of the sun. It- is estimated that the height of the corona in the sun’s atmosphere is a matter of half a million miles; and it is believed tiat toward the photosphere the heat is' so intense that the chemical elements are dissociated into finer forms of matter. In the

NEW SOURCE OF PAPER-PULP| Discovery May Put an End to Problem That Has Been Worrying Newspaper Publishers. Several promising sources of pa-per-pulp were recently noted In these columns. Another may now be add«d to the list—the widespread and hardy plant, broom corn. Successful experiments with this have been made In Italy. In Prometheus (Berlin) we read:

War Waged Upon Rats. It has been estimated that there is one rat for every human being In the United States, says the Toledo Blade. The damage to foods and goods which must be charged to rats, constituting <e cost of .their upkeep, amounts to about >I.BO per rat. A movement Is now on foot for the extermination of the rat population of this country, the leaders of which are not commercial interests, but people connected with medical and sanitation organizations. The reason for their

F7Z fll wove©TO beAA \ swam

cooler regions of the sun's atmosphere, near the boundaries of the corona, vapors give place to solid particles and masses. The corona intercepts enormous quantities of heat from the sun, and in this seething zone coronium is born, at least, so says the spectroscope. The nearest approach we have in nature and upon this globe to the intensely heated atmosphere of the corona of the sun is in the molten masses deep in the earth. The only normal outward evidence of this combustion is that afforded by active volcanoes. Accordingly, we might reasonably expect some of these to exhale coronium, and such Indeed has been found to be the case. About 15 years ago Professor Nasini of the University of Padua, Italy, submitted a note to the French academy in which he declared that he had found coronium in the gases taken from the crater of Vesuvius. In view of this volcanoes may assume a new importance along practical lines, and even dead craters may prove of use, because within the lava may be found the material from which coronium may be manufactured. Hitherto hydrogen has been the unit of weight by which the specific gravity of other gases has been measured. Hydrogen is about twelve times as light as the air we breathe. Now comes coronium, which is 16 times as light as hydrogen, and therefore 192 times as light as air. It is easy to realize what this would mean to aeronautics if the new found gas could be produced in large quantities. There are some hardheaded scientists, however, who are not encouraging, and among them is Dr. Rankine, who is associated with Sir Willim Ramsay. Dr. Rankine says: “Personally I cannot see that even when found coronium will be of much use to airships. One thing against it will be its elusiveness. Helium is four times heavier than hydrogen, but [ it manages to creep out of any receptacle we can devise. It escapes from us almost as rapidly as we collect it.” But other men of science reply that this is really a mechanical problem and is quite apart from the production of coronium. Electricity is elusive enough, they point out, and yet man has found ways to .control it. Anyhow enthusiasts of a so-called I scientific turn have already been giving their imaginations full play, and if coronium can be produced here they predict a revolution in aerostatics. One of them has said that we need not worry about the days to come ■ when the light of the sun grows dim ■ and this globe of ours becomes too chilly for comfort. When that time arrives the frostbitten human denizens of this sphere can take passage in airships, thanks to coronium, and sail away to any distant planet that may seem more habitable. He hedges, however, by saying that this will not be necessary for a million years to come, and by that time, he hopefully concludes, means will have been discovered by which it will be possible to combat atmospheric conditions during the trip from the earth to the other world. One of these conditions is a lack of oxygen. A short while ago three meteorological experts went up in a balloon to a height of 33,000 feet, and at that altitude life was sustained only by breathing through a special respirator that supplied them with fresh oxygen. The Germans have actually prepared a breathing apparatus which will sustain aeronauts up to a height of 50,000 feet —at least this has been established by laboratory experiments. The lifting power of 1,000 cubic feet of coal gas is equal to about 14 pounds, while a similar volume of hydrogen will raise 70 pounds. Hydrogen’s lightness, despite its elusiveness, therefore, has so far made it the best obtainable buoyant agent for aircraft. The latest Zeppelin airships have gas bags ■which have a capacity of nearly 700,000 cubic feet, have a diameter of 40 odd feet and are of 500

l “The fibrous twigs„ are broken in a I sort of flax-breaker, then treated for * a considerable length of time with caustic soda lye, and afterward put through the breaking machine a second time. The mass is freed of moisture by means of hydraulic presses, “after which it is separated into fibers, washed and bleached. The material thus obtained sells for about a cent a pound, and is of excellent quality, suitable for making the best grades of paper. The liquid pressed out from the pulp is a valuable by-

deep interest in the agitation lies in the fact that the rat is the natural carrier of the bubonic plague. This disease, so far as known, does not exist in this country Just now. But its coming is an ever present threat. It may appear at any time, more virulent than upon its previous visits, more widespread in its action, harder to control. It could be passed from one rat to another, carried by ship or by rail from one community to another. So long as' there are rats, there exist the means by which one

feet and more in length. The biggest of these have a total lifting capacity of 20 tons. If coronium could be employed instead of hydrogen, an airship of the same lifting capacity would have a total length of a trifle over 200 feet and its maximum diameter would be considerably less than twenty feet. In the place of gas bags holding 700,000 cubic feet of hydrogen its containers would have within them but 43,000 cubic feet of the lighter gas. The smaller airship would obviously be cheaper to construct, speedier and more manageable. It would be able to stay afolt longer and sail further. The best of the Zeppelins have remained aloft about thirty-five hours, and this is suggestive of what the more mobile smaller and swifter airship could do when sustained by means of coronium. There is another phase of aeronautics in which cornium would be of great value. Meterorologists have been reaching ever higher into the atmospheric zones in their endeavor to determine the conditions that prevail there. Sounding balloons charged with hydrogen have been used to take temperatures at different heights up to fifteen miles. Could coronium be used instead of hydrogen the , ocean of air could be penetrated a great deal further and possibly astonishing information would be obtained. One remarkable discovery has already resulted from the use of sounding balloons. Theoretically the temperature of the air falls one degree Fahrenheit for approximately every 300 feet of ascent, and this rate of reduction was supposed to go on reguraly. It is now established that within the lower two miles of the atmosphere this rule is frequently reversed. Above this, however, there is more regularity. Formerly it was supposed that this went on unbrokenly until the cold of distant space was reached, something in the neighborhood of absolute zero. When the sounding balloon records were accumlated one of the first facts apparent was that at a height, generally of something like six miles, the temperature actually ceased to fall and even tended to rise. This conI tinues to be the case as far as the | sounding balloons have gone afolt. | This zone of comparatively mild temperature is also apparently a region of relative calm, but we do not yet anow how far heavenward this stratutn extends. So far consideration has been given .«mly to the services that coronium may fill for man because of its lightness, but who shall say that there are not other ways in which it may act helpfully? It is the unsuspected properties of radium that have proved of the utmost value since its discovery. Perhaps coronium may hold possibilities of an equally important nature. His Lordship’s Beard. A certain peer, who had a very long and very bushy beard, had dismissed his valet for the night. Shortly afterward, however, he was much annoyed to hear peals of laughter from below, and called back to the man to explain. The valet answered that it was just a little joke, but his lordship would have none of it, and demanded the details, angrily. “Well, admitted the man, with reluctance, “it was really a little game we were having, my lord.” “What game?” “Well, my lord, a kind of guessing game.” “Don’t be a fool. Waters! I rang for you in order to get an explanation. What guessing game were you playing? Guessing what?” “We blindfolded the cook, to tell the truth, my lord, and then one of us kissed her, and she had to guess who it was. The footman held the mop up and she kissed it, and then cried out: ‘Oh, your lordship! How dare you!’ ”

product, since its high content of alkali makes it useful in the soap industry.”—Translation made for The Literary Digest. Acute Business Man. Prospective Tenant —“Number t’irteen? It might nod be lucky to live in a house vot vas number tTrteen.” Agent—“ You don’t believe in such nonsense as that?” Prospective Tenant —“Veil, vot reduction vill you make in der rent if I take der chances ?”—Puck.

of the most terrible of diseases can find victims. i Through agitation the people have ; learned the dangers of the typhoid fly : and have come near to neutralizing . them. The war upon rats, though a . harder one, ought to be successful. Possible Reason. i "Wonder why the man in the Infor- ■ mation bureau has such a small win • dow?“ "That’s so they can only fire one )< question at him at a time.”

WWIONAL SUNWSOTOI Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening Department. The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR OCTOBER 5 • MOSES’ CRY FOR HELP. LESSON TEXT—Numbers 11:10-18. 24, 25. GOLDEN TEXT—“The supplication of a righteous man availeth much in Its working.”—Janies 5:16. This lesson is taken from the book of Numbers, “the book of journeyings,” or aptly called the “book of murmurings.” The events of Exodus and Leviticus cover perhaps one or two years, whereas those recorded in Numbers occupy about 38 years. Read in this connection P5.95:10 and I Cor. 10. From Sinai to Kadesh-Barnea are found four general murmurings. The first was at Taberah, 11:3, and the events of today’s lesson which occurred at Kibroth, 11:34. The other two were at Hazeroth, 12:15, 16, and Kadesh, 13:26. This book is full of impressive warnings about worldliness. ■’ Moses Was Human. I. Complaint and Controversy, vv. 10-15. Moses was great but he was human. No man is faultless, and In this lesson we have another incident illustrating the weakness of Moses. Yet despite all this we find inserted in the very next chapter God’s estimate of his character, 12:3. Moses had been subjected to a terrible strain, the details of his leadership, the constant murmuring of the people under this load he gave way, just as he had previously yielded to impulse, Ex. 2:12, and as he did subsequently. Ch. 20:10-13. The Israelites are a striking illustration of the natural discontent of the human heart. Any affliction, and discomfort or privation, and we forget God's marvelous works on our behalf. His wonderful goodness. That God was displeased is indicated by verse 10, but that did not imply that Moses, too, was to lose his temper, to resort to murmuring, and to accuse God of being responsible for the burden or that he would not help to share the load, v. 11. God placed great honor upon Moses by calling him to this task of leadershift and now he complains, and doubts for a moment God’s sustaining grace, 2 Cor. 12:9; Phil. 4:13. The language here used, vv. 12-14, is wonderfully suggestive. The utter weakness of the Israelites, the promised goal, the hunger of soul and body, the sorrows oi affliction are all graphically ‘set before us. Moses’ own weakness is revealed (v. 13) by his words, “where should I have flesh to give?” He seems to forget absolutely God’s dealings with Israel before they reached Sinai (Ex. 16), as though God expected any such thing from him. The height of his petulance and bitterness is reached when he exclaims, "kill me I pray thee . . . and let me not see my wretchedness,” v. 15. What a fool ish prayer and how vastly ■ different from Paul’s “desire to depart,” but willingness to remain, Phil. 1:23,24. To know that others have been guilty of this same folly should set us on guard, I King 19:4; Job 3:20-23, 6:8-10 and Jonah 4:3, 8, 9. To crawl under some juniper tree and pray God to translate us is not the part of a true soldier, I Kings 19 and Eph. 6:13-18. Burden Distributed. 11. Comfort and Counsel, vv. 16-18, 24, 25. Moses had been warned not to bear the entjre burden of leadership by his father-in-law, Jethro, Ex. 18:17, 18. Now that he is unwilling to take the full honor of undivided leadership God most graciously grants his request and appoints others to share the burden and responsibility. There was no more power, however, but more machinery. God distributed the burden and revealed the fact that Mdses’ power was in proportion to his burden. Human nature always looks for the arm of flesh upon which to rely, but such a reliance usually brings a curse not a blessing upon those who seek it, Jer. 17:5. God dealt in mercy with Moses. Notice how gently he passes by this exhibition of 1 infirmity and notwithstanding this lapse, bears testimony to his faithfulness (12:7). Yet ae is impartial in chronicling his faults and thereby giving us an incidental and thereby giving us the truth. What a suggestion in the words “I will come down and talk with thee.” yet that is the privilege of the believer in Christ, John 14:16, 17 and 16:13. God calls a “tent meeting,” v. 16 R. V., but before he meets them they must* sanctify themselves, for so only is one prepared to meet God, Ex. 19:10, 15, 22. These people had been lusting for the food of Egypt even as today many who have professed to accept Christ are forever longing for the pleasures of time and sense. They forget the bitterness of past slavery in the privations of the present, entirely forgetful of the goal of luxury and freedom, Rom. 10:28, 2 Cor. 4:17. God granted their request, v. 18, to their sorrow, v. 20. The whole trouble was then “rejected the Lord,” v. 20 R. V. The granting of material prosperity tends to leanness of soul, Ps. 106:15. It frequently happens that God does not answer our prayers because he knows that to answer them actually and literally would spell disaster in our lives. Once before at Jethro's suggestion Moses had chosen elders, Ex. 18:13-26, but here he chooses at the behest of Jehovah which illustrates the contrast between a ministry exercised in human strength and in the divine strength, Zech. 4:6; Luke 4:18 and Acts 2. The word “prophesied” v. 25, is not restricted to the foretelling of events, but Implies any kind of an utterance that is prepared by God, without reference to time. God’s answer to Moses’ bitter cry was first a challenge, “Is the Lord's hand waxed short?” v. 23. Second, the placing of his spirit upon the 70 elders. The sign of this enduement was that they prophesied; though this was not repeated, v. 25; and third, he brought, to answer his servant’s doubt, an overwhelming abundance of quails. ▼. 31. Parenthetically there is a suggestion as to jealousy, vv. 26-29.

Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You’re Tired—Out of Sorts —Have No Appetite. CARTER’S will put you ■Carter in a few days. jflmgEMy VITTLE They do jOjjMF BIVER their | PILLS. Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature

HUSBAND MUST BE AMERICAN Popular Singer Declares They Are the Best in the World, and Perhaps She Is Right. A young American singer who returns to this country after a successful career abroad, expecting to reap here high hoonrs and much money, announces that she is a candidate for matrimony, but only American men need apply. Her verdict is that .the Russian husband is cruel, the German selfish, the Frenchman untrue, the Italian “broke,” the Spaniard jealous and lazy and the Englishman domineering. These generalizations are undoubtedly too strong. There are as good husbands in each of the countries as anywhere, but the foreigner who deliberately hunts an American girl is apt to be an adventurer, and we hear of all the bad cases. We do not hear of the thousands of American women happily married and living in every country in Europe. It is to be hoped that the singer will find a husband with none of the bad qualities mentioned and with all of the virtues. We feel at liberty, however, to point out that there are some mighty bad husbands in this country and that American birth alone is no guarantee of perfection. It is true, however, that the ordinary American busband is the best trained animal In captivity. He eats out of his wife’s hand and signs checks and is thankful (or the opportunity. There are millions of such husbands now and millions of candidates for the yoke.—Philadelphia Inquirer. Building Ships on Mountains. Boat building on a mountain top sounds peculiar, to say the least, but such is being done in Switzerland, says the American Machinist. Sulzer Bros, have under construction at Winterhur a 200-foot passenger boat for Lake Geneva. It will be fitted with Diesel engines of 1,400 horsepower. Escher Wyss & Co. at Zurich, are building a 200-foot tugboat for the River Rhone in southern France. In both cases the vessels after erection at the works must be disassembled and shipped in a knocked-down condition to the place of launching, there to be reassembled. The turbine-building firm of Escher Wyss & Co., Zurich, Switzerland, has under way the largest Pelton waterwheel ever built. It is for Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil, and will develop 19,000 horsepower. The head is 280 m. (920 feet) and the speed 375 revolutions per minute. This firm has Installed Pelton wheels in Italy to operate under a head of 1,000 m. (3,280 feet). DRY SCALE COVERED HEAD 2760 Tamm Ave., St. Louis, Mo.— “My little daughter’s head began with a dry harsh scale covering it. First it got a white scale over the top and then it got a dirty brown scab with pus under it. Her hair came out in less than a week and her head itched and bled. She had no rest. I had her | wear a scarf all the time, it looked so badly. She was so sore and had such big brown scabs on her head that the teacher would not let her attend school. “We took and had her treated for three months with no relief. She kept getting worse until I tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment I used the Cuticura Soap every third day and the Cuticura Ointment at night. In three weeks her head was Well of sores. Two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment completely cured her.” (Signed) Mrs. Walter Rogers, Nov. 28, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.”—Adv. Defining a Patriot “What is a patriot?” was the question set to the candidates for junior scholarships given by the Northumberland education committee. Here are some of the replies: “A bird with red feathers coming out of its head.” “The patriot will sometimes talk.” Familiarity with the pierrot is probably the cause of the definitions of a patriot as a “clown,” and a “booster.” St. Patrick was a patriot, “the father of saints,” and “a man who lives up the highlands of Scotland.” “An old sailor” (pirate?) and “a man who herds cattle (peasant), were among other answers. “Patriots are better at home,” wrote one. —Pall Mall Gazette. The Idea. “Why didn’t the founders of the nation establish another king when they broke away from George III?” “I suppose they thought it would be a crowning mistake.” The annual electric dry battery production of the United States has pass--3d the 310,000.000 mark. Nothing equals Dean’s Mentholated Cough Drops for Bronchial weakness, sore chests, md throat troubles —5c at all Druggists. Every girl screams on getting kiss--3d by a man—but she usually does it nwardly. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation,allays pain,cures wind colic,3sc a bottle Jtr Greece annually produces over 21,>OO.OOO pounds of tobacco.

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter and farter colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. They dy« in cold wjter a o ul nc y .lik You c»n dye any garment without ripping apart. WRITE TOR FREE booklet, calendar, blotters, etc. MONROE D»UO COMPANY. Quincy,

ALMOST TURNED THE TRICK' Clever Scheme of English Smugglers Only Frustrated by Luck at the Last Moment One of the most ingenious of smug- I gling tricks was that originated by a band of clever Parisian rogues recent- ! ly. A coffin supposed to contain the dead body of a man who had died of diphtheria, was dispatched from the gay city for burial in London. It was met at the railway terminus in that country, and conveyed at nightfall to a bouse not far from the Mile End road, Whitechapel. Everything would have passed off as desired and planned had not a policeman on duty become suspicious on seeing a particularly large coffin being taken out of a hearse into a house that was known to be the habitation of men who had done penal servitude. After the funeral party had shut their door and the hearse had driven away, the policeman secured assistance and knocked at the door. It was found that the coffin, instead of containing a corpse, was filled tightly with cakes of tobacco, dozens of boxes of cigars, and other excisable goods. The "mourners” were immediately arrested and the goods confiscated. Cruel. “What are you thinking of. Beatrice?” inquired Mr. Hainer of his wife, one morning while they were at breakfast. “I am dreaming of my youth,” replied the woman. “Well,” replied the brute, “I thought you had a far-away look in your eyes.”—Lippincott’s.

Ki 'rASlflifli tisf 1 w *tlft >0 Hu Xu U ull L * i■lmua Hul u ■ Uli lIL ji; n UIU Hill i C? ALCOHOL—3 PER CENT A\fcgetabie Preparation for As - ting the Stomachs and Bowels of tir j Promotes Digestion,Cheerfulnessandßesl Contains neither ‘p Opium. Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic & 'fOl'i DtSAffV£LflmJfEn - I ft J Mt \ - I * J A perfect Remedy for Constipalion.Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions. Fever ishness and LOSS OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of Twr-Centaur Company. & NEW vork Guaranteed under the Foodanj) Exact Copy of Wrapper.

fiHiirrrr W|«fc ®€M fi T, £W| *» .1 tgT Protect Their Eyes IVlOlIiei*! With Good Light A poor light strains their eyes, and the injurious effects may last for life. A good oil lamp gives an ideal light—brilliant, yet soft and restful. The Rayo is the best of Oil Lamps—a factproven by its long life of usefulness and its adoption in over 3,000,000 homes. Scientifically constructed, it sheds a clear, mellow light, without glare or flicker. No smoke or odor.

Made of solid brass, nickel-plated. Dealers everywhere# Send for booklet. For best results use Perfection Oil. Standard Oil Company, Chicago (AN INDIANA (CORPORATION)

Lamps

'WTNCHESTER “Repeater” Smokeless Powder Shells gh grade shell at a reasonable price, ichester Loaded “Repeater” has the jng sportsmen who have tried all Although moderate priced, the is loaded with the best quality jt.',* The list of loads furnished ■ most shooters’ requirements, ve a full measure of shooting or the W on the box. They are HIGH IN QUALITY MODERA TE IN PRICE

Have been a standard Household Remedy Since 1837 Use them for all forms of illness arising from DISORDERED. STOMACH OR LIVER and all ailments proceeding from Deranaed Digestive System

Backache Is aWarning

I 1 z T»U» a Sfry'*

Thousands suffer ! kidney ills unawares ’ —not knowing that' the backache, headi aches.anff dull.nervous. dizzy, all tired ' condition are often due to kidney weakness alone. Anybody who suffers constantly from I backache should sus- ' pect the kidneys, j Some irregularity of the secretions may | give just the needed proof. Doaq’s Kidney Pills have been curing backache and |‘ sick kidneys for over fifty years.

A Minnesota Case Mrs. Anna Bossard, 71 Sycamore St.. St. Paul, Minn., says; “1 suffered terribly and doctors couldn’t help we. 1 was so helpless with the pain in wy back 1 couldn’t turn in bed. 1 grew thin and ha 4 terribiedizxy spells. Doan's Kidnev Pills cured me and today 1 am in per feet health. Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box DOAN’S V/LIV FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. I rnn Olir flno IGO acre farms in So. Mich., rllK \nl P good bldgs..soil, markets. Comeand I Uli UHLL. see them, tarl lirvn«,a. Bish. naTrAITO WataoßE.<’oleman,Wai*. I* la 8 f" Iw ■ Ingtoti. D C. Books t ree. High. I M I mil I Vest references. Beat result* ji-i-iiii;itin vmßi Igl Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uee *3 In time. Sold by Druggieta.

CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the A, Signature /Am of Ar hJv In HJr U SB U’ For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TNt OINTAUn COMPANY, MMW YOMK ©IVY.

TYPEWRITERS all makes. Rebuilt Remingtons and Smith Premiers, $17.50: Olivers .Underwoods, U.C.Stniths, Monarchs $85.00. Healers wanted. Write .or catalog. INDIANA TYPEWRITER A SUPPLY CQ. ISK N. Meridian Stre. t, Indianapolis, Ind. YO KO SACHET—Power ot Perfume. Remarkable Tablet that Imparts a Wondrous Odor to Everything within Reach of Its Power. Beautiful sugar shell given away free. The »l»h Sow. Co.. 1.. B. RS. l.al*orte. Ind, READERS—i I of this paper desiring to buy any- I thing advertised in its columns should I insist upon having what they ask for, I refusing all substitutes or imitations. 1 ! W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 40-1913.