nition abor ning resi- ades rered roney [ayor gates dress ly. dull follow: en 1, 40@ rashed, rashed, L@35¢; d de- 3, 3D D37Y%C. [@28¢; J@34c¢; halt lelaine, -Three- 235¢C. TS. re and ng at ieathed eceatly old, a , was ylvania Ae eclared persons a large en pill- re died f Pitts- ailroad . a new a cost ;. been bs the having the city ind sev- a dyna- of the 1d near > in the onstruc- engaged ynamite. Shot. fairs of Peters- )artment inted to ept six, dds that and ae- elr's may uble. amblers. e United the Ohio resident y lost at om - lost. Trout, of . men to st his of the was car- intability inst his A gd fal Colonel Arthur L. Hamilton, {i of the 7th Ohio Volunteers, 259 | Goodale street, Columbus, O., writes: ¢As a remedy for ca- | tarrh and stomach trouble IX § can fully recommend Peruna.” Mrs. Hamilton, wife of the allant Colonel, is an ardent riend of Peruns also. ay New Sugar Cane, From South America comes the Iat- est substitute for sugar cane. Its juice cannot he fermented, and for this reason the plant is to be devel oped for the manufacture of syrup. iTCHING. SCALP HUMOR Lady Suffered Tortures Uniil Cured by Cuticura-—-Scratched Day and Night. “My scalp was covered with little pim- ples and I suffered tortures from the itch- ing." “I was scratching all day and night, and ‘I could get no rest. I wgshed my bead with hot water and Cuticura Soap and then applied the Cuticura Ointment as a dressing. One box of the ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap cured me. Now my head is entirely clear and my hair is growing splendidly. I have used Cuticura Soap ever since and shall never be without it. (Signed) -Ada C. Smith, 309 Grand St., Jersey City, N. J.” In the early days of railroading in this country horses were used to help the locomotive on upgrades. #3), Cut Your Wor in Two Atkins Saws cut not only wood, iron and other materials better than any other, but they cut work, That is because they are made of the best steel in the world by men that know how. . Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware dealers. Catalogue on request. E.C. ATKINS ®. CO. Inc. Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis BraNcHES—New York, Chicagoy Minneapolis Portland (Oregon), Seattle, San Francisco Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto (Canada) “N Accept ne substitute—Insist on the Atkins Brand | SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWHERE 2 FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc- esssful. Fhoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs pe discharges, heals inflammation and local eness, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh, “Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, oR Ee eal and economical than liquid antiseptics for a. TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists; 00 centsa box. = Trial Box and Book of instructions Free, THE KR. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON, Mass. When Baby Has the Croup t oxsie’s Croup Cure. 'It cur s and prevents Poeumonis and Diphtheri . No opium. No nausea. cents at dru _ ists or mailed postpaid. : 3 A N.Ys P. HUOX SIE, Buitale. FRUITS GROW IN POPULARITY... or & Good Signs of Wholesome Taste Markedly Evi= : dent in England.- 8 N interesting and salutary phase of modern civiliza- tion is its growing regard for a fruit diet. To what extent the teach- ing of vegetarian doctrines has influenced the popular taste, or the unhealthy conditions of present-day life have given rise to a spontaneous de- mand for the “kindly fruits of the earth” eannot, perhaps, be determined; but the fact remains that there never was so much fruit consumed in Eng- land, in the history, at any rate, of its markets, as there is to-day. This popular demand has taken many interesting turns. One is the plea for cultivation of several*of our wild ber- ries; another is the extraordinary in- crease in the consumption of bananas, the imports of which have risen an- nually during the last three or four Years by millions of bunches. And still another turn, the most curious of all, is the growing demand for strange foreign fruits—weirdly- shaped and colored vegetable bodies “which the Covent Garden salesmen would never display in their windows and suffer the host of inquisitive callers who merely ask questions were it not that certain fruit-loving epi- cures, who are increasing in numbers, are always ready to pay a very high price for them. Of the new fruits which have been introduced to London during the last two or three years the mousteria de la Cosia is perhaps the rarest and most curious... It comes from Maderia aud Portugal, where the term used to de- scribe it means ‘‘a squashy pine.” The fruit is, like a long pine-cone, about eighteen inches in length, and is ex- tremely juicy. It is very luscious in taste and its fragrance is delightful, one cut fruit being sufficient to scent a whole house. Owing to the fact that it takes three years to ripen, the monsteria is very seldom obtainable at Covent Garden; but as soon as a consignment reaches the market, watchful epicures make their appearance, and buy up every specimen at from half a crown to three shillings and sixpence each. The tree upon which it grows is a species of pine. It flowers prettily, then the green {fruits appear. I'or three seasons they hang, and then the shell turns yellow, drops off, and the perfectly ripened fruit is ready for gathering. The inside of the monsteria is of a creamy color, and the de la Cosia is stated to be the best of several varieties of the fruit. The avocada, or alligator, pear comes from Maderia and the West Indies, and is the edible over which there has been some controversy as to whether it is a fruit or a vegetable. Experts have de- .cided that it is a fruit, though it is popularly eaten as a savory. It has the shape of an ordinary pear, but in color is of a distinct green, and green- est when ripe. When the large stone in its centre is removed there remains a delicately flavored pulp, which, when seasoned with pepper, salt and vinegar, is-eaten with bread and butter. Some people cut the end off an avocada, scoop out the pulp, and eat it on a steak or chop. Messrs. Kauffman, of Covent Garden, through whose hands all the new for- eign fruits in London pass, state that the experienced will select the avocada before any other fruit, and will often gladly pay half a crown for a single small specimen. Two varieties of the granadillo, the yellow, egg-shaped. and the purple, orange-shaped, have been placed on the market at various times during the last two years. Both are popular, con- sidering the great demand which every small consignment which arrives in London causes. The granadillos come chiefly from the West Indies. The custard apple, a product of Por- tugal and Maderia, is far better known than the fruits already named, be- cause during the last year or two con- signments have increased greatly. Its pulp is flavored like rich custard, and is very nutritious. Every fruit con- tains several large pips, about the size of beans. ; Loquat nespra japonica seems an amazing name for a fruit no larger than a lime, but those members of the London Stock Exchange who know the thirst-quenching properties of the little edible will be ready to forgive its name for the sake of its value. 1t also is a product of Maderia, and comparatively new to London; but in July and August there is a certain small dealer who sells large numbers of loquat, etel, in the strenuous crowds around -Throgmorton street at one penny each. The fruit is of a canary yellow hue all through, and is full of a most refreshing juice. In hot countries it is taken on long journeys as a thirst- i | quencher. Guavas have been arriving in London from Maderia in increasing quantities during the last two years and have sold ; readily at from four to Six shillings a dozen. The guava is about the same size as the lime, and has the same fleshy, strawberry-pink interior. The grape fruit, from Jamaica and California; is, according to market au- thorities, becoming more popular every month. One dealer hasgjust completed Aan’ arrangement by whieh he will in | future obtain a shipment of 1000 cases | each week. It is, perbaps, the best known of all these strange fruits, though most people will taste for. it must be acquired. The Jamaican mandarin admit that the } a. delicate fruit that often fifty per cent. are lost in shipment. This o-| ange is pipless, ahd aheut the same size as a large pontegranate. It iuay be bought retail at froin nine to twelve shillings a dozen. The mango, the only wild fruit which a soldier in India is allowed to pick, has recently been introduced in large quantities to the London markets. It comes from India, the West Indies and Madeira. "The mango tree is one of the prettiest trees in the world—a tall tree, with a mass of soft, feathery foliage. the leaves being of a dusky green at first, and then assuming a light hue, and the hundreds of little fruits turn- ing from yellow to reddish brown. The Bombay mangoes are considered the best. They are pine flavored. and the taste for them has to be acquired. In London shops they sell from twenty- four to thirty shillings a dozen.—ILon- don Express. + The Beauties of Our Land. Nature's beauty in America is a mar- velous and rarely wonderful spectacle. There are long. rivers the rushing sweep of which drain the heart of the continent. ing granite peaks, tlien and remote, far up into the clouds; scarred clefts and canons, deep wooded valleys that hint of savage withdrawal from human as- sociation. The mysterious: and bar- baric land of the mesas, and the great primeval forests that whisper and rus- tle, and gleam and gloom in light and darkness, and through every season of the year. The forest that is never seen twice in the same aspect and never tells the same story; is as silent as the grave, and yet is filled with con- stantly moving, hidden, unseen life; as changeful and mutable as human thought, and as mysterious as the im- pulses that sway human acts —Metro- politan Magazine. EBeaut\ fying West Point. The experts of the IMorestry Bureau of the Government are carrying out the plans prepared by themselves iu conjunction with My. Clmsted, the landscape architect, for the .beautify- ing of the West Point’ military res- ervation. General Mills, the superin- tendent of the Academy, takes a keen interest in this project, which is to be carried out in conjunction with the new construction at the Military Acad- emy. Already some fifteen acres of old growth of the land bordering on the Academy limits have been cleaned out and improved. A forest nursery Las been es’nblished which will yield 40,000 shite pine, 5000 red spruce, 4,- 090 eastern hemlock and about 2000 Amnjerican elm.—New York Tribune. A Stupid Bull. It happened in North Carolina. The scene was a freight train of the Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley Railroad. One of the cars contained a bull which was haltered by a rope and to the rope was attached a tag bearing the animal's destination. At one of the stops the brakeman looked in the car to see if the bull was all right, and found that he had chewed up the rope tag and all. “Cap'n, I dunno what we're goin’ to do "bout that bul! down yonder in the car,” said the brakeman to the con- ductor a few minutes later. “Why, Beb, what's the matter with him?” replied the conductor. “He's eaten up where he’s gone.”— Baltimore Sun. His Reason. A young man from the South, who had secured a position in a mercantile house in Philadelphia had, at the rec- ommendation of a fellow employe, eny gaged board and lodging in a private family. The family were extremely devout. Before cach meal a long grace was said. To their dismay and hor- ror the new boarder sat bolt upright while the others at table reverently bowed their heads. When the second day passed and the man from the South evinced no disposition to unbend, the good lady of the house could en- dure the situation no longer. “Atheism?” asked she, sharply. “No, madam,” humbly responded the new boarder, “boil.”—Harper’'s Week- ly. Benefits of Standing Up. Women are supposed to grow more masculine as time changes and our manners change with the times, so it may not have attracted much notice how lately they have taken to stand talking, male fashion, in front of ‘the fireplace after lunchenon or dinner in- stead of sinking gracefully into the nearest comfortable cairs. This is, however, no attempt at man- nishness, but simply the following out of the latest medical fad, which ad- vises us to stand for at least half an hour after each meal, to avoid the pains of indigestion. Iood is better assimilated so, it seems, than if we adopt a semi-recumbent position.— London Onlooker. Paste Jewels, What man is a mathematician clever enough to solve the girl proposition? A fool who can be flattered is ten times a fool. As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is new thought to a starving poet. An ounce of ingenuity is worth a ton of energy. Art is all well enough, everything. Mock not the starving man with ad- but a start is | vice—Dbefore dinner. orange is | not, so. widely krown, because it is such | There never was a man who didn't feel he was being held up and robbed —for his part of the preacher’s salary. --New Orleans Picayune. "The Rocky Mountains, lift-- FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’S WEEKLY REVIEW Activity Is Still the Keynote in the Industrial and Commercial Situation. A temporary flurry in the money market had little deletorious effect in commercial channels, most re- ports indicating a further increase in the volume of business. Orders coming forward are all for distant delivery and buyers experience much difficulty in making purchases for quick shipment. Wholesale trade in holiday goods is now well under way and retail dis- tribution of seasonable merchandise responds to the generally lower temperature. There is still some de- lay in mercantile collections, especi- ally at the South, where cotton is not being marketed freely, and to a less degree in grain regions, because traffic facilities are not adequate, but the majority of reports indicate that payments are more prompt in. spite of the higher money rates. Manufacturing plants have scarce- ly a drawback, except scarcity in la- bor in a few instances, and smail strikes that interrupt structural work to some extent. . None of these influences - affect any considerable proportion of the capacity, and there are many new high records of pro- duction. This is the case at pig iron furnaces and coke ovens, while tex- tile mills and shoe factories make almost as ‘satisfactory exhibits. Traflic conditions have improved and railway earnings for the first week of November were 4.9 per cent. larger than in the corresponding time last year, while the official statement offering in commerce for the month of October showed a very large increase in the aggregate, and at New York for the last week ex- ports gained $3,933,028 in comparison with 1904, while imports decreased $1,160,047. Increased imports of iron and steel, especially structural shapes, testified to the current of con- sumption, as domestic production is undoubtedly at the maximum. continue firm, but that trading is restricted by the light offerings of packers, who are sold far ahead, rather than any lack of demand. Further advances occurred in foreign dry hides. Leather is also somewhat less active. Failures this week numbered 240 in the United States, against 217 last vear, and 42 in Canada, compared with 27 a year ago. MARIS ITS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red................. $ 7 7 Rye—NO. 2... 0 ciss vivassinesel 2 3 Corn—No. 2 yellow, 8ar......cceeas 61 62 No. 2 yellow, shelled. 6) 61 ixed €ar............ 43 49 Oats—No. 2 white 83 34 . 3 white........ 20 30 Flour—Winter patent..... 4 25 4 30 ancy straight winters.. 4 00 4 10 Hay—No. 1 Timothy.... 1300 13 50 Clover No, 1..... 10 00 1050 Feed—No. 1'white mi 1950 200) Brown middlirgs. i6 50 17 5K¢ Bran, bulk..... 1550 16 00 S.iraw—Wheat..... we 709 7 50 IB a aarar viens ininisnaiinres 700 750 Dairy Products. Butter--Elgin creamery........... $ RN 24 OGhio creamery...... .: 20 RN Fancy country roll. 16 1% Cheese—Ohio, new..... 11 12 New York. new............... . 11 12 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b 3 15 Chickens—dressed 1 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.. oF 24 25 Frults and Vegetables. Apples bbl...........0.00 0 1h. 251 3 Fotatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 65 ros Cabbage—per ton............ lee. 1300 1500 Onions—per barrel...........%,. ar SOD 522 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 5. 5 a5 Wheat—No. 2 red..... - 5 93 2 v 83 84 Corn—Mixed......... al 52 EEE. i.e iii iiiiit iain 2. 25 Butter—Ohio creamery............ zt oe PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. 2 500 5 Wheat—No. 2 red... ne 84 85 Corn—No. 21nixeqd..c. .ciudve sie tus 5) 51 Oats-—-No.2 white.................. 81 2 Butter—Creamery................. 24 26 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 26 29 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents.. $ 500 515 Wheat—No. 2 red 95 96 Corn—No. 2...... 59 60 Oats—No. 2 white. 31 82 Butter -Creamery ................. 24 26 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 24 26 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 to 1.600 1bs. .......... $540 $550 Prime. 1,300 to 1,100 1bs,........ . 49 5 20 Good, 1,20 to 1,80 ibs............ 4 50 475 Tidy, 1,050t0 1.150.1b8.... ... ..... 4 25 4 40 Fair, 900 to 1.100: 1bs...... i. ....... 3 40 4 10 Common, 709 to $00 1bs....... asi 003 3 40 Common to good fat oxen........ 800 4 00 Common to good fat bulls........ 200 3 50 Common to good fat cOws........ 15) 340 Heifers, 700 to1,1001bs............ 27 4 00 Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 50 00 Hogs. Prime heavy hogs.......... $515 $520 Prime medium weights....,......... 5 10 510 Best heavy Yorkers....,. . 500 5 03 Good light Yorkers......... .b2B 5 30 Pige, as to quality....... . 510 5 25 Common to good roughs. .. 34.20 470 SIRES. coe air iri “ 325 375 Sheep. Prime wethers..............:. i. $5 00 525 Good mixed..... ms Cena iis 470 4 90 k mixed ewes and wethers. 50 46), C Sand COMMON... cone sna. 2 00 4 00 Cullis to choice lambs. ............ 5 00 VS Calves. Yeal Calves. .............,..} 72% Heavy and thin calves... 4 50 “Let the Men Cook.” A Virginia paper ventures the opin- ion that ‘lots of young girls who are devoting lots of time to music les- sons will learn. after marriage that cooking is a more valuable accom- plishment that thumping a piano.” Cooking? Not on your life. And not ‘Hides }: Japanse Holidays. There are only three national holi- days in Japan. January 1 is one of them, and the birthday of the reigning Emperor, November3, is another. But Feburary 11 is the greatest of the three dates, for it is the anniversary of the coronation of the first Emperor, Jimmu. Eating When Tired. A woman should not expect to de- rive much benefit from her food if she eats when very tired. Don’t try to rest yourself by eating a hearty meal. When one is exhausted instead of eating lie down for an hour to got rested. Just learn to avoid eating when tired. FITSpermanentlycured. No fitsornervouse nessafter first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer, §4trial pottleand treatise free Dr.R. H. KL1¥E, Ltd. 131 Arch St. Phila. Pa Burmah is stirred by the question of offie cial dress. Mrs. Winstow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums,reducesinflamma- tion,allays pain,cures wind colie,25¢.a bottle Berlin has about thirty vegetarian res- taurants. Pigo’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used iorall affections of throat and lungs.— Wa, O. ExpsLey, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. London uses 211,323,602 galions of water a day. The Sensible Child. A flaxen-haired tot—a boy of three— attracted much attention by wander- ing alone along the main aisle of a department store the other day. Crowds jostled and pushed, but the little fellow trudged onward manfully, apparently with a definite object in view. A floor walker, seeing that the child was unaccompanied, stopped him. “Where are you going, son?” he asked. “I’m looking for mamma; she’s lost,” responded the youngster bravely. “She got lost when I was looking at the pretty things,” At this moment there was a little shriek heard, and a half-hysterical woman ran forward - to clutch the boy. “That’s mamma; I've found her,” said the lad, calmly, as he was led away. “That boy hes more sense than his mother,” the fioor walker commented. - — Philadelphia Record. DON'T MISS THIS: A Cure For Siomach Trouble—A New Method, by Absorption—=No Drugs. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you afflicted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour Eructations, Heart Pains, Indigestion, Dys- pepsia, Burning Pains and Lead Weight in Pit of Stomach, Acid Stomach, Dis- tended Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic? Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach Tor- ture? > Let us send you a box of Mull’s Anti- Belch Wafers free to convince you that it cures. Nothing else like it known. It’s sure and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. Harmless. No drugs. Stomach Trouble can’t be cured otherwise—so says Medical Science. Drugs won’t do—they eat up the Stomach and make you worse. We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers cure and we want you to know it, hence this offer. : : SPECIAL OFFER.—The reguiar price of Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers 1s 50c. a box, but to introduce 1t to thousands of suffer- ers we will send two (2) boxes upon re- ceipt of 75c. and this advertisement, or we will send you a sample free for this coupon, 11255 A FREE BOX. 114 Send this coupon with your name and address and druggist’s name who does not sell it for a free box of Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers to Mvurr’s GRAPE 'l'onic Co., 328 Third Ave., Rock Island, Ill. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. Sold at all druggists, 50c. per box. Seven Feet Ten Inches Tall. Frederick the Great’s father, Freder- ick William, the creator of the Prussian army—whose special mania was the collection of giants from all parts of the earth-—would have given something like a king's ransom for “Long” Joseph, who has just joined the First Foot guards at Potsdam, at the age of 20, with a weight of about 18 stone and a stature of seven feet ten inches—an ugly man, decidedly, to meet in a bayonet melee. Freder- ick William had a whole regiment of such colossi, knows as the Riesen- garde, among the tallest of them be- ing one Kirkman, a Scoto:Hiberian or Ulster Irishman, whose portrait may still be seen in the palace at Chariot- tenburg. One of Frederick's first sov- ereign acts was to disband this pre- posterous brigade of giants, which had cost the Prussian State about as much as all the rest of its army. STIFF AND SORE from head to foot? Can't work today, but tomorrow you can, as the Old-Monk-Cure St. Jacobs Oi will soften and heal the muscles while you sleep. It Conquers Pain much piano playing, either. The dear { girls will be in commercial or oni the vaudeville ‘“stoige.” Let the men cook for themselves. All they're fit for —Cincinnati Enquirer. GRIP, BAD Price, 25c. and 50c. Call for your HOSPITALS CROWDED MAJORITY OF PATIENTS WOMEN Mrs. Pinkham’s Advice Saves Many Prom this Sad end Costly Experiences It is a sad bul true fact that @Wevery yeas brings an in- crease in the number ofoperas tions performe upon women in our hospitals, More thanthrees fourths of the patients lying WW on those snow white beds are women and girls whe are awaiting or recovering from operas tions made necessary by neglect. Every one of these patients had plenty of warning in that bearing down feeling, pain at thelcft or right of the womb, nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back, lencorrhcea, dizzie ness, flatulency. displacements of the womb or irregularities. All of these symp. .s are indications of an une healthy condition of the ovaries oa» womb, and if not heeded the trouble will make headway until the penalty has to be paid by a dangerous opera- tion, and a lifetime of impaired useful- ness at best, while in many cases the results are fatal. The following letter should bring hope to suffering women. Miss Luella Adams,of the Colonnade Hotel, Seattle, Wash., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — ‘“ About two years ago I wasa great suf. ferer from a severe female trouble, pains and headaches. The doctor prescribed for me Ty finally told me that I had a tumor on 1 womb and must FRasTED an operation if wanted to get well. I felt that this was m; death warrant, but 1 spent hundreds of dol lars for medical help, but the tumor kepd growing. Fortunately I corresponded with an aunt in the New England States, and she advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound, as it was said to cure tu- mors. I did so and immediately began to improve in health, and I was entirely cured, the tumor disappearing entirely, without an operation. I wish every suffering woma# would try this great preparation.” Just as surely as Miss Adams was cured of the troubles enumerated im her letter, just so surely will Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cure every woman in the land who suffers from womb troubles, inflammation of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability and nervous prostratiom. Mrs. Pinkham invites all youn women who are iil to write her for free advice. Address, Lynn, Mass. : $ 1 000 BeGiven for Reliable Information 8 We will give One Dollar for a Postal BM Card giving the first reliable news of a chance to sell a horizontal steam # engine of our styles, within our range Bi of sizes. We do not want inquiries at i this time for vertical, traction or gas engines. ATLAS ENGINES AND BOILERS i have for years been the standard for all steam i plants. Best of material and workmanship. f§ Our big outputenables us to sell on small prof- kl its. An Atlas, the best in the world, costs no more than the other kind. A Write today for our special.offer. i ATLAS ENGINE WORKS Bl Selling agencies in all cities INDIANAPOLIS fll Corliss Engines High Speed Engines Water Tube Boilers FourValve Engines Compound Engines Tubular Boilers Auvtomatic Engines Throttling Engines Portable Boilers a Atlas Engines in service 8,000,000 H. P. WwW = L. DOUCLAS 23:50 $3.90 SHOES i} W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalied at any price. > a Sat W.L.DOUGLAS MAKESAND SELLS MORE MEN'S 50 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. REWARD to anyone whe 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 eny $3.50 shoe in the worid. 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 bess shoes produced in the world. 1 1 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 longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoes f Men, $2.50, $2.G0. Boys’ School D. Shoes, $2.50, $2,$1.75, $1.5 AUTION.—Insist upon having W. L.Douge las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. Ashosdealerineverytown 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, Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles, W.L.DOUGLAS, Brockton, Maas. Ae SR i Bl A NSIONEY W.MORRIS, s as Washington, BD. CCe:! r ae 0 fully Frosecutes © Mims. ¥raio sivil war. 15 ad] sdicating claims. atty sines P.N.U £7, 199% D R oO PS quick relief and eures NEW DISCOVERY; gives Tl IS GUARANTEED TO C wors! cases. Send for book of testimonials and 10 Daye treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Atlanta, Ga. -GRIPINE RE NEURALGIA, COLD, HEADACHE AND 1 won’tsell Anti-@ripine to a dealer who won't © aarantee Xe, MONEY BACK IF IT DOESN'T CURB ¥., W. Diemer, 2M.D., Manufacturer, Springfi=id, Me.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers