9 J THE CHANGE OF LIFE INTELLIGENTWOMEN PREPARE Dangrera and Pain of This Critical Period Avoided by tba TJee of Lydla B. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. How many wo men realize that the most critical period in a wo man's existence is the change of life, and that the anxiety felt by women as this time draws near Afft &f, GHylandfj is not without If her system is in a deranged condi tion, or she is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is at this time likely to become active and, with a host of nervous irritations, make life burden. At this time, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to begin their destruc tive work. Such warning symptoms as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, diz ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, pal pitation of the henrt, sparks before the eyes, irremilarities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and inqui etude are promptly heeded by intelli gent women who are approaching the period of life when woman's great change may be expected. I.ydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Com fund is the world's greatest remedy J.ji women at this trying period, and rcay be relied upon to oveftomeall dis tressing symptoms and carry them safely through to a healthy and happy old age. i Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up the weakened nervous system as no other medicine can. Mrs A. E. Q. Hyland, of Chester town, Md.f in a letter to Mrs. Pink- cam, says : Dear Mrs. rinkham: "I had been suffering with falling of ths womb for years and was passing through ths change of life. My wnmb was badly swollen. I had a good deal of soreness, dizzy spells, headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote you for advice and commenced treatment with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound as you directl, and I am happy to say that all those distressing symptoms left me, and I have passed w My through the change of life a well woman." for special advice regarding this im portant period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham for advice. It is free and always helpful. The Time for Repentance. H'lre Js the way a Ronton county man confessed at a revival: He had been iprossed to repent, nnd finally got up and sahl: "Dear friends, I feel the spirit moving in me to talk and tell what a bad man I havis been, but I can't do it while the grand jury Is In session." "The Ixird will forgive," shouted the preacher. "I guess that's right." Jaid the penitent, "but he ain't on the grand jury-" ITTSpermanentlyoured. Nolltsornervous ness after first day's use ot Br. Kline's Great Kerveltpstorer.fitrial bottleaod treatise free Dr.R. H. Klike, Ltd., 0S1 Arch 8t.,Phlla.,Pa The more active the mind the greater the qeed for physical recreation. Fined $100 for Killing a Man. Andrew RoBkoo, struck Prank Ma gte over1 the head with a billiard stick on the night of August 2, at New BTiinswJck, N. J. Magre died. Ros--oe was Indicted for manslaughter, but was convicted of sjmple assault only. Judge Strong fined him $100 for killing the man and gave him. 60 days to nay the fine. Pentoses Cannot Vm Crtred by local applications as they cannot reaoh the diseased portion oi theeur. 'J. Hero is only one way to cure deiUuuus, and thut is by consti tutional remedied. J)eiUne8 is caused by aa lnllBined condition ol the mucous lining of the KustuctiiHU Tube. When this tube Is In flamed you nave a rumbllugsound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is tiie result, and unless the intlam matlon can be talteu out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearlnir will pe destroyed foruvur. Mine casus out of teu areoauHodbyo-uarra, which is nothinirbutati Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any caseof Deafness (caused by catarrh jthat can sotbeoured by Hull's Catarrh Cure. Mend for eiroularstroe. i'.J. (Jiienkv (Jo., Toledo, U. Bold by Drugirlsts, 760. 'lake tlall' family Pills for eoastlpatloa. Social Function In 1920. The accomplished and beautiful Mrs. Porkand gave a delightful wine party at her lovely home, Jagshire. Mrs. Porkand was gowned in black sillc tire waist being ornamented with $5,000 bills, and the skirt tastefully draped with government bonds, mak ing altogether a superb efct. Mrs. Depuyster-Stuyvescant-Crab, rival for social leadership, whom Mrs. Porkand had tactfully Invited, was at tired Jn blue crnpt de chine, trimmed and draped with $1,000 bills, govern ment bonds and airship strockB. At 2 p. m. ths tellers were appoint ed and carefully invoiced the cos tumes, resulting in another victory for Mrs. Porkand, whoBe gown was ap praised at $20,1)87.652.92, defeating the too Sanguino Mrs. Crab (by $78,622.16. Puck. A GIANT LAID LOW. Orlppled and Made 111 by Awlnl Kidney Disorders. John Fcrnaoys, fruit raiser, Webs ter, N. T., says: "I used to lift railroad tics easily, but wrenched my back and begun to suffer with backache and kidney trouble.' I VKTTL'mm til one dnv a mUmAW twinge felled me nue a log, made ine crawl on bnnds nnd knees. I was so crippled for a time that I couldn't walk without sticks, had head aches and dizzy spells and the kidney secretions were muddy and full of brickdust sediment. Doan's Kidney pills made the pain disappear and cor rected the urliinry trouble. I have felt better ever since." f Sold by nil dealers. SO cents a box, joBtcr-Milburu Co., Buffalo, N. X. VMsJAM Rice Hulls in Stock Feed. The Pennsylvania Station has recent ly examined a sample of bran sub mitted by a Westmoreland County f:ir mer with a statement that cattle re fuse it and when they do eat it, are purged and that hogs eating it sicken and die, one farmer in that county having lost fix Jogs in this way. Vpon pxnmlnation the br?n 'was found to contain rice hulls. These hulls, pro duced abundantly as a waste from the rice milling Industry, differ materially from the hulls of harley, wheat, rye and oats because the fact that they contain sharp particles of silica. These are extremely irritating to the mucous lining of the digestive tract of the animals eating the hulls. The Irrita tion produced is so intense that many animals arc sickened and often killed because of this action of the rice hulls. Indiana IY.rmer. Improved Roosts. Perches should always bo low. Eighteen inches from the ground Is ample, and the strips Rhotild not bo nailed. When nailed you have always to contend against the vermin trouble, which Is one of the worst. The red blood sucker, if allowed sufficient lati tude, will drain the system of any fowl, and the very essence of egg pro duction 1b drawn from the body of a hen in an infected house. It will pay better to secure insect proof perches', which may be constructed as follows: Have a piece of iron tubing twenty four inches long, take an ordinary jam tin, cut a hole In the bottom of tin sufficient to allow the tubing to pass up through the tin within six inches of the top, then Folder the tin to the Iron. The perch should be about twelve inches shorter than the tength of the house. Bore a hole in both ends of perch the size of tubing, anil when the tubing is fixed on to a heavy stand or driven iato the floor, place the iicrch which should bo 3x2 Inches hardwood, on top. Perches re quire to be about three inches wide lo prevent crooked bi-.-asU. Thesn are often caused by birds roosting on nar row perches. When the perch is in position pour a little kerosene into the tins at each end, and you will have in sect proof perches. H. V. Hawkins, in the Massachusetts Ploughman. Putting up Timothy Hay. The old idea that timothy must be entirely ripe before it is harvested has passed away. When I was a boy we used to wait until the seed began to drop from the heads before we put up the hay. But we learned there was always a coarseness and deadness about the hay that the stock did not like, so one year we cut the timothy lust before the seed had matured and we discovered that the hay was much sweeter and stronger. The cattle and horses relished it and It seemed to be more beneficial to them. Ever af terward the hay on our farm was put up before It had ripened. The expe rience of most successful farmers has proven that timothy hay should be har vested while the' seed are still im mature and the fields waving green. If it Is mowed down in the morning of a warm clear day, it will do to go Into the stack by that afternoon or the next morning. Never let It stay in the lunshino too long, for it will be scorch ed and thereby lnjnred. Timothy hay will keep better in round stacks, well topped. It Is not so apt to heat or take water. If a farmer ricks his hay he should take utmost core that the ricks are tapered gradually upward from the bulge, especially if he desires to leave them standing during the win ter months. It Is a great saving of labor to put the hay into the rick or stack from the swarth. W. D. Neale, In the Epitomist. Bitter Potatoes. Every year housekeepers peel away bushels of potatoes in thick parings trying to get the green off of them so that they will not taste bitter. Son.c potatoes are white, mealy and sweet when cooked, where others are bitter, and of a yellow greenish color. It la when they are dug that the mischief 1b done. The careful man digs his potatoes when the ground is not too wet, picking them up as fast as they are uncovered. Carrying them at once to the cellar, or perhaps if It is early it would be best to put them in the barn or granary until dried off. But it must be a dark place or they will begin to turn green and keep getting darker until they are green almost clear through, and con sequently bitter and totally unfit to eat. This useless waste of potatoes is not necessary. And a'year when they are scarce and sell at a high price per bushel it makes considerable differ ence as to tue number of bushels need ed to supply one's family. It pays to exercise a little more care when digging and storing pota toes to protect them from the sun and light that produces this green, bitter taste. It takes only a very little more Ume to carefully cover them with a thick layer of vines, or a large piece of canvas, and thus keep them in a much better condition than they otherwise would be. ' Potatoes should not be allowed to lay for any great length of time after being dug, even if they are covered with vines or a canvas, fur the hot rays of the sun will penetrate through and spoil them. Potatoes keep best stored in dry dark cellar. Frances C. Klner, In In diana Farmer. Sure Profit In Sheep. Hogs are probably the best paying animals to grow on the average farms, but In some respects sheep are prefera ble. This is especially true on upland farms that are too much worn or de pleted of humus to produce staple crops in paying quantities. Such fields If fenced for sheep and converted into a pasture for them, will yield a greater net return than if cultivated, and al the same time become more fertile, fo.' it is a true saying that the foot of th, sheep fertilizes the land. While im proving the soil, they also improve the herbage of the pasture by exterminat ing the weeds.- It Is claimed for sheep that they make larger relative gains for food consumed than any olher kind of live stock. Another claim set up for them is that the annual clip of wool will pay for the expense of keep. Perhaps this is a little overdrawn, except under very auspicious circumstances, which can only be brought about by more judiclouB management than usually ob tains on farms where mixed husbandry Is the practice. They require less attention during winter in the manner of housing and feeding, but they should be looked af ter pretty closely at lambing times, as some mothers ignore their young at first, and require to be penned with their lambs for a few days In order to get. them to recognize the obligations of motherhood. The objection to allowing sheep and neat cattle to run In the same pasture can only apply to restricted areas, where the stock Is unduly crowded. One of the most decided advantages in raising sheep is that it requires less manual labor, the most expensive fea ture of farming, than cultivated crops, but this is applicable to livestock gen erally, but to sheep in a more eminent degree. An important, if not the most Im portant, essential for profitable sheep husbandry is the proper selection of breed for the desired end and the use of pure bred rams. rianters' Journal. The Private Dairy. Contrary to what some may as sert, the private dairy is capable ot producing the finest quality of butter that it is possible to make. Indeed, rightly managed, no creamery can fully compete with it. The very method of business forbids and prevents this. With a large number of patrons there cannot help but be some who are rut up to the highest standard, and as it takes only a very little cream that is "off" to defile any amount, these, of course, must fix the grade of the pro duct. The standard is thus inevitably brought down to the lowest, or, at best, to an average one. Hence it Is that the market value of the very best creamery butter fluctuates with every change in the general market, where as the proprietor of an individual dairy may have a set of customers who are so well satisfied with what they are receiving that they seldom care to note the variations in market prices, being willing even to pay a little more as long as they are assured of getting the very best and having it come at regular Intervals. Is not such business worth Btrivlng after? Once secured, It is generally permanent, and allows the dairyman to calculate with much certainty that his income will no longer be depending on unknown conditions, but will be almost as stable as any of the best of investments. The cost of making good butter is about the same year after year, so that he is quite sure to derive a steady profit from his busi ness, like a regular income. Such attainments are not arrived at, however, by mere temporary efforts. Rather there must be a constant card exercised over the work from begin ning to end. Lessons must be learned, and the information gained turned to practical use. Good cows must be obtained; they must be fed well, and In caring for them the most scrupul ous cleanliness practised in every way. The work must be conducted accord ing to the best known rules upon which success is based. The nature of the milk and cream must be studied, and every precaution against infection by improper feeding or watering care fully observed. There must be strict management throughout all the work, and any faults found eliminated. Vari ations of weather and temperature must be taken into consideration and allowed for; otherwise it will be im possible to proceed, according to the seasons, so as to maintain a constant evenness. In brief, every feature of the practice and science of dairying must be learned and fully mastered, and then never departed from. The rules of nature, it must be remembered are Inviolable. Like causes produce like results under all circumstance), whether for good or ill. Well, lh basis of all the operations in dairying is as completely dependent on these natural laws as the growth of plants, the welfare of animals or man's own health and comfort To succeed, therefore, the dairyman must conform to all these natural laws In every de tail :assachusett3 Ploughman. UNOSTENTATIOUS. Our magnates show their riches may When in a foreign clime. But none of them make much display . Around taxpaying time. AN INSINUATION. Hraggs-"! killed a bear during my Hunting trip In Montana." Waezs "So? How fnr did li cIibsa you before he dropped?" Chicago iews. A HAPPY RELEASE. Kind Friend "Pardon me, but ought to tell you that Jones has run away with your wife." Husband (bored) "But why run?" London Punch. THE OXE WEAK POINT. McFlub "I suppose you find your new automobile superior in every way to your old horse? ' Pleeth "Not in every way. It balks just about as often." A HASTY EXPLANATION. "I wonder why all (hose swimmers who try to swim the English Channel always slart from the English side?" 'Trobably it's the shortest way." Cleveland Plain Dealer. A GOOD MATCH. Bell "I never understood how that ugly Miss I'assay got a man to marry her." Nell-"I didn't, either till I saw the man. Detroit Free Tress. TnE OTHER EXEREME. Blinker 'Toverty Is not a disgrace." Clinker "No, it's an honor these days. Look at the rich men falling over themselves in their efforts to apol ogize for their tainted money." CHEEP' CHEEP! "I declare," remarked the duck, "if that little chick isn't trying to talk nl ready, but It doesn't amount to much.' No," replied the young rooster, scornfully, "all his talk is 'cheep.'" Philadelphia Press. HE DIDN'T REQUIRE ANY. Mrs. Mutherly "That young Yale vard is far too attentive to you my dear. Don't you give him any encour agement" Miss Mutherly "Mamma, he doesn't need any." Albany Journal. AN IMMUNE. "Mr. Cadsby never pays the slightest attention to flattery." "No," answered Miss Cayenne. "It would be impossible to devise any form of flattery that would correspond to his good opinion of himself." Wash ington Star. AT HIS HEELS. "How is that son of old Milllgau's turning out?" "Oh, he's following right in his fath er s footsteps." "Makine lots of monev. oh?" "No, begging for it." Cleveland i lain ueaier. THE CYNICAL CODGER. "Ever notice," asked the Cynical Cod ger, "how some lazy men will neglect their work Just to brag about this country's industries nnd prosperity? Reminds me of a barnyard the hens laying all the eggs nnd the rooster doing nothing but crowing about it." SUCCESS IS DIFFERENT. rolk "When a fellow starts to do anything he can always succeed If he only sticks to It" Jolk "Notnlways. now about when you start to remove a sheet of sticky fly paper that you've sat down on?" Philadelphia Ledger. UNDER DOG SOMETIMES WINS. "Yes, I think I have him at my mer cy. He hos a few thousand dollars and I haTe millions." "Well, why don't you go ahead and smash him?" "I'll tell you. Every time I start to do it I begin thinking of what hap pened to Russia." SO NATURAL. "I dreamed last night, George," said Mrs. Swellmnn, "that I was with a box party at the opera and " "Yes." interrupted her husband, "1 might have known that." "What! How do you menn?" "You were talklne verv loud ki rnnr sleep." Philadelphia Press. WITH A PROVISO. Customer (handing over the money) "I want to be sure about it. Can yon guarantee that this stuff will kill off the cockroaches?" Druggist (wrapping up the bottle) "I guarantee It absolutely, ma'am If you can get them to take it according to directions." Chicago Tribune. ANOTHER DISAPPOINTED GIRU 'You want to marry my daughter. you say. But I don't recall that she has ever mentioned you?" 'You surprise me! Isn't your name Timmons?" "No." , "Excuse me. I must have got Into Ihe wrong flat." Cleveland Plain Dealer. To make Cheap Gas-light for Country Homes TAKE I common Clay Tip. , Put a simple "'Acetylene" Gasburner on its stem. Bind the two in position with a tight-fitting piece of Rubber Hose. Then fill the bowl of the pipe with fine-ground Cal cium Carbide. Next tie a rag over head of the bowl to keep in the varDiac. Now put the pipe into a Glass Water, as in picture. There vou have a comnlete Gas- plant for 25 cents. A vuwi a maim lu iiic xjiiiiici - y and you'll get a beautiful White Gas- S' light. Of course, this is only an experi ment, but it shows the wonderful jm plieity of Acetylene Lighting. lhat very simplicity gave Acetylene Light a setback, at first. It seemed so simple to turn Calcium Carbide Jnta Gas-light that over 6oo different kinds of "tanks" and "Acetylene Machines" were invented, patented, and marketed for the purpose, by about as many different people. Well, the thing to be expected certainly happened ! About 530 of these "Acetylene Machines" had been invented and sold by people who knew more about .Tinware than they did about Gas-making. The "Calcium Carbide" was all right all the time, but 530 of the machines for turning it into Gas were all wrong all the time. So Acetylene Gas "got a bad name," though it is clear enough now that it never deserved it at any time. It was like selling Wood Stoves to bunt Hard Coal in, and then blaming the Coal for not burning. Lots of tilings happened to grieve the Owners of these 530 makes of alleged "Acetylene Machines." But very few accidents occurred from them even in the days of rank experiment and dense ignorance, among, "Generator" Makers. Of course, a gun will go off unexpectedly, now and then, if the trigger be pulled by a person who "didn't know it was loaded." But, that's no fault of the Ammunition is it? Well, finally the Insurance Companies got after these 530 odd makes of "Acetylene Machines" that wouldn't Acetylate, and the Insurance Board made an investigation of all Generators that were submitted to them. Then, out of the 600 odd "Machines" patented, only about 70 were "permitted" by the Insurance Board to be used. Oh, what a howl was there! By "permitted" I mean that tfte Insurance Board was willing that any building should be Insured, with out extra charge, which" used any out of these 79 Acetylene Generators it had found safe, and effective, just as it permitted houses to be piped for City Gas, or wired for Electricity, under proper conditions. Now, the Insurance Companies ought to know whether or not these 70 different makes of Acetylene Generators were absolutely Safe to use. Because, they have to pay the bills, if Fire or Ex plosion occurs, from any one of the Acefylene Gener ators they authorize. And, here's a proof of their good judgment. Though there are now Two Million people usiny 'Acetylene Light in America, there have only been four l'irc3 from it in one year, against 886$ Fires from Kerosene and Gasoline. There have also been 4691 Fires from Electricity, 1707 Fires from City Gas, and 520 Fires from Candles. Besides these there have been 26 Fires from the Sun's rays, But, only four Fires from Acetylene. That shows how careful the Insurance Board was in its examination of Acetylene Generators, and in "permitting" only the 70 makes that were above sus picion, out of the 600 experiments that were once on the market. Well, the boom in Acetylene Lighting made lower frices possible on the material it is derived from, viz.. Calcium Carbide, a material that looks like Granite but acts like Magic. Today, Acetylene Light is a full third cheaper than Kerosene Light, or Gasoline Light, per Candle Power. It is not more than half the price of Electric Light, , nor three-fourths that of City Gas. If I can't prove these statements to your full satis faction my name is not "Acetylene Jones." But Acetylene is more than the safest and cheapest Light of the year 1005. 1 It is also the Whitest Light the nearest to natural Sunlight in health-giving Blue and Violet rays, and because of this, with its freedom from flicker, it is the easiest of all Artificial Light on the Eyes. It is so much like real Sunlight that it has made plants grow 24 hours per day in dark cellars where no ray of Sunlight could reach them. It made them grow twice as fast as similar plants that had only the Sun light of day-time, viz., half the time. That was proven by Cornell University in a three months' experiment made this very year. Now, I've saved up for the last a point more im portant to you than all the others about Acetylene Light. It consumes only one-fourth as much of the vital Oxygen from the Air of Living rooms or bed-rooms, as either Kerosene or City Gas-Light consume?. That's a tremendous difference i:i a lifetime, mark you three-fourths of a difference. Because, Oxygen is Life. And every bit of Oxygen stolen from the lungs of Women, Children and .Men, through Lighting, is a loss that can never be made good again. A 24 Candle-Powcr Acetylene Light costs you only tzvo-fifths of a cent per hour. That's about $5.5 per year, if burned every night in the year for four steady hours. A Kerosene Lamp of equal capacity would cost you a third more, viz. : three-fifths of a cent per hour for Kerosene alone, or $8.75 per year. That's exclusive of broken lamp chimneys, new wicks, and the everlasting drudgery and danger of cleaning, filling and trimming daily. I want to prove these figures to you, Reader, if you are a house-owner or storekeeper. Tell me how many rooms you've got and I'll tell you what it will cost to light them with brilliant, beautiful, ( Sanitary, eye-saving Acetylene. Write me today for my Free Book about "Sunlight cn Tap." Just address mc here as "Acetylene Jones," 9 Adams St., Chicago, lilt Moon and the Weather. Speaking of the superstition that the changes of the moon Influence the weather. Professor Pickering points out that Blnce the moon changes every Bev en and half days, every change In the weather must come within four davs of a change in the moon, and that changes will necessarily come within two days of a lunar change. Mrs. Wlnsiow's Hoothlng Hymp lor Children tecthlng,oftonsthoKums,reducoflnfliunmn- lloD.allu s palu, euros wiuu colic, 25c. a bottle PRICE, 25 Cts fF A 0 CURE THE GRIP IH UIIU bHI KM TJ7 iMTirnpnnirlf S MinimriflLBgfl JIAS NO tiUAL f OR HfDACHE V n ms en F3 1 Ei a pi Er IS GUARANTEED TO CURE. GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. I won't nil Antl-Orlpln to a (teal or who won't aanrnt It, Call fur your MOKKY HACK I r IT DOESN'T CWKSk F. II'. Diemer, Sl.Ii., Manufacturer, Sprlttaleld, Jf Milan is one of the important industrial centres of Italy. I'leo's Cure is the best medicine we ever used iorallafTeotlous of throat una lungs. Wk. O. Kkdslit, Vauburoa, ind., 4'eb. 10, "Every mind frets for relaxation." says writer. Vanishing Languages. President Wheeler and Professor Putnam of the University rff Califor nia, in describing the recent ethnolog ical and archeologlcal work of that institution, say that nowhere in Amer ica has there been such a diversity of Indian languages as In California. But these languages are now rapidly disap pearing. Several of them at the pres ent moment are known by only five or six, and others by only 20 to 30 living persons, and hardly a year passes without Borne dialect, or even lan guage, ceasing to exist through the death of the last Individual able to speak It. It Is regarded as Important to record all these languages at tho earliest possible moment for tho sake of the light they throw on tho ancient history of the Pacific coast. Youth's Companion. There are in Paris something like 1,000 co-operative cabs plying, supplied by 16 to 18 co-operative cab yards, which are now In a flourishing condi tion, some of them very large and sub stantial undertakings. The men In this Bervlce net on the average about 60 cents a day above the outside cab man's rat of compensation. NO TONGUE CAN TELL How I Suffereri With Hulling aud ltleetllliff cxema Until Cured by Cutlt'ura, "So tongue can tell how I suffered for five years with a terrib.y painful, itching and blcedinj eczema, my body and face being- covered with sores. XMever in my life did 1 experience such awlul tuli'ering, and 1 longed tor Ueuln, which 1 felt wus near. L had tried doctors and medicines without success, but niy mother, insisted that 1 try Cuticura. . I let better alter the iirat bath with Cuticura Soap, and one ap plication of Cuticura Ointment, aud was soon entirely well, (biguedj .Mia. A. fit- tec, liel.evue. Mica. During tho last decade American exports to China have Increased sixfold Proposed Expositions. Seattle wishes an Alaskan exposi tion In 1907 to celebrate some anni versary or other. Ixjs Angeles would commemorate the centennial of the pony express in 1900. Sedalla, Mo., already has on foot a project to cen tralize Missouri In 1920. And lately some one has proposed an exposi tion In Panama, in the year 2205, in celebration of the first centenlul of the opening of the Panamnl Cahal. WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195 To Introduce. Buy direct and save tho dif ference. Easy terms. W rite us and we'll toll yon nil nbout It. HOI Ml INK'S MUSK! HOUSK, 037 Knilthlli lil Htrxrt. I'll ttburjf, P . L. Douglas $3&$3SHOESSS, W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cllt Edge Lin cannot be equalled at any price. (.KUteiU M AKKRA fit f ffATESPBOfiF OILED CLOTHiHG? 75LICSERS.POMKEL 5LICRERS AID HAT3. FOLLOWING OUR SUCCES5&S AT PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO AND OTHER EXPOSITIONS WE: WON THE L HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD 1 Jtf THE ST.L0UI5 WORLD3F AIR , ' I M 1 ' 1 . :r., 1 1. 'r n - fftV-. FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to tneir sex, used as a douch is marvelously uc- iatnl. Thnrntirh!vlAnaAa kill A tM.ut .a.m. tops dlsdiarges, aealt inllammatioa and lucu orenett, curea leucorruoea aud naaal catarrh. Paitine Is in powder form lo be dissolved in par water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics lor alT TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, M cents a box. Trial Box and Brfc el Instructions Prr. Thc R. P.xton Co jrtSM Boston, Mass. Established s, Jnlrs. 18TS. 'W.L. onuniAS ma kfs a in ttm M'Jl.E rWW's s.'i.ifj nn tham SHY OTHER MAlJIJFACTURkR. 4IU.UUU disprove this stilement W. L. Doug-la. $.1.50 shoes have by their ox. cellent style, easv fitting;, and sureriarwcarlnf qualities, achieved the largest rule of any $3.50 snoe In the world. They are Just good jt tlmie that cost you $5.00 to f 7.00 the only difterrnce Is the price. If I could take yon into my factory at Brockton, Mass.. the largest In the world under one root making men's fin hoes, nnd show you the care with whirls every pair of Douglhs shoes is made, you would realhrt why W. I.. Uou.'las $.1.50 shoes are the best shoes produced In the world. II I could show you the difference between the shoes made In my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $.1.50 shoes enst more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are ol greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. Wi.L' DWll9 fro"f Warfo Shoam tor Man, $71. BO, S2.LO. Hay' School Orvs Stiovm,$2.BO, $2, $1.1 5, $1. BO , CAUTION. Insist upon having W. L.Doug Ins shoes, lake no substitute. None genuine uoiuo iiu in ice Biampea on Dotcom. WANTED. A shoe dealer In every town wber W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon request. Fist Color Eyelet i used; tffsy mill not wear 6 rasas. Write for Illustrate Catalog of Fall Btvlea. W.I UUUULAS. Brockton, Masjfc PENSIONS. "Aas war U e have records or service. Lawsand advice tree A... con .1 1, u. a BIS Maiuul Street. Inelunatl. Ohio WE BUY 11 . f.""'i' u itsi rant. t4 Bast Couth Ujrup. Vastes Good. (J Lfj in n mo. eoiq or (iruagUii. Eihkirv tful Heals a ay quantities an I nay he best prices. Write na at ouce The Uouautou Co, lul Wafer bt. New lurk CONPT TKT.AND WOrTKMH Pna l . It ns, 8is beautiful colored soVns for to. Coney Island Postal Card Co.. Coney lwi n.7,' It' alttletrd mi Thompson's EyeWarer vfiia vre Uess
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers