OHAS. J. WATSON MOB. L. COOPER The Inside of Worthy Clothes The inside of WORTHY CLOTHES is reflected in the out side appearance. They look to be the best values at the price—and they are / made inside to be just what they look to be. /V t / Quality, workmanship, style, fit and fabric to insure the maxi- jfr jt L * : \A mum in service, are the ingredients of WORTHY CLOTHES, jjj f] \ .ffl. That's what you get, whether you pay sls S2O $25 lli Vi 1 Worthy Clothes are to be had in amount of favor and are here in ii the striking English models for the wide variety. r"1; * young fellow, as well as those Then there are the plain and \ styles sought by conservative fancy serges and tweeds for those V||' f dressers. who prefer them. Jjm v The Olen Urquhart plaids and Whatever your taste, there's a suit checks come in for the greatest of WORTHY OLOTHES to meet it & RAW SKIMILK MENACE 1 Large Number of Hogs Stricken With v Foot and Mouth Disease Attrib uted to This Cause Washington. T>. C., April 30.—A feature of the present outbreak of foot j and mouth disease to which the Federal authorities attach much importance is theunprecedentedly large numberof ohgs which have been affected. Both actual , ly and in proportion to the' total nunv bei of animals stricken, this has been much larger than in any of the pre : vious outbreaks in this country. The chief reason, the authorities say. is the ' spread of the infection through un 1 cooked skimmed milk and other cream-1 1 erv by-products returned to the farms | 1 to be fed hogs. Infected garbage, it is : 1 thought, is also to he held responsible for a certain portion of the loss. 1 In the epidemic of 1902, in which 1 ' 4.461 nnimals were lost, only 360 of ' 1 the total were hogs. The loss in cattle ' 1 amounted to nearly ST per cent, of the j total, that in hogs to only S per cent. 1 and in other animals to only 5 per cent. 1 In the present epidemic, however, the * loss in hogs has been almost equal to 1 1 that of cattle, each being within a frac 5 tion of 47 per cent. Of 146.188 ani •' nials lost since the outbreak of the dis ' ease in Michigan last fall, 65.776 were e cattle. 68,275 hog? ami the remainder.. * P.OS7. sheep and goats. The epidemic P i —■— , t Do Not Gripe We have a pleasant laxative that will • do just **hat you want it to do. We sell thousands of them and we j have never seen a better remedy for the t bowels. Sold only by us, 10 cents. I , George A. Gorgas j ; 1 STUDENT S ELOPEMENT WITH WIDOW CAUSES STIR -* f- s ■i\ v ~-: ►.V '!'■ • f MmM J , . - vw«.. t 'S~"t ' *k iP* j&s * | f.. * ll^^^M||^&: J* * ;i : ,^£j v t :^ <*n£ m< MMfe , ; jBB I. H A A Pv I , yr " % Interesting developments are expected as a result of the marriage of Mrs. Alma V. Hayne, a "widow and to Donald Shields Andrews, a Yale senior student and son