The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 07, 1905, Image 3

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RE TER
A WOMAN’S SUFFERINGS.
Weak, Irregular, Racked With Paing
Made Well and 36 Pounds Heavier.
Mrs. E. W. Wright, of 172 Main St.,
Haverhill, Mass.,, says: “In 1898 I
‘was suffering so with sharp pains in
the small of the
back and had such
frequent dizzy
spells that I could
scarcely get about
the house. The
urinary passages
were also quite ir-
regular. Monthly
periods were so
i distressing I
dreaded their approach. This was my
condition for four years. Doan’s Kid-
ney Pills helped me right away when
I began with them, and three boxes
cured me permanently.”
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For sale by all dealers. Price, 50
cents per box.
Germany Taking Its Medicine.
Consul General Guenther of Frank-
fort ‘writes: The German wine produc-
ers and exporters are alarmed over
the action of our Agricultural De-
partment in drafting a new law to pre-
vent the adulteration of foodstuffs,
wine, etc. They are making strenuous
efforts to ward off what they call
‘this great danger to their interests.”
The various associations of wine
growers and the Chambers of Com-
merce in Western Germany have
memorialized the German Govern-
ment to intervene. Even United
States Consuls have received print-
ed circular letters protesting against
the application of the said law to
shipments of German wine, which
is claimed to be pure and wholesome.
CUTICURA GROWS HAIR
Bealp Cleared of Dandruff and Hair Ree
stored by One Box of Cuticura and
One Cake of Cuticura Soap.
‘A. W. laft, of Independence, Va., writ-
ing under date of Sept. 15, 1904, says: “L
have had falling hair and dandruff for
twelve years and could get nothing to help
me. Ifinally 1 bought one box of Cuticura
Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap,
and they cleared my scalp of the dandruff
and stopped the hair falling. Now my
hair is growing as well as ever. 1 highly
prize {uticura Seap as a toilet soap.
(Signed) ‘A. W. Taft. Independence, Va.”
CHINA AROUSED.
Students Sent to Japan to .Study
Secret of - Progress.
A missionary agent of our Ameri-
can Bible society at Shanghai reports
that ‘a very great change has come
over the spirit of China as a conse-
quence of the Japanese victory over
Russia. The victory of Japan over
China, so soon succeeded by its de-
feat qf a great Western and Christian
power, has startled Chinamen to in-
quiring as to the causes of so extra:
- ordinary a manifestation of prowess,
and by an oriental nation which is
small relatively to China, itself s¢
long the easy prey of European
powers, says the New York “Sun.”
Accordingly great numbers o!
Chinese students have been sent ti
Japan to learn how, at .last,. such:
mastery was attained by a people of
the orient. Of the thousands oi
students many have returned to China
to disseminate the knowledge they ac-
quired and to propagate in books and
newspapers their larger and more en-
lightened views of oriental needs and
destiny. At the time this report of
the agent of the Bible society was
written there were as many at 1,753
Chinese students still in Japan.
As a ‘result. of this Japanese pro-
paganda, the Chinese, more especial
ly in Peking, but also in the country
districts to a very considerable ex-
tent, are getting, new ideas of pro-
gres; but it is of progress without
Christianity.
Female Miner.
Miss Madge Pickler, daughter of a
former well-known member of Con-
gress, has left her home in South
Dakota to take possession of a mine
which she owns in the Cripple Creek
district. Miss Pickler every morn-
ing dons a miner's garb and goes
down into the mine.
OUST THE DEMON.
A Tussle With Coffee.
erp
There is something fairly demonia-
cal in the way coffee sometimes wreaks
its fiendish malice on those who use it.
A lady writing from Calif. says:
“My husband and I, both lovers of
coffee, suffered for some time from a
very annoying form of nervousness,
accompanied by most frightful head-
aches. In my own case there was
eventually developed some sort of af-
fection of the nerves leading from the
spine to the head.
«I was unable to hold my head up
straight, the tension of the nerves
drew it to one side, causing me the
most intense pain. We got no relief
from medicine, and were puzzled as to
what caused the trouble, till a friend
suggested that possibly the coffee we
drank had something to do with it, and
advised that we quit it and try Pos-
tum Coffee. :
«wwe followed his advice, and from
the day that we began to use Postum
we both began to improve, and in a
very short time both of us tere en-
tirely relieved. The nerves became
steady once more, the headaches
cased, the muscles in the back of my
neck relaxed, my head straightened
up and the dreadful pain that had sO
punished me while I used the old kind
of coffee vanished.
«We have never resumed the use of
the old coffee, but relish our Postum
every day as well as we did the for-
mer beverage. And we are delighted
to find that we can give it freely to
our children also, something ~-e never
dared to do with the old kind of cof-
fee.” Name given by Postum Co., Bat-
tle Creek, Mich.
Postum Coffee contains absolutely no
drugs of any tind, but the
offoe drinker from the old drug poison.
2's g reason.
relieves
‘abundance,
NOME PRIMITIVE
PLANT FOODS
i ———— asia
2) E are accustomed to speak
of the Indian as a hunter,
to think that his food con-
sisted wholly of flesh, and
NN that he jived purely on the
products of the chase. This
impression is very far from true. The
Indian—like man everywhere except in
the Arctic regions—is an omnivorous
creature, and while he may subsist
chiefly on flesh, he also greatly relishes
vegetable food. As a matter of fact,
the great majority of the aboriginal
tribes of North America were cultiva-
tors of the ground. The popular idea
that the Indian was a nomad wander-
ing from place to place and never
camping twice in the same spot arises
from an entire misconception of facts.
We have been told for years by the
newspapers and other equally ill-in-
formed authorities that the Indians
were wanderers, and we have come
to believe that this was true. It was
not. The Indians lived in very large
measure in permanent villages, near
which they had their cultivated fields,
and which they occupied for the great-
er part of each year. At certain sea-
sons special absences—more or less
protracted—were necessary for the pur-
pose of hunting some particular game
or of gathering some special sort of
wild roots or- fruits.
This permanency of habitation was
true even of some of the tribes inhab-
iting the semi-arid plains who depend-
ed for support on the buffalo, and to-
day, one who visits one of the plains
tribes and asks the old men how their
fathers used to live will everywhere
receive the same answer. They will
say that they used to grow corn, beans,
squashes or pumpkins, and tobacco
and besides this they gathered ax
abundance of wild crops which gave
them a certain amount of vegetable
food all through the year.
Of the Iroquois we are told that the
crops they harvested were so large that
they frequently had in their store-
houses two or three years’ supply of
corn, beans and squashes. The Paw-
nees, occupying the arid West, like the
Delawares of the moist sea coast,
stored their crops in great pits dug in
the ground, which they lined with
mats, and in which their corn was per-
fectly preserved all through the win-
ter, or until the supply was exhausted.
Very different was the situation of the
Cocopahs inhabiting the desert away
to the Southwest. They scraped aside
the rocks that covered the dry moun-
tainside and, uncovering a little soil,
planted there a few hills of corn and
squashes, carrying on their backs from
the distant spring the water which
should moisten the ground to cause the
seeds to sprout and to refresh the
plants . until the crop matured, and
when it was gathered they at once con-
sumed it. .
Within the memory of living men,
and while there were yet buffalo in
the Western Indians of
many tribes continued their primitive
culture of the stubborn soil. The Paw-
nee women used to hoe their corn with
hoes made from the shoulderblade of
the buffalo lashed to a wooden handle,
and about the same time, the warlike
Cheyennes were planting their little
cornfields on the Little Missouri River.
We know that in early days, when
wooded Minnesota was much farther
from the centre of things than Alaska
is to-day, the Indians of that territory
planted little crops of corn, loosening
the soil, either with hoes purchased
from the traders or with the hardened
sharpened branch of a tree. Their
fields were small, from a quarter of
an acre to an acre in extent, and pro-
duced a small corn the ears of which
were from three to eight inches long,
and which was chiefly consumed green
as roasting ears. A part of the crop,
however, was boiled on the ear while
green, cut from the cob and dried in
the sun to be kept for winter use.
Boiled with meat it made a nourishing
and palatble dish. There was no food
more delicious, and none better to work
on than dried corn and buffalo meat.
Over the whole of North America,
wherever the climate permitted it to
ripen, corn was cultivated by the In-
dians and constituted an important
part of their subsistence. Loskiel who
in the eighteenth century wrote inter-
estingly and at great length of the
Indians among whom the United
Brethren worked, enumerates mo less
than twelve methods employed by the
Indians in preparing their corn for
food. A concentrated form of nourish-
ment much employed when traveling
on the warpath, or where it was neces-
sary to go swiftly or with light loads,
was citamon, an interesting analogue
of the pemmican used in old prairie
travel. Pemmican consisted of pul-
verized dried meat mixed with melted
fat, but, as those will remember who
have read the old works of {ravel in
the Northwest, or even those “Trails of
the Pathfinders,” which have recently
appeared in Forest and Stream, there
was another sort of pemmican made
of the pulverized flesh of fish also
mixed with fat. Citamon, on the other
hand, was finely pounded cornmeal
mixed with powdered maple sugar, and
then packed in a sack so tightly that
the air could not enter it. While pem-
mican was purely a flesh food, citamon
was wholly vegetable.
It is well understood that the In-
dians had discovered the art of making
maple sugar long before the coming
of the whites, and that they taught
first the French in Canada and later
other white people how to manufacture
sugar and syrup from the sap of the
maple tree. They used not only the
sap of the hard or sugar maple, but
also that of the soft or white maple,
tiwough of Jatter much
was required to make a given quantity
the
more sap
even out on the plains, sugar was made
by Indians from the sap of the common
box elder tree.—Forest and Stream.
Jor sugar. In the Western country,
THE ORIGIN OF RADIUM.
It is Believed to Be Derived From Some
Parent Element.
Professor F. Soddy has made recent-
ly some interesting contributions to
our knowledge of radium, about whose
probable origin there has been so much
speculation. Radium is now believed
to be derived from some parent ele-
ment which is decomposing at a very
slow rate, and Professor Soddy not
only supports this view, but states
that from the disintegration of radium
must follow other and better-known
elements. On the assumption that
there is such a parent element and the
quantity of radium is minute, this par-
ent element must exist in large
amounts, and it must have a large
atomic weight in order to give radium
on its disintegration, a process that is
known to be very slow.
The only two elements answering
these requirements are uranium and
thorium, and as the former is practi-
cally always found in company with
radium it must be the substance
sought. Professor Soddy has been able
to demonstrate this fact experiment-
ally by obtaining from uranium, which
originally was free from radium, an
unmistakable emanating power. The
original uranium, it was proved, did
not possess the power of emitting an
emanation, and as the emanation thus
obtained seemed to be in all respects
identical with that of radium, it
seemed a proper inference that the
uranium in the course of its decompo-
sition was producing radium.
Professor Soddy believes that ra-
dium, actinium and polonium are in-
termediate products in the disintegra-
tion of radium, and _that the ultimate
product must be an element of lighter
atomic weight and should be a known
substance. The logical candidates for
such a position are bismuth and lead,
and inasmuch as the latter occurs in
the granium-radium minerals the pro-
ponderance of opinion is in its favor.
This seems in a fair way soon to be
settled, as polonium. not only is easily
obtained, but also changes very rapid-
ly, and the question of deciding defi-
nitely on this final product is apparent-
ly only one of cost and experiment.—
harper’s Weekly.
U, Vand W,
“Spell it wifh a We, Sammy, spell it
with a We!” the elder Mr. Weller
shouted from the gallery of the court
room to his son when the judge desired
to learn the correct initial of his name.
Doubtless, in a delightful anecdote re-
cently related of Mr. Laurence Hutton
and two of his friends, it was a recol-
lection of this famous injunction that
moved a perplexed parent to adopt,
when the propriety of a W was ques-
tioned, the simple rule, “When in doubt
choose ~.”
Laurence Hutton and the actor, Law-
rence Barrett, were both intimate
friends of the artist, Frank Millet; so
when, one summer in London, a baby
son was born to Millet, they both ac-
companied him to the vestry-house of
St. Mary’s, Kensington, in which parish
his residence lay, to have its birth duly
registered. :
The usual questions were asked and
answered, Mr. Hutton relates, and fin-
ally the name of the child. “Law-
rence,” said the father.
“L-a-w-r-e-n-c-e,” said Barrett, in his
most! formidable high-tragedy «voice,
and with a strong accent on the w.
“Pardon me,” said Hutton, ‘“L-a-u-
r-e-n-c-e, if you please,” with the accent
on the u.
“L-a-W!”’ shouted Barrett.
“L-a-u!” insisted Hutton, and the
poor little official laid down his pen in
amazement.
“The clerk was on the point of faint-
ing or calling the police,” added Mr.
Hutton, *when Mr. Millet, in his quiet
way, came to the rescue.”
“ ‘It appears to me, he exclaimed,
‘that in a case of this kind the father
of the child should have something to
say! I never interfered with the nam-
ing of any of your babies, did I? Then
turning to the clerk, he said, ‘Spell him
with a v.
“And Lavrence Millet he is by law to
this day.”—Youth’s Companion.
A School of Glove Making.
Mainly because of objection on the
part of skilled employes to having an
unlimited force of green hands en-
gaged, and also owing to chronic scare-
ity of competent help, the Master Glov-
ers’ Association, principally composed
of wholesale firms in the metropolis,
opened a free school of instruction at
Gloversville, N. Y., last week. It is in-
tended to make this institution perma-
nent, with the purpose of supplying
present and future shortage in the kid
zlove labor market. The various styles
in stitching are taught, among other
branches of the business, under the
general direction of a corps of expert
male and female tutors. As the ap-
prentices- become proficient operatives
they are at liberty to seek employment
in any factory operated by a member
of the organization. A uniform wage
schedule prevails. Many applications
have been received from both men and
women.—New York Press.
Destroying Germs.
The inspector of the disinfection
office of Turin, Italy, has instituted an
innovation in destroying germs in
dwellings. He uses a one per cent. so-
lution of sal soda for cleansing the
floors, whereby the bacilli of diphtheria
d in one minute,
and typhus are k
: isciating Stations.
Russian railway stations are usual-
{y about two miles from the towns
which they serve. This is a precau-
tion against fire, as many of the Rus-
sian dwellings, particularly in rural
districts, are thatched with straw.
FITSpermanently cured. Nofitsornervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestorer,$2trial bottleand treatise free
Dr.R.H, KuinNE, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila. Pa,
Great Britain 1s barely holding her own
in trade with Argentina.
Illiterate Roumanians.
Of all civilized countries, Roumania
is by all odds the least progressive in
the matter of education. In a recent
census particularly directed toward
this matter it was found that in a
population of a little more than 6,000,
000 two-thirds could neither read nor
write. This in itself is a poor enough
showing, but it further appears that
of the remaining third not more than
one-half are capable of more than
reading or writing the simplest words,
and but one-sixth of the inhabitants are
to be classed with the fairly well edu-
cated. The census was taken with a
view of remedying this state of af-
fairs, and it is probable that in a
short time reforms will be instituted
to better this condition. Meanwhile
Roumania is far behind Russia in the
matter of education..—New York Her-
ald.
Rallway Station Costing $17,000,000.
At the rate at which the improves
ments are being carried on at the ter-
minal of the New York Central Rail-
road, at Forty-second street, New Xork
City, it is expected that three months
more will see the Grand Central Sta-
tion razed and work begun on the
magnificent structure which is to re-
place.it.
Work on the improvements has gone
as far as it can go without entering
the station or causing an interruption
of the train service. Where two years
ago stood several hundred homes, to-
day is an excavation quite extensive
in itself, but only a fraction of the
great ‘hele that will be made in the
nineteen square blocks which the tere
minal will cover.
So anxious are the officers of the
railroad company to get their improve-
ments into shape in time to be ready
to .give station facilities to the new
subway routes planned for the city
that men have been kept working day
and night on the great excavation.
The plans of the railroad company
call for the expenditure of $25,000,000
on' the improvements. All of the land
"now occupied by station and tracks is
to be evacuated and an entirely new
terminal built. About $17,000,000 alone
is to be spent in a new station. There
are to be two systems of tracks, one
raised above the other, one system
for suburban service and the other for
trains to ‘distant points. . Eléctricity
will also De substituted for steam
throughout the terminal. * Ft ig
It may not be generally known that
the New York Central lines constitute
the Water Level line connecting the
East and the West. x ike
They run along the Hudson River,
New York to Albany; along “the ‘Mo--
hawk River and Erie Canal, Albany to
Buffalo; along »Lake. Erie, Buffalo to
Toledo and Detroit, and along the level
of Lake Michigan from Toledo to Chi-
water in sight nearly every mile of the
wiy.,. =
The New York Central operates
. more than twelve ‘thousand miles of
railway east-of Chicago, St. Louis and
Cincinnati. It .is the direct line from
New York::and Boston to Niagara
Falls and to the West, the Northwest
and the Southwest. by way. of the
great cataract and Chicago, St. Louis
or Cincinnati. : : :
This is one of the reasons why the
press of two continents call the New:
. York Central “America’s Greatest
Railroad.”
_A Japanese Shipyard.
. Japan’s shipbuilding yard at Naga-
saki, giving employment to 7,000 men
is by far the largest shipbuilding yard
in the Far East. It wi§ started in
1864 for ship “repairing, and ‘its dry
dock was not built till 1871. : Since
then it has been, and still is, the
nursery of the Japanese navy.
Since’ 1898 the yard has built
eight steamers, each of 5,000 tons or
more. Out of the 7,000 workers only
six are foreigners, but all the engin-
eers and all the mechanics speak
English, having received their techni-
cal training in England or the Unit-
ed States. “Now we train our own
foremen on the spot at home,” said
the Japanese engineer in charge. In
the yard is a museum containing mo-
dels of ail the best shirs in the world.
England supplied the main equipment
of the yard, but the electrical appar-
atus in use was manufactured in the
United States—New York Sun.
It is estimated that to collect one
pound of homey from clover 62,000,000
heads of clover must be deprived of
nectar and 3,75C,000 visits from the
bees must be made.
mrs. Winsiow’sSoothina Syrup for Children
teething, soften ths gums, reduces inflamma-
tion,allays pain,cureswind colie, 25c.a bottle
In 1892 Japan had only
merchant steamships.
167,000 tons of
Piso’s Cure for Consumntionis an infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W
SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb, 17, 190)
tok 1s estimated
The population of Ban
at 500,000 souls.
The British army authorities be-
lieve that it is khakhi that has stopped
recruiting. So they are going to re-
turn to the scarlet, reserving the
ing camps.
Acetylene gas is now used as an ex-
plosive.
a force is obtained from it which can
compete with that of powder and dy-
namite.
mcie gccce brighter inc J olcr
Culler
cults, Ask ceale
By means of an air mixture |
cago—965 miles of water level, with,
khakhi for active service and the train- |
ADY ¢
CT we Wall reLC peeiypaic at itca pi cl
THE IDEAL WIFE
Shapes the Destiny of Men—The Influence of a
Healthy Woman Cannot Be Overestimated.
Seven-eighths of the
men in this world marry
a woman because she is
beautiful in their eyes—
because she has the quali-
ties which inspire admira-
tion, respect and love.
There is a beauty in
health which is more at-
tractive to men than mere
regularity of feature.
The influence of women
glorious in the possession
of perfect physical health
upon men and upon the
civilization of the world
could never be measured.
Because of them men have
attained the very heights
of ambition; because of
them even thrones have
been established and de-
stroyed.
‘What a disappointment,
then, to see the fair young
wife’s beauty fading away
before a year passes over
her head! A sickly, half-
dead-and-alive woman,
especially when she is
the mother of a family,
is a damper to all joyous-
ness in the home, and a
drag upon her husband.
The cost of a wife's con-
stant illness is a serious
drain upon the funds of a
household, and too often all the doc-
toring does no good.
If a woman finds her energies are
flagging, and that everything tiresher,
dark shadows appear under her eyes,
her sleep is disturbed by horrible
dreams; if she has backache, head-
aches, bearing-down pains, mervous-
ness, whites, irregularities, or despon-
dency, she should take means to build
her system up at once by a tonic with
specific powers, such as Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
This great remedy for women has
done more in the way of restoring
health to the women of America than
all other medicines put together. Itis
the safeguard of woman's health.
Following we publish, by request, a
letter from a young wife.
Mrs. Bessie Ainsley of 611 South 10th
Street, Tacoma, Wash., writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :—
‘t Ever since my child was born I have suf-
fered, as 1 hope Tor women ever have, with
inflammation. female weakness, bearing-down
pains, backache and wretched headaches: It
affected my stomach so that I could not en-
Joy. ny meals, and half my time was spent
in bed.
“Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound
made me a well woman, and I feel so grate-
ful that I am glad to write and tell you of
my marvelous recovery. It brought me
health, new life and vitality.”
What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound did for Mrs. Ainsley it will
do for every woman who is in poor
health and ailing. -
Its benefits begin when its use begins.
It gives strength and vigor from the
start, and surely makes sick women
well and robust.
Remember Lydia E..Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound holds the record for
the greatest number of actual cures of
woman's ills. This fact is attested to
by the thousands of letters from grate-
ful ‘women which ‘are on ‘file in‘ the
Pinkham laboratory Merit alone can
produce such results.
Women should remember that a cure
for all female diseases actually exists.
and that cure'is Lydia E. Pinkham'’s
Vegetable Compound. Take no substi-
tute. .
If you have symptoms you don't
understand write to Mrs.- Pinkham,
Lynn, Mass., for special advice—it is
free and always helpful.
Evdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail
WINC
““ New Rival”
pattern and penct
Rival ’’ -Shells.
ALL
“NEW RIVAL” BLACK POWDER SHELLS
The most successful hunters shoot Winchester
Shells, blue in color, because they can kill
more game with them.
will find that they arc sure fire, give good
-in every way. Crcder Factory Loaded ¢¢ New
Don’t accept any substitute.
DEALERS
HE STER
Factory Locaded Shotgun
Try them and you
ration and are satisfactory
SELL "THE
‘Pittsburg, Pa.
This old and reliable institution has prepared thousands of youpg men and women for the active duticg
of life,
To those in want of a useful, practical education, circulars will be sent on application,
PP. DUFF & SONS.
- The ‘London Crystal Palace accom-
modates ‘more .people than any other
building in the world. It will hold
100,000 people.
WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195
To introduce. Buy direct and save the dif-
ference. - Easy terms. Write us and we'll
tell you all about it. :
HOKFFMANN'S MUSIC HOUSE,
537 Smithfield Street, Pittsburg, Pa.
Positive, Comparative, Superlative,
“I have used one of your Fish Brand
Slickers for five years, and now want
a new one, also one for a friend. I
would not be without one for twice the
cost. They arc just as far ahead of a
common coat as a common one is
ahead of nothing.”
(Name on application.)
HIGHEST AWARD WORLD'S FAIR, 1904.
Be sure you don’t get one of the com-
mon kind —this is the ;
mark of exceilence.
A. J. TOWER CO.,
BOSTON, U.S.A.
TOWER CANADIAN CO., LimiTED,
TORONTO, CANADA. 352
Makers of Wet Weather Clothing & Hats.
TRADE
nvn
F WOMEN
troubled with ills peculiar to a, 7TH
their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc-
cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inflammation and local
cures leucorrheea and rasal catarrh,
powder forr lve 1
clea
a , germicidal
and economical th ig eptics for all
TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box.
Trial Box and Book of instructions Free.
YHE R. PAXTON COMPANY Boston, Mase.
URE FOR.
ALL ELSE FAILS.
. Tastes Good. Use
= GURES WHER
@ Best Cough Syru
in time.
ONE Esher
Shin hie beth ACS
£
p.
If afitficted
ant Thompson's Eye Water
FA
ther dye. Cre 10c 13
sed Lee Leckle Eow
DELES
W. L. DoucLAS
$8204 °32° SHOES
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line
L
cannot be equalled at any price.
2 2 July 6, 1878.
{ F DOUGLAS MAKES AND SELLS
i MORE MEN'S $3.50 SHOES THAN
| ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER.
| £ REWARD to anyone who can
| $1 0,000 disprove this statement.
| W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ex-
| cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearin
qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50
| snoe in the world. They are just as good as
| those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 — the only
| difference is the price. If I could take you into
| my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in
| the world under one roof making men’s fine
shoes, and show you the care with which every
pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize
why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best
shoes produced in the world.
If I could show you the difference between the
shoes made in my factory and those of other
makes, you would understand why Douglas
$3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold
their shape, fit better, wear loner, and are of
greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50
shoe on the market to=day.
W. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoes for
Men, $2.50, $2.00. Boys’ School &
Liross SH0e8,$2.580, $2, 31.75,%1.
CAUTION .—Insist upon having W.L.Doug-
| las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his'mame and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. Ashoedealerinevery town where
W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of
samples sent free for inspection upon request.
Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy.
W.L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles.
P. N. U. 26, 1805.
Ba 2 On age at 62,
8 War. On ais
ol ® and tor widow
war. We have records of service. Laws
advice free A, w.
| 518 Walnut Street, ¢
Bo
ually ~e AT 8
rs. MONRO
incinnati, Qhio
tne
{ Mix Ce
(ES
CO. Unionv Mo.
3
McCORMIUK & »ONS,
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