Billboard advertising (June 1899)

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THE BILLBOARD ADVERTICS. dcc of the Law* of Ditiemimtive (Continued from Ma; Issue.I Tlie Drat group of tbe cognitive pow- ers as given la (lie classification of tlie faculties published In our May Issue Is termed tbe presenlatlve capacities. They consist of sense-perception and self-consciousness. These powers nave been aptly termed the collective pow- ers, for It Is through tbem that tbe mind obtains knowledge. gether are termed tbe represents powers. Koark says: But .quite frequently to be new. Later, " Identify It as one \ Memory In sneh case: produces, but wit bout which will not be recognized at all. unless under some unusual stimulus. Attention must be directed to a dual Additional Letters. Colo.. Hay 20, tally : bnd before. Ing. It I tbe Sensorlum. It should be noted that the sensorlum Is not sense-perception. The duce and convey sensations only. Sen- sations Introduced to the Intellect be- come perceptions. The combined pow- Undec the direction of the will it can be made to remember any certain event or mode of tbe past But it also acts Involuntarily. Aban- doned to Its own devices, it apparently wanders hither and yon without aim, purpose or direction. There is a fac- ulty In charge—at the helm. If yon choose. This faculty Is called the As- Per J. A. C. Thl Of'. Chas" Co.! PbN.'dolphin! ) lor the Lrfta B. Pin*hs mUed IclM 'a a '6l «rf*uli0* " Agin cV.'°Cl'ev' Uad! Jor^Uie Dr^Hand Co.. fWillpMl Hainan'« Co°. «°frJw P york;"£i4 "h">''s. wio i.j..,-: i'I either or line .ollemsn biloi In bis city (0 lake a day off and Insist on fitIII hk itclr vltii on msimc Mr. ESsSukb aS a- ts and demlieg a bad one. Mr. Gordon talk. ol the poster to Its" minutest detail. St nun mate? -Artie" Cigar aland out , Imt .rbtre.er be may be. ud II you lea a 3S-? SVOSt MS*-* It may be briefly stated that sense eptlon Is an Intuitive power by * Is the power by Wives and to know self In Its pres- Htate. as active or passive. That o say. at the very time that we I It- We also Just a glance at the third group, or the comparative faculties, and we will e finished the cognitive powers. comparative powers are them- es divided Into two groups, viz.: ; Logical—consisting of the notion- al, relational and rational, and the Im- aginative—consisting of Phantasy and the Compositive. With the logical " reasons—that Is. it apprehends, judges and compares. With the imaginative faculties, it creates. ' t are iutl mately related, and the hlghest-the chief of all the tal powers. (To be i do not by any Show Printing Co.. Erie. Vs. I.ith.l',,. ;-IL>.v(,n«hLr<..Botton,Ma»a. 1 AC1-EDK.& Print.Co.,57 Beekmaa.N.Y. 9 Ulbo. Co.. Tbe. Hllaaukee. Wla. r. P. EL. Fond-du-Lac, WK .ft Co.. SuC. and WoJ.Cfcw.b. nor even our chief faculties, but they are the flrst which the mind ex- ercises and furnish the material upon which tbe otber powers are engaged. They are therefore the powers upon which all the others depend. Tbls brings us to tbe second group, or representative capacities of the mind. It most be acknowledged that do real knowledge could be acquired If the percepts of the presentatlve fac- ulties fell upon a. mirror and left no mora record than a mirror holds. In reality, however, every percept makes an Impression more or less permanent upon the memory, a photograph, as it d to at will.