Tfc« Wmi Wit,. There Is a way of looking at •» thing tHat to ourlous and wronff. Tlih old ad«qr>. "proof of the pudding is In outing it," is Bouiul sense. And another "ni>v<'r ooiuHnmi beforo trial." In tho treatment of anything. treat tt In good faith, so when infirmities liew't us. beset them with jrood will and force. Thou sands have In this way overeomo the worst forms of rheumatism by usinK St. .Taeobs Oil. Never shrink from what is known to lie liy thousands a positive cure for this dread com plaint, and that is the thine to remove the trouble and solve tho doubt. Trains were first run on tho Thir 1 nvenuo elevated road, Now York City, in 187 H. Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-HOOT cures all Kidnoy and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation fro,a, 4 Laboratory Hlnchnmton. N. 1". The world's output of gold in 1393 amounted to $155,1)22.000. The Standard remedy for nil stomach and liver complaints is Ripans Tabulos. One tabule gives relief, but- in severe cases one nlioulci be taken after each meal until the trouble lias disappeared. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. -Tic, a bottle I use riso's Cure for Consumption both in my family und practice.—Dr. (4. W. PATTEK SON, Inkster, Mich., November 5, ism. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c ner bottle Weak and "Sore Eyes Eyesight Became Affected— Unable to Goto School Hood's Sar3&p%rlUa Wrought Cure and Built Up System. " Two years ago my littlo daughter Elsio was afflicted with ulcerated sore eyes. I tried one of the best doctors in the city for about a jSyiSjl year but her eyes jUnti seemed to grow m ®SiW worse. I had her TO uiist but liis treat jt . .ML ment did not ben -4...j ifira eilt them. I then rafe r- 'Mm commenced to R' ve little one K ,L. ' ilia and after the /''' first bottle I could ElsieCn uiicily, see that there was Arkansas ctiy, Kau. great improve ment. Elsie is now nine years old. Besides benefiting the special trouble mentioned Hood's Sarsaparilla has made her a strong and sprightly child. I will always speak highly of Hood's Sareaparilla." J. H. CAN NED*, 215 North Fifth Street, Janitor Fourth Ward School Building, Arkansas City, Kan. l-food's *"•*"* 1&%*%%%% parilla Be Sure to get r*ures HOOD'S. llAAfi'c £3511* cure habitual constipa fluOU $ t ill tion. Prico ~sc. per box. RADWAY'S PILLS, Always Reliable, Purely Vegetable. Perfectly tasteless, elegautly coated, purge. regu late, purify, cleans) an I strou-jtuen. HADWAY'S PILLB for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, 11 ladder, Nervous Diseases, Dizzi ness, Vertigo, Piles, • SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION AND All Disorders of the LIVER. Observe tho following symptoms, resulting from diseases of the digestive organs: Constipation. In ward piles, fullness of blood 11 tlio hea l, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, fulltiessor weight of the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering of tho heart, choking or suffo cating sensations when In a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs before the sight, fever und dull pain in the head, deficiency of perspiration, yel lowness of the skin and eyes, pain In the side, chest, limbs, and sudden flushes of heat, burning iu tUj flesh. A few doses of HAD WAV'S PILLS will free the system of all the above named disorders. Price *Z&c, a Box* Sold by Druggists, or sent by innil. Send to DR. RADWAY A CO., Lock Box 30}, New York, for Book of Advice. WALTER BAKER & GO. , < --a The Largest, Manufacturers of PURE, HICH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES have received ! HIGHEST AWARDB 1m from the greet 111 Industrial and Food a lisg| expositions l lllliiEiiFope id America. QJI|U I gPfl/ K'L: Unlike the Dutch l'rocea*, no Alka lien or other Chemicals or J>yea are Thiir d«llcioiji VOCOA STSSSMSS pure sad soluble, anil cotts less than one cent a cup. •OLD BV GROCERS EVERYWHERE WALTER BAKER &CO7DOBCHESTEB.MABB. The Greatest riedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one ot our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Ucrofula down to a common pimple. Send for Book. Manistee, Mich., Feb■ 14, 1895. Dr. Kennedy, Dear Sir : Jam the little boy you sent the Discovery to about six weeks ago. I used trvo bottles and also the salve. When I began to use the medicine my sores were as large as a quarter of a dollar, and now they are as large as a ten cent piece and I feel much better. Mamma and 1 feel very thankful to you. J shall write again and tell you how I am getting along. 1 remain your little friend, ANDRE W POMEIIOY, 88 Lake Street. N Y N p— TO I nnv for onr announcement In urvT taaueof thla liVUH paper It will ehnw a cut HEAI ot 1 atjle of DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS t would take several pace* to KITH detail* about tliMa eerleiM machines. ffandsotrw: Illustrated Pamphlet FLAILED Fret. fW AOKNTH WAKTKD. DAVIS * RANKIN BLDQ. AND MFC. 00. Sole Manufacturers, Chicago. S TIZ a Month Sign fainting (pattern and partic V * +* u'.nrt 10c). Llttietteid k Co., Adams, N. Y Time* When the Snn Failed. The anoient historians mention aev oral instances of the fmu "going out" or failing to shino and give forth its .usual amount of lient and light for periods of time varying in length from three hours to several months. Ac cording to Plutarch tho year 44 B. C. was one in which the sun was "weak and pale" for a period approximating eleven months. The Portuguese historians record "several months of diminished sun light in tho year 934 A. D., and, ac cording to Humboldt, this uncanny period ended with "strango and start ling sky phenomena, such as loud at mospheric explosion?, rifts in the vaulted canopy of tho blue above and in divers other rare and unaccountable freaks." In tho year 1091, on Sep tember 29th (See Humboldt's "Cos mos"), tho sun turned suddenly blaolc and remained so for tlireo hours, and did not regain its normal condition for several days. Accord ing to tho noted Helmuth's "Solar Energy," the days of seeming inactiv ity on tho part of the sun (the days following the sudden blackening of the great orb) were noted for a peculiar greeuish tinge, and are marked in old Spanish, French and Italian records as "the days of tho greon sun." Feb ruary,. 110(5, A. D., is noted in the an nals of marvelous phenomena as a month in whioh thoro were several days that "tho sun appeared dead and black, like a great circular cinder floating iu tho sky." "On tho last day of February, 1206," says Cortvza, an old Spanish writer on astronomy, astrology and kindred subjects, "the sun appeared togo suddenly out, causing a darkness over the country for about six hours." In 1241 tho European countries experi enced another siogo of supernatural darkness which the superstitious writers of that time attributed to God's displeasure over the result of tho great battle of Leigniz.—Atlanta Constitution. Followed by a Deluge. The depth of water has considerable effect upon a vessel's speed, Blioal water retarding her. • In somo ships, running at a high rato of speed in shoal water, the stem, or after-part, is drawn down very considerably. This is caused by tlio water not tilling with sufficient quickness the cavity at the stern caused by tlio forward move ment of the vessel. This lack of wiiter at the Btern ciuiHes tlio ship to settle there and be pursued by a huge wave. In one of our small, very fast ships this settling, or "squatting," as it is usually called, was so marked that the crest of the following wave actually boiled over the stem and broke upon the deck, and in some much larger vessels this water comes pretty well up towards the deck under similar circumstances.—Harper's Mag azine. SERVED IN*THE WAR. THE GRIP ALMOST \VOX WHERE TIIK BULLET FAILED. Our Sympatliier A1 wily* Enlisted in the Infirmities or the Veteran. (.From the Herald, Woodstock, Fa.) There is nil old soldier iu Woodstock, Va., who served in the war with Mexico and in the war ot the rebellion, Mr. Levi Mclnturff. He passed through both these wars without a serious wound. The hardships, however, told seriously on him, for when the grip at tacked htnx four years ago it nearly killed him. Who can look upon the infirmities of a veteran without a fooling of the deepest sympathy? His townspeople saw him con fined to his house so prostratod with great nervousness that he could not hold a knifo and fork at the table, scarcely able to walk, too. and as ho attempted it, he often stum bled and fell. They saW him treated by the best talent to be had—but still ho suffered on for four years, and gave up dually in despair. Ono day, howevor, he was struck by the ac count of a cure which had been affected by the uso of Dr. Williams' l'ink Pills. He im mediately ordered a box and commenced tak ing them. Ho says ho was greatly relieved within three days' time. The blood found its way to his lingers, and his hands, which had been palsied, assumed a nutural color, and ho was soon enabled to uso his knife and fork at the table. He hits recovered his strength to such an extent that ho is able to chop wood, shock corn and do his regular Work about his home. He now says he can not only walk to Woodstock, but can walk across the mountains. He is able to lift up a fifty two pound weight with one lmnd and says he does not know what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for others, but knows that they have done a great work for him. Ho was in town last Monday, court day, and was loud in his praise of the medicine that had given him so great relief. He pur chased another box and took it home with him. Mr. Mclnturff is willing to make affl' davit to these facts. The proprietors of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills state that they are not a patent medicine, but a prescription used for many years by an em inent practitioner, who produced the most wonderful results with them, curing all forms of weakness arising from a watery eomlttiou of the blood or shattered nerves, two fruitful causes of almost every ill to which flesh is heir. The pills are also a specifle for the trouble peculiar to females, such as suppres sions, all forms of weakness, chronic consti pation, bearing down pains, etc.. and in the case of men will give speedy relief and effect a permanent cure in ull cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of what ever nature. They are entirely harmless and can be given to weak and sickly children with the greatest good and without the slightest danger. Pink Pills aro sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price (SOe. a box or six boxes for .+2.50 —they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by ad dressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. ¥■ A tax on dogs was levied in Rome daring the reign of Nero. Deafnesa Cannot be Cared by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to oure Deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by ail In named condition of tbe inucoug lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless tho inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous sui-faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for anv case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) "that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend for circulars, free. " , F. J. OmmiT & Co., Toledo, O. br Druggists, 76c. Beat ot All To cleanse the system in a gentle and truly beneficial manner,when thaSprlngtimecomes, use the true and perfeot remedy, Syrup of Figs. One bottle will answer for all tha family and oosts only 50 cents: the largo jlae.Sl. Try it and be pleased. the Califor nia Fig Syrup Co. onlv. Karl's Clover Koot, the [treat Oload pnrlflor, gives freshness and clearness to the complex ion and cures constipation. --!' 1 eta.. f Octs., 1 3. PI.KASA NT, Wholesome. Speedy, for coughs is Hale's Honey of Horeliound and Tar. i Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in ono minut. . CARE OP GRINDSTONES. In cold weather tho grindstone should always be under shelter. It is more or less absorptive of water, and when water freezes, as it must in winter, it will soon chip off pieces and make the stone run unevenly. A grindstone of g'ood quality, will, with care, last manyyeais, and it isapleas ure to use it. One exposed always to the weather is a nuisance to any one obliged to use it.—Boston Culti vator. PROTECTING TREES. Discovered tho colts barking trees iu the pasture one day. Had a roll of line mesh wire chicken fence on hand, which I cut up and put around each tree. It did the business, and it will stay there. By tho way, why can't we have fine screen wire galvauized for permanent guards for fruit trees? Would it not overcome the destructive work of tho apple troo borer by pre vfiiting the insect trom depositing its eggs iu the trunk of tho troe, aB well as afford protection from rabbits and mice.—American Agriculturist. DISEASES OP THE PORE LEGS. The feet and legs of horsos are at tracting more attoutiou among breed ers than formerly, as all breeds have good and bad feet and legs, A scien tific writer in Europe says: "That there aro more diseases of the fore than of the hind legs of tho horso is only what would ba expected from his conformation, his mode of progression and the nature of his work. The foro legs and feet are the first to suffer in jury, for thoy are tho most severely taxed both at ease and at work." RECIPE POR PICKLINO 11EEF, There aro various recipes for pick ling beef, but tho following is a favor ite one among our Northern farmers: To each gallon of water add one aud one-half pounds of salt, one-half pound of sugar, and one-half ounce of saltpetre, in this t-atio you can in crease the pickle to acy quantity de sired. Put the pickle in a kettle and boil until all foreign matter rises to the surface and is skimmed oil". Then throw into a tub or clean cask to 0001, and when cold pour it over the beef, which, of course, must have been pre viously closely packed m tho barrels. The meat must be well covered with pickle and kept down with a weight. The meat should not bo packed down for at least two days after killing, and during this time it iB well to sprinkle with about equal parts of salt and saltpetre, whioh will remove the sur face blood and leave the meat fresh and clean. Store tho meat in as cool a place as you have—the cooler the botter in your climate.—New York Hun. now CREAM IS IOTEKED. Tho cream is best skimmed when rather thiols that is, when it may be almost rolled up on the pan and lifted in a sort of oake. It will then con tain about twonty per cent, of milk, and some milk must then be poured into the cream j»r with the oream, and the whole stirred to mix the two intimately. This stirring is done every tirno tho cream is added, and the third milking should be the last beforo the cream is churned. The oream will ripen of itself if it is kept in a warm place all this time, at not less than sixty degrees of temperature. At the end of this time the surface will glisten like Batin when it is stirred, and this is a good indication of its full ripening for the churning. Otherwise, the cream may be set on the addition of the last cream, by mix ing half a pint of the buttermilk from the last oan, churning to fire gallons of the cream and stirring it well; then, at a temperature of sixty or sixty-five degrees the cream will be ready for churning in twelve hours. This will yield the finest-flavored but ter, that is fit for the finest tables in a few hours after it is made, or for some tastes it iB churned for every meal, and eaten as it is churned. Cream thus flavored will make a very delicately-flavored butter.—New York Times. UTILIZING THE WASTE. A good plan whereby a farmer may utilize more waste is to have a spot set aside into which all tho kitchen and table waste in the shape of meat soraps, pieoes of bread, uneaten vege tables, eto., may be thrown. Heat this np ic the morning with boiling water, and mix in bran, shorts, prov ender, or whatever is cheapest and most abundant on the farm, until the whole is a orumbly mess, says the manager of the Poultry Department of the Canadian Central Experiment Farm. A small quantity of black and red pepper should be dusted in before mixing. Let the mixture stand for a few minutes until partially oooked, and feed in a narrow, clean trough to the layers in the morning. A light feed of oats at noon, and a liberal ra tion of wheat, buokwheat, or other grain for the evening meal should bring plenty of eggs. Each layer should be sent to roost with a full orop to carry her over the long night fast. It is imperative that green food in the shape of marketable vegetables, clover hay or lawn clip pings—the two latter dried in sum mer and put away to be steamed for winter use—should be supplied. If green bones are fed they may be given in lieu of any of the regular rations, reduoing the quantity of grain in pro portion to the quantity of bone used. —New York World. FBOFITABLK bWIITE HAWING. Select the breed best suited to your fancy and surroundings, then breed pure. Avoid inbreeding, for no farm animal will as quiokly-deteriorate from it as the hog. Belect a pure bred sow from one to two years of age, of good length, heavy quarters and a short snout. The boar should also be heavily quartered, well proportioned and tu»de. SoWa should be bred to farrow about the middle of April and the pigs should bo kept growing until ready for market. Fall pigs, unless weighing from thirty to forty pounds when going into winter quarters, are usually unprofitable. 3?eed the brood sow sparingly of corn but give her plenty of bran and mid dlings. Homo feeders argue that a sow will do better at farrowing if she bo thin in flesb. This is true if she has been fed on corn, but if fed as rec ommended above, she will do much better by her pigs if in good flesh. A few roots and nu occasional feed of clover hay aie very healthful and wpll be enjoyed by the sow. Care should be taken not to overfeed her for a few days preceding farrowing and for two weeks after, as the pigs oannot dispose of too muoh milk at that age. But after that feed the sow all she will eat of a mixed ration of corn meal, oat meal and bran, with ground barley and middlings for an occasional change. As soon as the pigs are old enough to eat slop thoy should bo allowed the freedom of a pen apart from the sow, where they can bo fed separately.—New Eugland Homestead. WHERE PALMS FLOURISH. Palms nt liorae have a peaty soil, but will do well ami probably livo longer in a mixture of sauily loam and well-decayed manure, with a sprink ling of charcoal to keep it sweet. The soil must bo well drained, and the tub or pot should fit close about the roots, says the Philadelphia Press. Palms aro easy to grow in the conditions of the ordinary dwelling, and nothing appears to greater advantage at so little cost. A sucoessful grower of palms ordered her plants from a dis tant florist. Tho plants, when they came by express, had a good ball of soil about the roots; this, wrapped first about with burlaps, then with strong paper. Tho pots for the plants were five inches mote in diameter than tho thickest part of the roots. In tho pot were first put broken pieces of crock nil.l charcoal to tho depth of three inches for drainage, then a half inch of potting; material, and upon this the root was rested. Tho oarth was then packed in firmly to uu inch of the pot. The amount of drainage and curth under tho root was deter mined by tho size, the rule being to have the atom of the plant meet the surface of the soil. The secret of suc cessful palm growing is in the water ing ; not too much, and yet the sur face of tho soil nover to be dry, and to keep the foliage clear of dnst by fre quent sponging. Tho owner of these plants, aresideutof thisoity, although ostensibly growing them as attractions for the homo, adds considerable to his income every year by loaning the palms for decorative purposes.—Balti more American. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Even in winter the horse is better for outdoor exercise. Teach a horse what you wish him to do and he will always do it. Water the horse in the morning be fore giving him his breakfast. Timothy hay is poor stuff for cow feed. Clover hay is the thing. Where your owes are insufficiently sheltered from cold, breed them so that they will layib in April or May. Mix your animals' rations scientific cally and weigh them carefully. Noth ing is more important in mixing foods for live stock than to mix them by weight. In some counties in lowa half the wheat crop will this year be fed to stock. In the northwestern States the whir of the steel wheat cruaher is heard in the land. After you have shown animals at fairs quarantine them to themselves a while after bringing them home. It is easy to catch contagious diseases among your live stock at fairs. Keep the breeding ewes in good con dition. Many ewes are lost by hav ing them start into winter in poor oondition. Such ewes, when they themselves do not die, produce dead or weakly lambs. Black fowls have the reputation of being uniformly better layers than white breeds. The blaok Leghorn by some is considered superior to white; the same may be said of the Minoroa, Langshan, Java, Coohin, Plymouth Book and Spanigji breeds. The manner in whioh a horse stands still is one of the best indications of soundness. If he stands with his legs straight and well under the body there is not much the matter with them. If he favors a limb or straddles before or behind, examine him carefully. When you buy new hogs, sheep or cattle, turn theiu into a pen or yard by themselves until you asoertain whether they have not some infeotious disease. This precaution is especially necessary now when European Gov ernments prstend that we have swine plague and pleuro-pueumonia among our live stook. To break up and soatter the manure and to loosen up the spots where there is no grass, they plant and harrow the pastures at the Ohio State Uni versity, according to the Agricultural Student. For this purpose they use four fence rails nailed together side by side and tied behind a light smoothing harrow. Wheat is a good food for laying hens; it contains protein fats and oar bohydrates, and is considered prefer able to corn for daily feed. It is im portant to bear in mind that it is the nutrients in foods that are valuable. There is a great deal to learn of what certain fools oontain, and the results derived from foeding. If a horse balks, do not whip him, but let him stop and think it over. After a little reflection and a few tosses of the head he will often start of his volition. Talk to him kindly, pet him, loosen a strap or a buckle, and be may forget his obstinate spell. An apple or a bunch of grass from the roadside may win him. A Close Ifnrvnin. A man, notorious for his "near ness," lately went into a batcher's aud inquired the price of a soup bone. The proprietor of tho shop is a gen erous fellow, and in answer to the old mnu's question he said, "Oh, I'll give you that." The customer put liis hand to his ear. He is somewhat hard of hear ing, and had missed tho other's re ply- "Can't you take something off that ?" he asked. Tho butcher took pity on him. "Yes," he said, "call it twopence." And tho old man went homo with a comfortable sense of having made a good bargain.—Tit-Bits. wt GIVE AWAY A Sample Package (4 to 7 doses) of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets To any one sending name and address to us on a postal card. ONCE USED THEY ARE ALWAYS IN FAVOR. Hence, our object in sending them out broadcast OiV TRIAL They absolutely cure SICK HEADACHE, Biliousness, Constipation, Coated Tongue, Poor Ap petite, Dyspepsia and kin dred derangements of the ™ Stomach.Liverand Bowels. Don't accept some substitute said to be "just as good." The substitute costs the dealer less. It costs you ABOUT the same. HIS profit is in the "just as pood." WHERE IS YOURS ? Address for FREE SAMPLE, World's Dispensary Medical Association, No. 663 mum St. BUFFALO, H. V. Coughs and Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, General Debility and •11 forms of Emaciation are speedily cured by Scott's Emulsion Consumptives always find great relief by taking it, and consumption is often cured. No other nourishment restores strength so quickly and effectively. Weak Babies and Thin Children are made strong and robust by Scott's Emulsion when other forms of food seem to do them no good whatever. The only genuine Scott's Emulsion' is put up in salmon tolored wrapper, llefuse cheap substitutes! Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. •oott A Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. SO o«nta and sl. Why She Never Married. When n man tempts fate by remind ing 11 spinster of her condition, his puuishment is generally swift and sure. In a county of Ireland where the Quakers are numerous the entire body on one occasion gathered to gether for one of their quarterly meetings. After the exercises of the morning a public luucheon was held, at which all the Friends attended. The conver sation turned to matrimouy. ".Bridget," said an unmannerly youthful member of ♦he society, speaking across the crowded table to a prim, elderly maiden lady, "wilt thou tell mo why thou hast never married?" "Certainly, friend William," re sponded the ready Bridget, in a voice audible over the room. " Tis be cause I am not so aisy pleased as thy wife was."—Tit-Bits. BEECHAM'S PILLS (Vegetable) What They Are For Biliousness indigestion sallow skin dyspepsia bad taste in the mouth pimples sick headache foul breath torpid liver bilious headache loss of appetite depression of spirits when these conditions are caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things for everybody to learn is that constipation causes more than half the sickness in the world, especially of women; and it can all be prevented. Go by the book, free at your drug gist's, or write B. F. Allen Co., 365 Canal Street, New York. Pills, 10c. and 25c. a box. Annual sales more than 6,000,000 boxes. "THE CLEANER 'TIS, THE COSIER 'TIS." WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT SAPOLIO For Tripsins Tongues. The popularity of Peter Tiper's celebrated peck of pickled peppers will probably never wane as a suaro to catch the tongue that would fain bo a^ile; but the test has formidable rivals. The following short sentences, as their authors maintain, do wonders in baffling the ordinary powers of speech: "Gaze on the gay gray brigade." "The sea ceaseth, and it sulKceth us." "-"Say, should such a shapely sash shabby stitches show?" "Strange strategic statistics." "Givo Grimes Jim's gilt gig whip." "Sarah in a shawl shoveled soft snow softly." "A cup of coffee in a copper colleo cup."—London Weekly Telegraph. Theoflieial returns of the produc tion of sugar in Queensland for the year 1894 show that tho output ex ceeded that of 189:! by ten thousand tons. W. L. DOUGLAS C MAC is THE sear. 90 dnUb riT FOR AKINIfe CORDOVAN", Jtm FRENCH & ENAMELLED CALF. mm : i,t«4»3.«P FINE CAI/iKanoam* mmm * 3 4ppouce,ssoles, $2 _ WORKINSMEu', V% I "*"• EXTRA riNE- *»• BOYS'SCHOOLSHQEI «l**W swoCKTOfCMAJia. OwOnt Mlllkm People wmr the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the beat vnliia (or th* money. They equal custom etioei in ityle anil (It. Their wearing qun'ltlet are unnurpaued. The price* ar* uniform,—(tamped on »o!». From Si t* $ J aavri over MVr It your dealer cannot supply you v : ci •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers