The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 27, 1902, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    What Is a Farm Worth?
My old friend William H. Plumb, of
Bangor, N. Y, wants me to tell him
what a farm is worth that gives an an-
nual income of $00, and what is the
value of a cow that gives $15 net in
milk and butter a year. According to
the system of farm bookkeeping, with
which 1 have long been familiar, this
$600 income means that there is that
sum left after deducting the cost of
seeds, planting, cultivating, harvesting,
and marketing the crops, paying wages
of all the help, feeding the hands and all
the stock, lie the family, paying
the taxes, pew rent, tickets to the cir
cus, buying a new horse or two, repair-
ing the carriages, wagons, and imple-
ments, expenditure for chewing tobacco,
smoking tobacco, pipes, a few gallons of
whisky now and then, &c., world without
end. Such a farm is too valuable to sell
at any price. As for the cow—why, she
1s worth, according to the same system
of bookkeeping, a good currying and
three bran-mashes a day—N. Y. Press.
Experts Are Dangeroun
There are scientific experts whose tes-
timony is to be taken with respect. They
deal in facts. For example, a chemist
will find what proportion of poison is
contained in a certain substance that
may have been administered with nus-
chievous intent. A physician will de-
scribe an injury and tell of results and
causes where shot stab wounds are
involved. An architect will be able to
explain how a bridge or building has
fallen. But the too usual expert is none
of these. He is a man who for a great
price offers a personal opinion as to
handwriting. A trial, especially one in
which human life or liberty is mvolved,
should be conducted solely on evidence.
Opinion is not evidence.
or
Handed Him One.
"Say, pa.”
“Well 2"
“1 thought y
always mind |
get into trouble.”
f a boy would
yu said
$ wouldn't
0 1
11s parents he
you will always bear it in mind
will live to be a good man. Never dis-
obey your parents and harm cannot
reach you. The boy who always does
his father tells need
fear that evil will overtake
“Sav. pa. here's a poem
that stood on a burnin’ deck beca
pa told him not to go. Just read it and
then tell me some about harm
never comin’ to boys lways do what
their parents say they
as
him do
to
boy
hi
hi
§
A Bell-ringer.
It was in a c« ill
swain had propose
village
and carr
the engage:
as ; ha
untry
fast
to the h
tried to
cerning his
“Hello, th
“Yes. re
he had left,
going now
B. B. B. SENT FREE!
Cares FEcrema, Itching Humors, Scabs,
Carbuncles, Plmples, Eic,
Botanic Blood Baim (B. B. B.) is a cer
tain and sure curef
Humors, Blisters,
Pimples, Aching Pones or Joints,
Carbuncies, Prickling
Old Eating Sores
ing Swellings, Bic
Blood Diseases. Botani
the worst and most
enriching, purifyingaad vitalizing the blood,
thereby Ving § i Way
the skin; ;
rich glow of health to the
$1
Blood Balm sent free by writing Blood Balm
Co., 12 Mitchell 8t., Atlanta, Ga. Describe
trouble and free medical advice also sent in
sealed letter. B. B. B. sent at once prepaid.
or Eczema, Itching Skin,
Scabs, Scales, watery
oils,
Pain in Skin,
, Ulcers, Scrofula, Superat-
00d Poison, Cancer and all
Blood Balm cures
deep-seated cases by
biood supply to
heals ever sore and givea the
skin. Druggists
" ' ’
per large bottle. To prove it
Grasshoppers are so great a plague at
Hay. New South Wales, that they obscure
all the street lamps at night, leaving the
town in total darkness
Tetterine in Texas,
“I enclose 50c, in stamps. Mail me one or
two boxes of Tetterine, whatever the price;
it's all right — does the work.” — Wm.
Schwarz, Gainesville, Texas, 50c. a box by
mail from J.T. Bhuptrine, Savaanab, Ga.
if your druggist don't keep it.
Thoroughbred dogs are less intelligent
than mongrels.
A Weighty Opinion.
Edith-——What on earth made you break
off the engagement? I thought you
were awfully in love with him.
Madge—1 was, but Rover
bear him
couldn't
/ Coughed
‘“1 had a most stubborn cough
for many years. It deprived me
of sleep and | grew very thin. 1
then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
and was quickly cured.’
R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn.
Sixty years of cures
and such testimony as the
above have taught us what
Ayer’'s Cherry Pectoral
will do.
We know it’s the great-
est cough remedy ever
made. And you will say
so, too, after you try it.
There’s cureineverydrop.
Three sizes : 2c, Bic, $1. All druggists.
NAT Re
REE AR e t en
ills Pill x;
World,
Are You Sick?
Send your name and P. O. address to
R. 8. Wills Medicine Co. Hagerstown, Md,
Hel ree ees Thompson's Eye Water
BENEFITS OF ADVERSITY
Dr. Talmage Says We Must All Go Through
Some Kind of Thrashing Process
for Our Own Good,
friumph Always Comes After Misfortune
Great Need Is Solace.
Wasmnaron, D. C.—From a procces
familiar to the farmer Dr. Talmage draws
lessons of consolation and encouragement
for people in sorrow and adversity. I'he
text is Isaiah xxvii, 27, 28: “For the
fitches are not thrashed with a thrashing
instrument, neither 1s a cart wheel turned
about upon the cummin, but the fitches
are beaten out with a staff and the cum:
min with a rod. Bread corn is bruised be
cause he will not ever be thrashing it.”
Misfortunes of various kinds come upon
various people, and in all times the great
need of ninety-nine people out of a hun
dred is solace. Look, then, to this neg
lected allegory of my text,
There are three kinds of seed men
tioned—fitches, cummin and corn. Of the
last we all know. But it may be well to
state that the fitches and the cummin were
small seeds, like the caraway or the chick-
yea, When these grains or herbs were to
TE thrashed they were thrown on the
floor, and the workmen would come around
with staff er rod or flail and beat them un-
til the seed would be separated, but when
the corn "was to be thrashed that was
thrown on the floor, and the men would
fasten horses or oxen to a cart with iron
dented wheels; that eart would be drawn
around the thrashing floor, and so the
work would be accomplished. Different
kinds of thrashing for different products.
“The fitches were not thrashed with a
thrashing instrument, neither is a cart
wheel turned about upon the cummin, but
the fitches are beaten out with a staff and
the cummin with a rod. Bread corn is
ing it.”
The great thought that the text presses
upon our souls is that we all ihe
some kind of thrashing process. The fact
that you may be devoling your life to hon-
orable and noble purposes will not win you
escape. Wilberforce, the Christian
was mn his day derisively
called “Doctor Cantwell.” Thomas Bab
ington Macauley, the advocate of all that
was good, long before he became the most
conspicuous historian of his day, was cari-
reviews as
“Babbletongue Macaniay Norman Me
Leod, the great friend of the Scotch poor,
was industriously maligned in all quarters,
go
out his burial a workman stood and
1.1
loo
to
“Ii he had done nothing for
3 t
forever and ever.” All the
wits of London had their fi
Wesley, the father of Method
If such wien could not escape the ma
ng oi neither
to get rid of the sharp, keen
tribulum. All who will live godly in
suffer
that, there are {
bankru; and
disappointments
as the
{| small
John
silars
wy
the word,
DETR
perse
ties
: d the joys and hilarities of lif
i trouble w
; the peopie were assembled in
ill sometimes break
| town theatre during the
War, and hile
farce and t}
3 the
they were witnessing a
andience was in great gratu
of an advancing army
uns ing
un wid
d the
nd ran for thei
i Bre seated
+ i
audience Mie
AY 3
t been as ch pounded
Is DeCause
as I am i
a BEVPrely ran on
Yon were, !
Yet there
ose the re the Lord's
favorites simpiy because their barns
and their bank account is flush and
thee are no funerals in the house, [It may
be because they are fitches and cummin,
i while down at the end of the lane the poo:
i widow may be the Lord's corn
You are but little pounded because von
are but little worth and she bruiced and
ground because she is the best part of the
harvest. The heft of the thrashing ma
chine is according to the value of the
grain. If you nave not been much thrashed
in life, perhaps there is not much to
thrash! If you have not been much shaken
i of trouble, perhaps it is because there is
| going to be a very small yield
When there are plenty of blackberries,
the gatherers go out with large baskets,
| but whon the drought has almost consumed
! the fruit, then a quart measure will do as
i well,
It took the venomous snake on Paul's
hand, and the pounding of him with stones
{ unti' he was taken up for dead, and the
| jamming against him of prison gates, and
{ the Ephesian vociferation, and the ankles
skinned by the painful stocks, and the
i foundering of the Alexandrian corn ship,
{ and the beheading stroke of the Roman
sheriff to bring Paul to his proper develop
ment.
{ It was not because Robert Moffat and
Tady Rachel Russell and Frederick Ober
| lin were worse than other people that they
| had to suffer. It was becanse they were
i better, and God wanted to make them
{ best. By the carelessness of the thrashing
i you may aiways conclude the value of the
i gram,
Next, my text teaches us that God pro
{ portions our trials to what we can bear
| the staff for the fitches, the rod for the
{ eumnmin, the iron wheel for the corn
Sometimes peopie in at trouble say,
{ “Oh, I can’t bear it!” But you did bear it
; God would not have sent it upon you if
| He had not known that you could bear it
You trembled and you swooned, but you
got through. God will not take from your
| eyes one tear too many nor from your
| lungs one sigh too deep nor from your tem.
| ples one throb too sharp. The perplex
ties of your earthly business have not in
them one tangle too intricate. You some.
times feel as if our world were full of
bludgeons flying haphazard. Oh, no; they
are thrashing instruments that God just
suits to your case, is not a dollar
of bad debts on your or a disap
intment about goods that you expected
go up, but that bave gone down, or a
swindle of your business partner or a trick
on the part of those who are in the same
kind of merchandise that you are, but God
intended to overrule for your immortal
help. “Oh,” you eay, “there is no need
talking that way to me. I don’t like to be
cheated and outraged.” Neither does the
corn like the corn thrasher, but after it
has been thrashed and winnowed #t has a
great better opinion of winnowing
mi A orn Sri, could ehose
e'l,” you say, could o m
troublss, I would be willing to be tronbled
Ab, my brother, then would not be
wou be i er r
are men who sup
are
inl
troubie. You would choose something that
would not hurt, and unless it hurt it does
not get sanctified. Your trial perhaps may
be childlessness. You are fond of chi
dren. You eay, “Why does God send
children to that other household, where
they are unwelcome and are beaten and
banged about when 1 would have taken
them ’n the arms of my affection?’ You
say, “Any other trial but this.” Your
trial perhaps may be a disfigured counte
nance or a face that is easily caricatured,
and you say, “I could endure anything if
only 1 was good looking.” And your trial
perhaps is a violent temper, and you have
to drive it like six unbroken horses amid
the gunpowder explosions of a great hol
day, we ever and anon it runs away with
vou, Your trial is the asthma. You say,
“If it were rheumatism or neuralgia or
erysipelas, but it is this asthma, and it is
such an exhausting thing to breathe.”
Your trouble is a husband, sharp, snap
py and cross about the house and raising
a small riot because a button is off. How
could you know the button is off? You
trial is a wife ever in contest with the ser
vante, and she is a sloven, Though she
was very careful abont her appearance 1p
vour presence once, now she is careless,
because, she says, her fortune is made!
Your trial is a hard school lesson you can
not learn, and you have bitten your finger
nails until they are a sight to behold
They never cry in heaven because they
have nothing to cry about. There are no
tears of bereavement, for you shall have
your friends all round about you, There
are no tears of poverty because each one
sits at the King's table and has his own
chariot of salvation and free access to the
wardrobe where princes get their array
No tears sickness, for there are
or ne
crutch for the lame limb and no splint
but the pulses throb
no
for the broken arm,
fall or our gorgeous October before the
leaves scatter.
different modes of thrashing. Oh,
story of the staff that struck
and the rod that beat the cummin and the
iron wheel that went over the corn! Dan
el will describe the lions and Jannah levia-
thian and Paul the elmwood whips with
how aromatic Eden was the day she left
it, and John Rogers will tell of the smart
of the flame and Elijah of the fiery team
that wheeled him up the sky steeps and
Christ of the numbness and the paroxysms
and hemorrhages of the awful erucifixion
There they are before the throne of God
of ail who were
ruck of the rod, on the highest elevation
vd amid heaven
a
all He
3 4 y
1 one eevalion those
st
v the highest ait
who were unde
not ever be thrashin
¢ h
of
those F Wace)
aere
wounds?
very
fe el t o
LAer 1s ant
BOON iter.” And that
when He embosoms all
the hush of this
ay end
rod saves
hie in great
ire |
mornin
I anod
If
would cure
The thought that you as
vagh with this after awhile
rrow and all this trouble
We shall have a great many grand
n heaven, bat I will tell you whiel
the grandest day of all the mill
heaven
tell me
we get there
more glorious. [ suppose it is, but I do
not care much about that.
good enough for me
Yes, I cap
than the breaking in of the English army
upon Lucknow, India. A few wéeks before
in and slew them.
slain were (sken out and thrown
well, As the English army esme inte
Cawnpur they went into the room.
oh, what a horrid scene!
into a
floor was ankle deep in
shoes be submerged of the carnage
locks of hair and fragments of dresses,
the same awful death, waiting amid anguish
untold, waiting in pain and starvation, but
waiting heroically, when, one day. Have
lock and Outram and Norman and Sir
David Baird and Peel, the heroes of the
English army-huzza for them'!—broke in
on that horrid scene, and while vet the
guns were sounding, and while cheers were
issuing from the starving, dying people on
the one side and from the travel worn and
powder blackened soldiers on the other,
right there, in front of the king's palace,
there was such a scene of handshaking and
embracing and boisterous joy as would ut.
terly confound the pen of the poet and the
pencil of the painter. And no wonder,
when these emaciated women, who had
suffered so heroically for Christ's sake,
marched out from their incarceration. one
woutided English soldier got up in his fa
tigue and wounds and leaned against the
wall and threw his cap up and shouted,
“Three Cheers, my boys, for the brave
women!” Yes, that wae an exciting scene,
But a gladder and more triumphant scene
will it when you come up into heaven
from the eonfliets and incarceration of this
world, streaming with the wounde of bat.
tle, and wan with h , and while the
hosts of God are o ng their great ho.
manna you will strike hands of eongratula.
tion and eternal deliverance in the presence
of the throne. On that night there will be
bonfires on every hill of heaven, and there
will be a eandle in every window. Ab, no!
1 forget, 1 forget. They have no need
of the candle or of sun, for the Lord God
giveth them light, and they shall reign for.
ever and ever. Hail, hail, sons and ugh:
ters of the Lord God Almighty!
Copyright, 4 LL. Klawerp }
a —
COMMERCIAL REVIEW,
General Trade Conditions.
R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review of
Trade” says: Evidences of further im-
provement are numerous, Labor con-
troversies are less threatening, many set-
tlements having been effected, while oth-
ers are momentarily anticipated; wages
have been advanced, not only through
strikes, but in some cases voluntarily;
traffic congestion has subsided until it is
possible to deliver goods according to
specifications,
Pressure for iron and steel has not di-
minished perceptibly, yet the impression
is growing that after July 1 the situation
will become approximately normal and
it will be possible to secure deliveries
with some degree of promptness.
Grain markets have begun to feel the
effects of weather reports, and for the
next few months it will be a simple mat-
ter for speculators to secure erratic fluc-
tuations.
Although 400,000 bales more cotton
have come into sight than a year ago,
reports from the South are almost unani-
mous regarding the exhaustion of stocks
Failures for the week numbered 200 in
the United States against 224 last year,
and 31 in Canada against 35 last year.
LATEST QUOTATIONS.
Jest Patent, $4.80; High Grade
Minnesota Bakers, $3.7
Flour -
3.85
Wheat—New York No
No. 2, B4V4aBsc
2, B6c.; Phil-
ae
jaltimore No.
Phila-
SP
N
677% .
!
\
Jaltimore
Corn
New York No. 2
delphia N
A 3
No, 2, 641 5ab% ).
Oats— New York No. 2, 48l4a40c
Philadelphia No ; Balimore No.
2, soc
Hay
No. 1, o0
N03.
large bales $1
timothy, $14.00214.50;
3 da, $12.00a13.00
Green Fruits and Vegetables.—Apples
New York, per brl, $3735a
Fancy Greenings, per brl, 84.50
harleston, per bunch,
~Florida per
Norfolk, per brl,
New York State,
timoth
v
w
assorted,
45.00. Asparagus—(
S0a7 sc Lees new,
bunch, gasc., Broccol:
Hsaloc Cabbage
large Danish, ton, $12.00a14.00;
new Florida, p crate, $1.00a1.50
Native,
do,
5, Western Mar
vania, per
(Maryland and Virginia)
-a16c; Virginia. do a16¢c; West Vir-
ginia, 1835416: Western, —atfc; South
ern, per dozen, 152a16¢ ; guinea, per doz,
Duck Eastern Shore, fancy, do,
31ax2c; do, Western and Southern. do,
30a3ic; small and dirty, do, —a2oc
Goose, per dozen. 45a350¢
Cheese~ New Cheese
to 12%5¢; do. flats, 37 Ihe, 12%c to
picnics, 23 Ibe, 1234a13%;¢
Live and Dressed Poultry
Turkeys—Hens, choice, ate: dg.
young toms, choice. —aige. Chickens—
fens, 12a12%4¢; old roosters, each, 23a
Joc; ducks, fancy, large, 13a14¢; do, mus.
and mongrels, 11a13¢c Geese
Western, each. soayoc. Guinea fowls,
each, 15a20¢c. Dressed Poultry—Turkeys,
hens, good to choice, 17a: do, hens
and young toms, mixed, good to choice
168 Ducks—Good to choice. 14a1s5¢
Young. good to choice, 13a14:
1 old and young. 12a12%%¢
Geese—Good to choice, 10a1 3c. Capons—
Fancy, large, 17a18¢; do, good to choie
15a16¢
Eastern Shore
per dozen,
dozen, ——aifx
.
do,
large, Go ibs, 12
13C;
We quote :
Live Stock.
Chicago. — Cattle -— Good prime
steers, $6.75a7.10; poor to medium, $4.25
26.50; stockers and feeders, $2.30a5.00;
cows, $1.25a5.50 ; heifers, $2.50a6.00: can-
iex
as-fed steers. $so00ab00. Hogs—Mixed
and butchers, $6.10a6.50; good to choice
heavy. $6.40a6.55; rough heavy. $6.10a
6.35: hight, s.o0ab. 30: bulk of sales. 85.1%
ab.3s. Sheep--Steady to 1c higher:
lambs, steady ioc higher; good
choice wethers, S320u560: Western
sheep, $4.73a$0.00; native lambs, $500
6.00
East Liberty—Cattle, choice. $560a
6.7%: prime. $6.2006. 40: good. $5.30a%5.00
Hogs active: prime heavies, $5 70a6 75;
best medinme. $6.7006.75: heavy Yorkers,
$6.50a6.60; light do. $6.3:a0.45: vigs,
$6.00a6.20; roughs, $30006.200 Sheen
steady: best wethers, $:36tas580: culls
and common, $2ztoa350. Veal calves,
$7.50a88.00.
LABOR AND INDUSTRY
Three millions of artificial teeth are
uted each year.
Canning of fruits and vegetables is
Maryland's biggest industry.
Pittsburg’'s 1.400 painters accepted a
4o-cents-an-hour compromise,
Five unions are to be chartered in
Dotto Rico next month, with 00 mem-
rs.
Pennsylvania silk mills have been or
ganized, with a capital of nearly $2.000.-
A dispute between teamsters’ unions
threatens to divide Chicago labor ranks.
fo
to
Deep laid Seheme
KrafteeHenry, while you're at the
telephone, just tell my wife. I'll bring
Mr. Topnotch home to dinner with me
tonight.
Clerk~-Beg pardon, sir, but Mr. Top-
notch is out of town today, and won't
be back.
Kraftee—I know it, but 1 feel as if
Md like to have just one good, square
weal,
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear, There is only one
way to euro deafness, and that is by consti
tutional remedies, Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube, When this tube is in.
flamed you have a rambling sound or {im per-
fect hearing, and when it {8 entirely closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the ind am-
mation can be taken out and this tube re-
stored to its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed terever, Nine cases out of ten
are caused by eatarrh which isnothing but an
inflamed condition of the mucous surface,
cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Cir-
sulars sent free,
Bold by Druggists, 76e,
Hall's Family Pills are the best,
The Bank of France ean compel its cus-
tomers to accept in gold onefifth of any
money drawn from the bank
Best For the Bowels.
KNomatter what ails you, headache to «ean
cer, you will never get well until your bowels
are put right, Cascanzrs help nature, eure
you without a gripe or palp, produce easy
natural movements, cost you just 10cents to
start getting vour health back, Cascanzgrs
Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal
boxes, every tablet tas ©. C. C. stamped on
t. Beware of imitations,
Some peopie make mountains out of mole
hills, and others just make a bluff,
Many School Children Are Siekly,
Mother Gray's Bweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray, s nurse in Children's
Home, New York, break up Colds in 24 hours,
cure Feverishness, Headaches, Stomack
Worms, At all draggists’, 25¢. fample mailed
Free. Address Allen 8, Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y
It is better to have s good ear for music
than a bad voice for it
Earliest Russian Millet,
Will you be short of hay? 1f so,
plenty-of this prodigally prolifie mill
% tons of rieh hay per acre. Price, {
§1.90; 100 Ibs,, 3.00: low freights.
Balzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis,
am of & ship has a stern duty
PIT'R manent iv et
ITS permanently cus
iret dav's use «
rer. ®#2trial bottle sn
sh Bt
pred § OF NOrvTOnY-
ness after
Nerve Regd
Dr. RH.
{Dr ie 8 Great
1treatiselres
Phila.
Pa
be funny,
Plso's Cure for
medileine
SadreL, Ocear
onsumption is an infaili
for coughs and cold N
Grove N.J.,
Even an
C10
autom
Peculiar to Itself.
This applies 10 St
fifty years i
Jacols Oil used
best
: }
Weak and Sickly Children
bY en —_
£ gest i “ iv
trout loss of flesh and general weakness,
thy and strong by the us
of Voi srative ( ompound Every
doctor whe at all vp to date will say that
Compound will make the
bring colour to the
flesh where health d«
who have been
should be treated with
have inherited a weal
stomact
subject to
can i
Vogeler's Curat
blood pure
cheeks, and
it
and
put on
Children weak
from two to five drops, twice daily, most
satisfactory results will follow. Itis the Lest
of all medicines, because it is made {rom the
Sample bottle free on application to the proprietors,
Ye
vw?
removes from the soil
large quantities of
Potash.
The fertilizer ap-
plied, must furnish
enough Potash, or the
land will lose its pro-
ducing power,
Read carefully our books
on crope-sent Sree,
GURMAN KALI WORKS,
o3 Nassau S81, New York,
150 Kinds for 16¢.
REE
tov
i
{
i
i
WHERE buGiuns FAIL
To Cure Woman’s Ills, Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Come
und Succeeds. Mrs. Pauline
ndson Writes :
“Dean Me. PINEnAM : —Boon after
my marriage two years ago 1 found
myself in constant pain. The doctor
said my womb was turned, and this
cansed the pain with coosiderable in-
flammation. He prescribed for me for
MES, PAULINE JUDSON,
Becretary of Bchermerhorn Golf Club, +
Brookiyn, New York.
four months, when my husband became
Surpatien; because | grew worse instead
of better, and in speaking to the drug
fin he advised him to get Lydia E.
*inkham’s Vegetable Compound
and Banative Wash, How | wish I
had taken that at first ; it would have
saved me weeks of sufferipg. It took
three long months to restore me, but
it is a happy relief, and we are both
most grateful to you. Your Compound
has brought joy to our home and
health to me.”"— Mus. Pavvine Jupsox,
47 Hoyt Street, Brooklyn. N. Y. —
$3000 forfeit If above testimenlel is mot genuine.
It would seem by this state-
ment that women would save
time and much sickness if they
would get Lydia E. Pinkbam's
Vegetable Compound at once,
and also write to Mrs. Pinkham
at Lynn, Mass., for special ade
vice. It is free and always helps.
~~ THE BEST
WATERPROOF CLOTHING
IN THE WORLD
A J) fx /, BEARS THS TRADE MARK
ey
FADE IN BLACK OF YELLOW
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES
ON SALE EVERYWHERE
CATALOGU REL
MR. snowine iLL UNE OF
/ HN GARMENTS AND HATS
gins Stores,
and the est
shoe deniers
eTrTYRIeTe,
farTION:
The peruine
have WW. 1
Donging’
RINE BE
$ 204
JL UNION MADE
®
Notice imevrase of sales in table below:
1696 en 148,700 Patrs.
airy i. oat
oe nen ves Pairs.
Dowticd in Four Years.
7
W. L. Dougias makes and sellemore men's
£3.00 and 83 50 shoes than any other two man-
ufacturers in the world.
W. L. Douglas $8.00 and $3.50 sho placed
side by side with $5.00 and $4.00 shoes of
other makes, ars found to be just as good
They will outwear two pairs of ordinary
$3.00 and $3.50 shoes,
Made of the best leathers, including Patent
Oorona Kid, Oorora Colt, and Nationa! anharen.
wed.
a ore
I had been troubled a year, off
and on, with constipation, bilious-
ness and sick headaches, One day
a friend asked me what the trouble
was. When I told him he recom-
mended Ripans Tabules. That
evening | got a box, and after the
second box I began to feelso much
relief that | kept on with them. |
have Ripans Tabules always in the
house now and carry a package of
them in my pocket.
At druggists,
The Five-Cent packet is sanough for as
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
60 cents, contains a supply for a year.
DROPSY xr zur
Be rn
clin BEE
BRUEAT TIS IT PAYS