N.S.E. One touch of nature makes the whole world kin. Shakespeare. YOU ARE TRUE TO YOUR IDEALS AND YOUR FAITH IN YOUR FELLOW-MEN GROWS FIRM, WHEN YOU USE SCHILLING'S VI THE FRA February Are Your EYES Normal ? IF NOT, USE The Ideal Sight Restorer For 15 Days at Our Expense It helps Nature in a purely natural way to strengthen the eyes and restore the natural vision. Its action is in the nature of a gentle massage, which stimulates the eyes by restoring the normal circulation of blood that is all that weak eyes require. But it does more it moulds the eye painlessly but surely to its perfect shape. This is necessary to correct near-sight, far-sight, astigmatism, and kindred defects. It is absolutely safe it foes not come in direct contact with the eyes; and five minutes manipulation, in your own home, twice aday, is all that is necessary to counteract eyestrain and headache, and relegate eyeglasses to the rubbish-box. Throw away your eyeglasses. See nature, and rend with your naked eyes. Write for instructive booklet and 15 days test to The Ideal Company, 321H Fifth Avenue, New York City THE NORMAL EYE sftgners anfc Cngrabtr* in one or more colors, of Illustra- tions for high-class CATALOGS Advertisement Displays or Other Commercial Needs. BIRD'S-EYE VIEWS, COVER DESIGNS. QOur 20 years of exper- ience combined with extensive, well equip- ped facilities enable us to offer special advantages. GATCHEL & MANNING DESIGNEBS ILLUSTRATORS ENGRAVERS 27 to 41 S. 6th Street, (cor. Chestnut) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Mention THE FRA and send for samples and further information. "Rugs is Rugs" NOT SO. The high-grade Wilton rugs sold to-day are at the best only fine carpets, but The "Hartford Saxony " Rugs are real rugs embodying those qualities of color and wear so long credited exclusively to the Oriental Rug. For Illustrated Booklet, Address FRA SAXONY, 41 Union Square, New York FINICKY FURNACES STEAM AND HOT WATER BOILERS EASILY REGULATED Let the little General Manager make "Jast right temperature" a certainty in your home all day and all night. T'I'his Jewell Controller with Time Clock attachment is the only absolutely accurate controller of temperature made. fYon can set it at any temperature and your room will remain at that tem- perature regardless of outside changes. Yon can set it for CO degrees or any temperature at night, and if you like 70 degrees at 7 o'clock, set the time clock attachment for 6.30 and at G.30 your room will begin to warm up, and at 7 it is 70 degrees without any one having done anything to the controller. Con- venient? Yes and unfailing. THE JEWELL CONTROLLER With Time Clock Attachment never loses thermostatic control night or day for a moment. Cannot run down with draught on. TYou can depend upon the Jewell not only to settle the "Just Hight Temperature" question in your home, but to save coal bills enough to pay for itself in a very short time, to Bay nothing of doctor liills. The discomfort of uneven heat and danger of colds and resulting serious illnesses are entirely avoided in its use. Kvery house ought to have one. It is convenient economical ornamental necessary to good health. TBegTUatefl Steam, Hot Water and Hot A ir with the same unfailing accuracy. Write for booklet "The House Comfortable" and free trial offer. JEWELL MANUFACTURING CO., 66 N. GKEEN ST., AUBURN, N. Y. "You Do the Designing We'll Make the Hug" Thread & Thrum Rugs The most artistic rugs made. Different from all others. Color scheme adapted to your room decorations, self- tones or contrasts. Seamless, any size up to 12 feet wide; any length. Wool or camel's-hair weft heavy, reversible and durable. If your dealer does not sell them write for color card and price list. Address Arnold, Constable & Co., Distributing Agents, New York The Thread & Thrum (Workshop, Auburn, N. Y. WILBUR'S CHOCOLATE BUDS Little foil- wrapped forms of solid chocolate, deliciously flavored and possessing that smooth melting quality to be found only in the very highest class. But if you cannot find the Buds on sale, we will mail you prepaid one pound for a dollar. A sample box for your dealer's name and 30 cents in stamps, if you prefer; but only one box to the same address. II. 0. Wilbur & Sons, New and Bread Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. *J Fit A readers are intelligent and dis- cerning. ts, postpaid, only FIFTY CENTS. For sale by all leading stationers. Utica Aluminum & Novelty Work., 360 Blceckcr St., Ulica, N. Y. Stokes' Standard Seeds I want every reader of THE FRA who is interested in grow- ing vegetables or flowers to write for my new 1909 cata- logue free. Explains my new way of selling seeds the best in each class, relieving the buyer of the worry and risk of selecting jt Shows photographs of what have actually been grown from my seeds and gives full direc- tions to insure a successful, early garden. My "Bonny Best" Early Tomato is ready for the table before other varieties. Finest and most prolific strain ever produced. You should know about it. Special Ten Cent Combination Offer: Write for free catalogue, or send me lOc. in stamps and mention THE FRA and I will send the catalogue and three lOc. packets of seed one each of my "Bonny Best" Early Tomatoes, "Stokes" Standard" Sweet Peas, and "Stokes' Standard" Single Poppy (Luther Burbank strain), each unequaled in its class. Write to-day. STOKES* SEED STORE Dept. C ki!9 Iviarkst ttreefc, Fhil^coipriia, Peril*- February THE FRA IX rO look fearlessly upon life; to accept the laws of nature, not with meek res- ignation, but as her sons, who dare to search and question; to have peace and confidence with- in our souls these are the beliefs that make for happi- ness. Maeter- linck. j* is mere childish- ness, or else bigotry, to point at Nietzsche's end as the moral tag of his life. If he had lived during the Mid- dle Ages, either he would have been burnt alive or else have proved a for- midable rival to some angelic bishop. But liv- ing in the Nine- teenth Century, a century of in- difference to men of his ardent temperament, he erupted his own stake and fagots and the mad genius within him burnt up his mind. While he would not have so astonished the world if born to work in the dogmatic harness of the Roman Catholic Church, yet its discipline might have quieted his throbbing nerves, and perhaps given the faith a second Rosmini. James Huneker. J* I love children. They do not prattle of yester- days: their interests are all of to-day and the to-morrows I love children. Mansfield. That Man Has Nothing On His Mind But His Hat! O sayeth the Wiseacre with a know- ing Wink 3& But the Wiseacre betrayeth feeble judgment and falleth far short in his joke, provided the man weareth a Knox Hat. [ Prithee, Kind Friend, do not cast the slur sal- ebrous at an advocate of Knox. Be assured his thoughts travel on a high plane, when he circleth his top-piece with the Hat of his Grandsire. People of Quality wear hats of Quality, even unto theThird Generation.^ Latter-day prophets who proclaim ever and anon, in voice sonorous, 'What was good enough for Grandpapa suits this chickee from the Head Up," refer, of course, to STYLE SERVICE Immortals sanctify their thoughts under Knox Hats Address: Knox Hats, Planet Earth ET us have a church for the whole man ; truth for the mind ; good works for the hands ; love for the heart ; and let our doctrines and forms fit the soul as the limbs fit the body, growing out of it, growing with it t Let our church fit man, as the heavens fit the earth. Theodore Parker. ^ I have never had a policy j* I have simply tried to do what seemed best each day, as each day came. Lincoln. THE FRA February OUsee, boys, "said the Grizzled Guide, after supper, as he lit his pipe with great care and precision, "a Sport and a Sportsman ain't jess the same man. A Sport comes to the woods to get somethin' to talk about when he gets home; a Sportsman comes for sport recreation. A Sport does most of his huntin' at the end of his trip, 'round his own camp-fire. Thar's when he shoots his big game and has his narrer escapes. Thar's where he totes his heavy pack over weary miles. Q On the trail a Sport don't tote packs; he's always tired. He plays poker at night and sleeps late in the mornin'. He carries his ammunition in a bottle, and when he hunts, it 's mostly by proxy. His guides supply the game. A Sport wears tailor-made huntin' clothes, and a carvin' -knife or two in his belt for bears, I guess. But of all things, you should see the average sport's gun ; all carved and silver-mounted, all frills and furbelows. It can't hit nothin' nohow. < A sure-nuff Sportsman carries a Winchester. Incidentally, I mought mention, a Sportsman knows a gun, and he requires more than tassels, tinfoil, and carved butts, with inlaid this and that. Q You see, a Sportsman goes to the woods because he loves the woods. He hunts the game because it's exhilaratin'. But he ain't bent on murder he gives the pursued a chance. All things bein' equal, he knows his Winchester will bring down the prize without any unfair advantage. A Sportsman always gets his share of game, and that's all he wants a share. He likes huntin'. Q A Sport but, Oh, Shucks ! You know, boys. C You can pretty generally, mos' always in fact, tell a Sportsman by his gun. He likes the Old Reliable Winchester, that shoots straight and true every time you pull the trigger. Why, that Texas feller who was along here in the early Fall, told me that as many as 450,000 SPORTSMEN USE WINCHESTER REPEATING SHOTGUNS THE GUN IDENTIFIES THE MAN! The United States Ordnance Board, after subjecting one of these guns to the severest of tests for strength, reliability, accuracy, penetration, endurance, excessive loads, defective shells, rust and dust, reported officially that: "The result of the severe tests to which the gun was subjected showed that every part was strong and serviceable. The Board finds that the gun possesses the advantages claimed by the manufacturers." . What a gift for the gods to bestow upon a man when they wanted to produce an equal! Lincoln never tired out his brain cramming for exams. He never became so familiar with the backs of books that he had a contempt for what was within the covers. He had a reverent mind for truth. He knew values and he knew the relation of values; and that is education. He never mistook for a great thought one of little or no importance, no matter how it strutted and paraded before him. And any one who has the sense of values has the sense of humor ,.< Lincoln knew that seriousness was not always wisdom and that a good joke often caused one to see truth. Women rode on horseback carrying babies; and there were various four-horse teams with wagons filled with girls all dressed in white, carrying flags j* jt All of our folks went. My mother fastened the back door of our house with a bolt on the inside, and then locked the front door with a key, and hid the key under the door-mat. At the grove there was much hand-shaking and visiting and asking after the folks and for the news. Several soldiers were present; among them a man who lived near us, called "Little Ramsey." Three one-armed men were there, and a man named Al Sweetser, who had only one leg. These men wore blue, and were seated on the big platform that was all draped with flags. Plank seats were arranged, and every plank held its quota. Just outside the seats hundreds of men stood, and beyond these were wagons filled with people. Every tree in the woods seemed to have a horse tied to it, and the trees over the speakers' platform were black with men and boys. I never knew before that there were so many horses and people hi the world jt jt When the speaking began the people cheered, and then they became very quiet, and only the occasional squealing and stamping of the horses could be heard. Our preacher spoke first, and then the lawyer from Bloomington, and then came the great man from Peoria. The people cheered more than ever when he stood up, and kept hurrahing so long I thought they were not going to let him speak at all. At last they quieted down, and the speaker began. His first sentence contained a reference to Abe Lincoln. The people applauded, and some proposed three cheers for "Honest Old Abe." Everybody stood up and cheered, and I, perched on my father's shoulder, cheered too. I had on my shirt made from a flour sack, with the words "Extra XXX" across the bosom, and beneath the legend, "Pillsbury's Best War- ranted Fifty Pounds," my heart beat proudly. & The elocutionists believe in the virtue of voice, the sublimity of syntax, the majesty of long sentences, and the genius of gesture. The orator loves the real, the simple, the natural. He places the thought above all. He knows that the greatest ideas should be ex- pressed in the shortest words that the greatest statues need the least drapery. Lincoln was an immense personality firm but not obstinate. Obstinacy is egotism firmness, heroism. He influenced others without effort, unconsciously; and they submitted to him as men submit to nature unconsciously. He was severe with himself, and for that reason lenient with others. He appeared to apologize for being kinder than his fellows. He did merciful things as stealthily as others committed crimes. Almost ashamed of tenderness, he said and did the noblest words and deeds with that charming confusion, that awkwardness, that is the perfect grace of modesty. As a nobleman, wishing to pay a small debt to a poor neighbor, reluctantly offers a hundred- dollar bill and asks for change, fearing that he may be suspected either of making a display of wealth or a pretense of payment; so Lincoln hesitated to show his wealth of goodness, even to the best he knew. A great man stooping, not wishing to make his fellows feel that they were small or mean. By his candor, by his kindness, by his perfect freedom from restraint, by saying what he thought, and saying it absolutely in his own way, he made it not only possible, but popular, to be natural. He was the enemy of mock solemnity, of the stupidly respectable, of the cold and formal. He wore no official robes either on his body or his soul. He never pretended to be more or less, or other, or different, from what he really was jt jt He had the unconscious naturalness of Nature's self Jt Jt He built upon the rock. The foundation was secure and broad. The structure was a pyramid, narrowing as it rose. Through days and nights of sorrow, through years of grief and pain, with unswerving purpose, "with malice toward none, with charity for all," with infinite pa- tience, with unclouded vision, he hoped and toiled. Stone after stone was laid, until at last the Proclamation found its place. On that the Goddess stands. He knew others, because perfectly acquainted with himself. He cared nothing for place, but everything for principle; little for money, but everything for independence jt Where no prin- ciple was involved, easily swayed willing to go slowly, if in the right direction sometimes willing to stop ; but he would not go back, and he would not go wrong. He was willing to wait. He knew that the event was not waiting, and that fate was not the fool of chance. He knew that slavery had defenders, but no defense, and that they who attack the right must wound themselves. He was neither tyrant nor slave. He neither knelt nor scorned. With him, men were neither great nor small they were right or wrong. Through manners, clothes, titles, rags and race he saw the real that which is. Beyond accident, policy, compromise and war he saw the end. Bring on your anathemas, hurl your insensate thunder- bolts. The march of the ages laughs at your threats, and the great cosmic au- tomaton moves ever serenely and grandly on. The shame we feel for the per- secutors of Right in the centuries that have gone, is like that which will well up in the conscious- ness of the future toward the blindness and fatuity of to-day. Shades of Tor- quemada, of Calvin, of Ed- wards, of Ma- ther! the intol- erance you be- queathed is fad- ing away into the Oblivions that never wake into the en- gulfing fast- nesses of that Time which speaks not. George Allen White. jfc O greater blessing than the artistic conscience can come to any worker in art, be he sculptor, writer, singer, or painter. Hold fast to it, and it shall be your compass in time when the sun is dark- ened. To please the public is little, but to satisfy your Other Self, that self which watches your every thought and deed, is much. No artistic success worth having is possible unless you satisfy that Other Self. j No one is useless in the world who lightens the burden of it for any one else. Dickens. February THE FRA xvu ARE YOU AN ADVERTISER? TV/TEN of the minute, fellows with plenty of ginger and dash in their cosmos, 1VA with ego sufficient to flavor, are setting a pace for all Old Timers. Pub- licity oils the machine that moves the stock. Twentieth Century Business Methods command you keep your goods in the front window. To-day you simply have to advertise, or it's you for the granite and the epitaph * se & * * E D ( l SON'S MIMEOGRAPH means "first aid" to advertisers. You have a list of customers that appreciate a little "personal touch" now and then. Again you may have in stock some= thing of Special Interest that they want that you want to sell. The Edison Mimeograph will turn out a neatly typewritten list of your "bargains," a letter written in your own handwriting, of something quite bosarty, that will boomerang the Persimmons. QOnly Haswasers meditate I The Band Wagon awaits, my Lord! THE EDISON MIMEOGRAPH Adapted to printing circular letters, price lists, changes in prices, quotations, descriptions, notices, schedules, statements, office and factory forms, music, drawing, sketches, and anything typewritten or handwritten, where either small or large quantities are desired. Fifty copies per minute. No experience required. Every copy as perfect as an original. Booklet free to FRA Followers. A. B. DICK COMPANY, 161=163 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, 111. BRANCH DEPOT : 47 Nassau Street, New York E court- ecus to all, but intimate with few; and let those few be well tried before you give them your confidence. True friendship is a plant of slow growth, and must undergo and withstand the shocks of adversity before it is entitled to the appellation. Let your heart feel for the afflic- tions and dis- tresses of every one, and let your hand give in proportion to your purse; re- membering al- ways the esti- mation of the widow's mite, that it is not every one that asketh that de- serveth charity; all however, are worthy of the inquiry, or the deserving may suffer Jt Do not conceive that fine clothes make fine men, any more than fine feathers make fine birds. A plain, genteel dress is more admired, obtains more credit, than lace and embroidery, in the eyes of the judicious and sensible. George Washington in a letter to his nephew, Bushrod Washington, 1783. Jt We rise by raising others and he who stoops above the fallen, stands erect. Ingersoll. Of UST suppose that a Bissell could not do better work than a Corn Broom I Just suppose that a Bissell was not ten times easier for the Worker's [back! Just suppose that a Bissell did not outwear thirty brooms and save your money! You would still realize on the invest= ment because it permits dustless industry it conserves Health. BISSELL "Cyco" BALL-BEARING Carpet Sweeper befriends the Housewife. Mothers whose duties confine them indoors, too much of the time, where the air is never very good, should not invite illness by breathing in a dusty room for twenty minutes or more each day. Housewives I Buy a Bissell and Live Forever I O long as one as- pires, daily put- ting ideals into c ircul a t i on through the ave- nues of home- making, house- keeping, busi- ness relation- ships, keeping much in the open air, there is no danger of morbid introspection. Unless we make use of our ideals they are nothing but spiritual anesthetics. Helen Rhodes. r XT is only the sincerity of human feeling that abides. As for a thought, we know not, it may be deceptive; but the love, where- with we have loved it, will surely return to our soul ; nor can a single drop of its clearness or strength be abstracted by error jt Of that perfect ideal that each of us strives to build up in himself, the sum total of all our thoughts HE five writers to whose genius we owe the first at- tempt at com- prehensive views of history were Bolingbroke, Montesquieu, Voltaire, Hume, and Gibbon. Of these, the first was but a cold be- liever in Christianity if, indeed, he believed in it at all ; and the other four were avowed and notorious infidels. Buckle. jft The man who does you an injury will seldom forgive you for it. Dr. W. C. Cooper. NO TASTE NOR TEMPER THE "MORNING AFTER" PROVIDED IT WAS SCHILLING'S BEST February THE FRA xxiu Do You Believe In Cleanliness? HOLKS who value their health know that Nature requires co-operation and assistance. This body of ours may accomplish great things and stand many abuses, but even Human Machinery eventually shows wear and tear. CfTo maintain a standard of excellence and eliminate depreciation, watch- fulness and kind care are essential. You insure against breakage and long stays in the repair-shop by taking an occasional INTERNAL BATH. Q There is just one and only one effective Internal Bath which has been before the public for years which operates in such a way as to leave no ill effect whatever after using which is so near to Nature's own way that it does not force but assists her that one is the J.B.L. CASCADE Thousands are using it with great Every One Ought to Read This SUCCESS MAGAZINE NEW YORK, February 28, 1908 CHAS. H. TYRRELL, M. D. My Dear Sir: About two months ago I was induced by a friend in this office to purchase one of your "J. B. L. Cascades." I was exceedingly skeptical about your propo- sition, and it was with great indifference that I gave it a trial. The result has been little short of amazing. It has practically made a new man of me and has given me the relief I had been looking for for years. I have taken pleasure in recommending the Cascade to a number of my friends and will continue to recommend it. It gives me great pleasure to write this little note of grateful appreciation. Yours very truly, (Signed) DAVID D. LEE results and corresponding enthusiasm. Some of their experiences, and most interesting infor- mation on the Internal Bath, its purpose, its reasons and its results, are contained in a little book called, "The What, The Why, The Way, ' ' which will be sent you free on request. We suggest that you write for it now, while it is on your mind. TYRRELL HYGIENIC INSTITUTE 321 V Fifth Avenue, New York City ALL THIS CAN French, German Spanish or Italian To speak it, to understand it, to read it, to write it, there is but one best way. You must hear it spoken correctly, over and over, till your ear knows it. You must see it printed correctly till your eye knows it. You must talk it and write it. BE DONE BEST BY THE Language-Phone Method Co h ned Rosenthal's Practical Linguistry With this method you buy a native professor outright. You own him. He speaks as you choose, slowly or quickly, when you choose, night or day, for a few minutes or hours at a time. Any one can learn a foreign language who hears it spoken often enough; and by this method you can hear it as often as you like. Begin now and in a few months you can speak, read, write and think in a new language. C[The method is recommended by well-known members of the faculties of the following universities and colleges: Yale, Columbia, Chicago, Brown, Pennsylvania, Boston, Princeton, Cornell, Syracuse, Minnesota, John Hopkins, Virginia, Colorado, Michigan, Ford- ham, Manhattan, De La Salle, St. Joseph's, St. Francis Xavier. Sendfjr booklet, explanatory literature, and testimonial letters THE LANGUAGE. PHONE METHOD 865 Metropolis Building, Broadway and 16th Street, New York City VICK QUALITY SEEDS are grown where good seeds are known. Cf You get the best Vegetable or Flower Garden when you use the best methods of planting and after-care. This in- struction can be easily obtained from VICK'S GARDEN AND FLORAL GUIDE which is not only a catalogue, but a book of value to every grower of Vegetables, Flowers or Fruit. It tells when, where, and how to plant, illustrates many of the new and desirable varieties and it is reliable, too. It is free if you ask for it. JAMES VICK'S SONS FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-TWO MAIN STREET, EAST ROCHESTER, NEW YORK, U.S.A. xxiv THE FRA February WRITING PAPER |OUR stationery tells its own story. Sloppy, mussy, cheap writing paper creates an atmos- phere that stifles friendship. Good taste, good breeding and good character distinguish the people who use Roycroft Paper. Any Quantity Fair Prices. First Bound Volume of THE FRA The first six FRAS including Cover Portraits, Text and Advertisements, bound in heavy boards, leather back, with title in Gold. A limited number. Each $3.00 Cover Portraits by Gaspard, first six numbers: Joe Jefferson Walt Whitman Emerson Victor Hugo Franklin Ellen Terry THE ROYCROFTERS, East Aurora, New York R U B A I Y A T OMAR KHAYYAM A Book of Verses underneath the Bough, A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread, and Thou (Old Omar's Song has sweetened with the years) Oh, Wilderness were Paradise enow! Without Omar Khayyam's Poetical Philosophy as seasoning, all other brands are quite tasteless. Eight hundred years have passed, yet the Persian with his Jug and Thou still holds the center of the " New Thought " stage. <]| Bound in limp leather, silk lining, with marker. Price - $2.00 Roycroft Rag Mats )OVEN roycroftie by hand on the Old Fashioned Looms by girls sixty years young ! Some of these girls work three hours a day and some work less ; meeting as a Social Sewing Circle with an aim to perpetuating local topics. Freedom of Speech and a great disdain for things financial, lift our weavers above the level. But the rugs reflect the care and skill of the last generation. $1.25 the Yard. THE ROYCROFTERS, East Aurora, New York BOUND PHILISTINES COMPLETE SETS cannot be pur- chased at any price but we have on hand a few odd Bound Volumes of The Good Stuff. Perhaps we have just the one you need to complete your set. QSix numbers in each volume: Mot- toes, text, ads, quibs, cracks and original covers, all included. Board binding, with leather back just ONE DOLLAR a volume. Leather Card Cases Dainty little Card Cases, hand modeled, floral designs, stained an artistic greenish-gray %&$ Very neat and durable. Three sizes 41-2 inches long - - - $1.50 4 inches long - - - 1.25 31-2 inches long - - - 1.00 THE ROYCROFTERS, East Aurora, New York GOAT SKINS ^TELVET finish, untrimmed, *^ discreetly stamped with Roycroft mark in corner. Can be had in these colors Old Rose, Brown, Gray, Maroon, Green, Wine. They introduce an artistic atmosphere wherever displayed Size, between five and eight square feet Price by Mail, say Two DOLLARS COMFORT PILLOWS When arranging a cosy corner or a window seat, or when seeking to extract just another mite of comfort from that Old-fashioned Arm Chair, please remember Our Comfort Pillows. 6 m H EVERY MAN TO HIS TRADE WE MAKE INKS Buffalo Printing Ink Works Buffalo, New York & ffi xxviii THE FRA February heard of germs, bacilli, bugs, microbes, micrococci, bacteria, vibrios, spirilla and other wild and woolly free- traders of disease. You Ve heard how these small animals exploit the Rooseveltian Idea re race suicide. You 've heard how they multiply faster than John-rabbits, and do fifty-seven times as much harm. You Ve heard how they caper on your custard pie and skip a barn dance on your pudding. CJ Further, you've heard learned men discuss eloquently the habits of these pithy little parasites. You've been warned and re-warned ; even your sweetheart's kiss, so you 're told, harbors a dozen or two of these unhealthy marauders. CJ Naturally you're frightened! You are perfectly willing to fight any visible foe, but to combat stealthy, strike-and-dodge, "work-while-you-sleep" antagonists, puts your nerves on edge. ^JThey don't fight fair, these germs, they attack only the weak point in your defense ; they double-cross you when your guard is down. {JTTz/s then is an invitation to taJ^e the war into the enemy's country! ff You've heard of the Ounce of Prevention well, an Ounce of Preven- tion, in Germ Warfare, and an Ounce of Dioxogen are the same thing. DIOXOGEN KILLS GERMS