The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, April 12, 1906, Image 3

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ZRATE
bmitted
ceive
eS,
ly elec-
ich the
ship of
vital is-
acquire
ys, but
e same
nz that
0 oper-
at as a
would
lo so.
bmitted
h was:
proceed
This
cessary
nvolved
ce pre-
council
et rail-
. {0 ex-
irchase,
of the
carried
as sim-
» policy
ever is,
without
owner-
et rail-
instead
te com-
‘ried by
ues the
tificates
ons as
1ership,
nt over
r muni-
NE
e Prac-»“
arlboro,
1d been
justices
g cases
it was
matter
s. The
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ceeding
e Mer-
saloon-
he Sun-
keeper
ille and
ereupon
ould be
he con-
seper a
AD
Sorry
overnor
as sent
Weyler,
ng ithe
shocked
all the
on a
Cuban
his ex-
ot hap-
United
not en-
island
and as
resign-
rember,
ilroad’s
from
an into
siding.
few of
at the
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esident
‘athdlic
d., fell
ort the
ding to
rity of
cult.
aim.
bill ap-
id to
k Tack
tors of
5. Cos-
n Pitts-
The
ut 50,-
he firm
by the
to. be
iting in
.
"EX-MAYOR CRUMBO
RECOMMENDS PE-RU-NA
: “My endorsement of Pe-ru-na is
§ Based On Its Merits.”
: ---Ed. Crumbo.
2 bany, Ind., writes from 51. EK. Oak
street:
“My endorsement of Peruna is based
on its merits.
“If a man is sick he looks anxiously
for something which will cure him,
and Peruna will do the work.
“I know that it will cure catarrh of
the head or stomach, indigestion,
headache and any weary or sick leel-
NAAAAAAAS
ing.
“It is bound to help anyone, if used
according to directions.
_ “I also know dozens of men who speak
in the highest terms ef Peruna and have
yet to hear of any one being disappointed
in it.
Mr. Crumbo, in a later letter, dated
Aug. 25, 1904, says:
“My health is good, at present, but if 1
should have ‘to take any more medicine 1
li fol back on Peruna ©
Had a Few Lives Left.
After being missing for two weeks
a cat belonging to a family in Wiit-
shire, England, was found clinging to
the side of a weil 35 feet from the
surface and just above the water.
She was apparently none the worse
for her experience when she was
brought to the top.
DISFIGURED WITH ECZEMA.
Erushed Scales From Face Like Powder
—Under Physicans Grew Worse—
Caticura Works Wonders.
“I suffered with eczema six months. I
had tried three doctors, but did not get
any better. It was on my body and on
my feet so thick that I could hardly put
e pin on me without touching eczema. My
face was covered, my eyebrows came out,
and then it got in my eye. I then went to
another doctor. He asked me what I was
taking for it, and I told him Cuticura. He
said that was a very good thing, but that
he thought that my face would be marked
for life. But Cuticura did its work, and
my face is now just as clear as it ever was.
I told all my friends about my remark-
able cure. I feel so thankful I want every-
body far and wide to know what Cuticura
can do. It is a sure cure for eczema. Mrs.
Emma White, 641 Cheriier Place, Cam-
den, N. J., April 25, 1905.”
Mark’s Books Barred.
Mark Twain's “Huckleberry Finn’
and ‘“‘“Tom Sawyer” have been barred
from children considered under the
age of discretion by an order issued
by the Brooklyn public libraries.
VIDA EE aed hy
“From the cradie to the baby chair” ;
HAVE YOU A BABY?
PHOENIX
| WALKING GHAIR
. (PATENTED)
“AN IDSAL SELF-INSTRUCTOR.™
Ove PHOENIX Walking Chair
holds the child securely, pre-
venting’ those painful falls and.
bumps which areso frequent when
baby learns to walk.
vr “BETTER THAN.A NURSE."
The chair is provided with a re-
movable, sanitary cloth seat, which
supports the weight of the child
i and prevents bow-legs and spinal
troubles; it also has a table attach-
| ment which enables baby to find
amusement in its toys, etc., with-
out any attention. -
: “As Indispensable as a cradle.”
It ie s0 constructed that it pre-
vents soiled clothes, sickness from
drafts and floor germs, and is
recommended by physicians and
endorsed by both mother and baby.
Combines pleasure and utility.
No baby should be without one,
at yomr furniture dealer
“and ask to see one.
ITER
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
I" PHOENIX. CHAIR CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
Can only be had of your furniture dealer.
ournalism in
the Laboratory
If the Eastern colleges hav2 been
somewhat slow in establishing schools
of Journalism, the faculties in the
West bave perhaps been over-bold in
experimenting with mnewspaper-mak-
ing. The University of Kansas has es-
tablished a department of journalism,
and at the University of Chicago, Pro-
fessor George LE. Vincent has con-
ducted for three years a course entitled
“The History and Organization of the
American Press.” At both places prac-
tical newspaper workers have been
engaged to explain the details of aec-
wal day-to-day writing, editing, and
printing. At Chicago, Professor Vin-
cent’s class was set to work last spring
to issue a four-page morning newspa-
per. This laboratory experiment he
describes in the American Journal of
Sociology. It was doubtless an inter-
esting excursion into the'practical, but
we suspect that it gave the students
an exaggerated notion of the import-
ance of the technique of journalism.
The theory that the only way to be-
come a newspaper writer is to write for
the newspapers, is sound, but we doubt
if Professor Vincent's Daily Times sup-
plied a real test.
Merely as an experiment, however,
the paper produced by the Chicago
students is worth notice. It was writ-
ten and ‘‘set up” between nine o'clock
in the morning of June 6 and one
o'clock in the morning of June 7. The
editor, of the college daily acted as
managing editor, a student employe
of the Associated Press as telegraph
editor, and {wo student reporters as
news and city editors. Its staff num-
bered forty, and was divided among
the usual departments. From five
o'clock in the afternoon until the ex-
periment ended the plant of the Chi-
cago Evening Journal was turned over
to the students. The various news as-
sociations furnished “copy,” and the
morning journals allowed the report-
ers of the Daily Times to go out with
their own men on assignments. Noth-
ing could be more favorable for a
trial, especially as one ‘“rehearsal®
was had.
Professor Vincent's verdict upon the
Daily Times, which was actually sent
to press but five minutes late, is that
it was “on the whole a sucess.” If
did not attempt innovations, merely
striving to print the day’s news in a
clean, attractive form. Its front page,
he says, corresponded closely, so fan
as the choice of news went, with those
of the Chicago morning papers. It
erred only in giving to the account
of the marriage of Emperor William's
son a place on the first page with this
equivocal headline, “Oldest Son of
Emperor and Duchess Cecilia Married
Yesterday”? As it turned out, the
evening papers of June 6 had “cov-
ered” the Prussian wedding so thor-
oughly that it was bad newspaper
judgment to “feature” it on the morn-
ing of June 7. A number of ‘“gradu-
ate students in political science and
economics” wrote the editorials. Such
weighty matters were discussed as the
future of English diplomacy, the
changes in President Roosevelt's Cab-
inet, democracy in unionism, and “two
kinds of reformers.” The news that
came in on June 6 called for three ad-
ditional editorials on “Finance and
Publicity,” “Admiral Enquis: and His
Cruises,” and “A New Theatrical Con-
science.” If all these matters were
touched upon with the pen of authox-
ity, Professor Vincent was justified in
exulting over the editorial page. In
our opinion, the enterprise of the tele-
graph editor in turning a number of
items concerning Government affairs
into a specia! correspondent’s Washing-
ton letter should not pass unnoticed.
As Professor Vincent says in apology,
“What are principles and policies in a
crisis such as this?’—it was midnight
when the letter was manufactured.
The experiment strikes one as a bit
of exciting fun “or Professor Vincent's
class, merely illustrating again what
every newspaper man of experience
knows—that the technique of journal-
ism is an infinitesimal part of the
equipment of a journalist. Headlines
and the “make-up” of the page, the
mysteries of linotype operation, and
of the stereotyping room, the “lingo”
of the newspaper office—these are
things that the alert young reporter in
an office will pick up quite as soon
as he will need to know them. More
to the point was the paper read be-
fore the class in journalism at the
Kansas State University a few days
‘ago by a former Topeka legislative re-
‘porter for a Kansas City newspaper.
After an experience of nearly twenty
years, this man declared that the es-
sentials of a successful newspaper man
JAare “a receptive mind and willing
“legs.” The awility to write he subordi-
nated, saying that in the school cf the
editorial blue pencil the plain recital
of fact will soon come to be inevitable.
ow .
“Get out among people, he advised the
f young men ambitious to become great
Journalists. ‘Remember that it is the
mind that makes the man, and if you
possess a newspaper mind all the earth
is yours.” Insatiable curiosity as to
fhe drift of human affairs marks the
“born” journalist; the best training it
is possible to give him is the widest
Foote acquaintance with past and
fpresent. His work will be more valu}
ble for a knowledge of the history of
Finland or of the Oregcn Trail thard
for a year of laboratory experiments
in academic newspaper building.—New
(York Post.
Imitation Precious Stones.
sz It is now possible to produce in pasiy
an imitation of almost every precioud
iktone which is capable of deceiving the
deyes of all but the most expert. Not
only is there a superficial resemblance
but a skilfully prepared “paste” ston
exhibits the same luster and high index
of refraction and dispersion as would &
Biamond of the first water.
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY
New Business Increases in Volume
and Orders for Rails Is Being
Booked to End of the Year.
Opening spring trade is not per-
ceptibly retarded by the partial in-
terruption to csal mining, except in
the immediate vicinity of anthracite
mines. High temperature not only
broadens the demand for season-
able merchandise, but stimulates
agricultural operations, reopens
Northern navigation and starts many
contemplated building operations.
Were it not for a few labor contro-
versies the commercial horizon would
be cloudless. But some manufactur-
ing plants will be compelled to sus-
pend if the fuel supply is cut off and
structural work is interrupted by de-
mands for higher wages in certain
localities. That the year 1906 start-
ed out to eclipse all records is evi-
denced by bank exchanges 18 per
cent. larger than in the first quarter
of the previous year, while liabili-
ties of commercial failures averaged
only 81 cents to each 5,000 of solvent
payments through the clearing
houses, which is the lowest commer-
cial death rate for the first three
months of any year. The average
loss, if distributed through all the
firms in business, was only $24.86 to
each concern; not a serious burden
to be borne by the mercantile world.
Railway earnings in March were
6.9 per cent. larger than last year,
and foreign commerce at New York
for the last week showed gains of
$1,139,369 in imports and $837,959 in
exports as compared with the corres-
ponding week in 1905.
Progress in the iron and steel in-
dustry has not suffered as yet from
the partial suspension of coal mining
and new business comes forward
each week in great volume. Latest
developments are most pronounced
in the structural steel division.
Next in volume of mew business is
the tonnage of steel rails that is
rapidly closing order books up to
the end of the year.
Failures for last week numbered
197 as against 232 last year and 18
in Canada as against 28 last year.
MARI REITS,
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat—No. 2 red.........c........$ 89 83
ye—No.2........... ces 3 74
Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear... 49 51
No. 2 yellow, shelled.... 46 48
Mixed ear 46 47
Oats—No. 2 33 36
No. 3 white 31 a5
Flour—Winter patent............ « 465 470
Fancy straight winters........ 4 00 4 10
Hay—No. I Timothy............... 1275 13 00
Clover'Ro, 7... so. 0. shh ire 9 00 950
2 = 3)
20 0)
20 50
7 50
7 50
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery.. $§ 32 32
Ohio creamery...... 28 x9
Fancy country rol
Lheese—Ohio, new.. 14 15
New York. nevw................. 13 14
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per1b....................... $ u 15
Chickens—dressed................. 16 18
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 16 17
Fruits and Vegetables.
Apples DBlececseerterteeees cenreeee 35) 5 50
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 5 80
Cabbage—per ton............ «ss 1300 15
Onions—per barrel........... 3... 0D 92
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent 525
Wheat—No. 2 red........... 5 B
Corn—Mixed..... 46 47
288... ... Srtessesseseaciaaiiieaeas 16 20
Butter—Ohio creamery........... . 24 x8
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent $50 5
‘Wheat—No. 2 red..... 84 85
Corn—No. 2 mixed 2 46 47
Oats—No. 2 white. . 35 36
Butter—Creamery. . 29 32
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. . 16 20
NEW YCRK.
FIoOUr—Patents.......ceansuenres. . $ 50 515
Wheat—No. 2 red . i. 86 89
Corn—No. 2......... . 47 48
QOats—No. 2 white. . 34 85
Butter -Creamery tes 28 30
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 16 21
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,450 101,600 Ibs. ...... .... $5 60 $6 00
Prime, 1,300 t01,500 1bs,. Hd 35 5 60
Good, 1,200 to 1,300 1bs.. 5% 5 35
Tidy, 1,050 to 1,150 1bs....... 4 90 5 20
Fair, 900 to 1,100 1bs.... 4 25 4 45
Common, 709 to $00 1bs...... 3 7 4 10
Common to good fat oxen 275 4 50
Common to good fat bulls 2 00 4 00
Common to good fat cows 2 00 375
Heifers, 700 to1, 1001bs. ... 250 4 60
resh cows and springers........ 18 00 4800
Hogs.
Prime heavy hogs.......... $670 $645
Prime medium weights. . 675
Best heavy Yorkers...., . 6 7 875
Good light Yorkers. . . 065 6 70
Pigs, as to quality....... . 650 6 60
Common to good roughs 5 50 6 00
Blags.......0 eremee 400 4 50
6 6 25
5 60 5 92
«500 5 50
Cullsand common................. 250 4 00
Culls to choice lambs. ............ 55 0 6 90
Calves.
YealCalves,.. ............. 6 50
Heavy and thin calves..... 4 00
Prohibit Opium Trade.
Australia’s different states having
agreed to prohibit the sale and
growth of opium, the Commonwealth
government has prohibited the im-
portation. of opium except for medi-
cal purposes. All the states will lose
revenue by the prohibition. The loss
to Queensland alone is estimated at
$80,000 yearly.
A BRIEF TRAGEDY.
A trip to the Post Office.
It gives you a thrill;
You look for a check,
And you're handed a bill.
—Hastings News.
IT WAS,
Hig Wife—John, dear, the doctor
says I need a change of climate.
Her Husband—AIll right. The
weather man says it will be colder
tomorrow.—Chicago News.
When We Begin to Grow Old.
Dr. Osler’s jocose remark about the
comparative uselessness of man for
the activities of this life after the
age of 60, has brought out a rival in
the person of Prof. Minot, of Har-
vard. Prof. Minot declares old age
begins at 25. A man of 80, he says,
is not nearly as likely to have an
original idea as one of 20. The Har-
vard professor, like Dr. Osler, must
be speaking in a Pickwickian sense.
If he was in earnest he ceriainly
would have placed the beginning of
old age at birth, for there is where
it really begins.—Pittsburgh Gazette.
FITS permanentiy cured. No fits or nervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer, $2 trialbottleandtreatisefres
Dr. R. H. KrLixg, Ltd. 931 Arch St. Phila,Pa.
A naturalist nas peen making observa:
tions on the toilets of certain ants.
Mrs. Winslow’s Seothing Syrup for Children
teething,softensthegums,reducesinflamma-
tion,allays pain, cures wind colie,25¢.a bottle
They bave a queer way of holding auc
tions i. Japan.
Costly Eggs.
Eggs of the aptornis, a recently ex-
tinct wingless bird, bring very high
‘prices, fine colored specimens fetch-
ing as much as $750 to $1,000 apiece.
The apteryx, or New Zealand kiwi, is
a bird which, though still living, is
becoming scarcer from day to day,
and its final extinction is only a
question of years. These kiwi breed
very slowly, only one or two very
large eggs being laid during the sea-
son, and as yet there is no record of
the successful raising of young in
captivity.
BOX OF WAFERS FREE—-NO DRUGS
—CURES BY ABSORPTION.
Cures Belching of Gas—=Bad Breath and
Bad Stomach—Short Breathe’
Bloating—Sour Eructations—
Irregular Heart, Etc.
Take a Mull’s Wafer any time of the day
or night, and note the immediate good ef-
fect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas,
disinfects, the stomach, kills the poison
rms and cures the disease. Catarrh of
the head and throat, unwholesome food and
overeating make bad stomachs. Secarcely
any stomach is entirely free from taint of
some kind. Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will
make your stomach healthy by absorbing
foul gases which arise from the undigested
food and by re-enforcing the lining of the
stomach, enabling it to thoroughly mix
the food with the gastric juices. This
cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion,
sweetens the breath, stops belching and
fermentation. Heart action becomes strong
and regular through this process.
iscard drugs, as you know from experi-
ence they do not cure stomach trouble.
y a common-sense (Nature's) method
that does cure. A soothing, healing sensa-
tion results instantly.
We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will
do this, and we want you to know it. This
offer may not appear again.
i
4146 GOOD FOR 25c. 142
Send this coupon with your name
and address and your druggist’s name
and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we
will supply you a sample free if you
have never used Mull’s Anti-Belch
Wafers, and will also send you a cer-
tificate good for 25c. toward the pur-
chase of more Belch Wafers. You will
find them invaluable for stomach trou-
ble; cures by absorption. Address
MuLr’s GrarE Tonic Co. 328 3d
Ave., Rock Island, Jl.
Give Full Address and Write Plainly.
All druggists, 50c. per box, or by mail
upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted.
The Highest Bridge.
The highest railroad bridge in the
world will be built across the top of
the famous Royal Gorge near Canyon
City, Colo., and the construction will
begin March 1. It will be 200 feet
above the present hanging bridge of
the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad,
and from it the great stream will
look like a thread or silver. The
bridge will be for the extension of the
electric railway system from Canyon
City to Florence and the top of Roy-
al Gorge, and the cost of the bridge
will be about $100,000.
England’s Oldest Peer,
The only living peer who was a
member of the house of lords at the
time of Queen Victoria's accession is
Lord Nelson. He succeeded to the
earldom in 1835. Lord Nelson is not
a direct descendant of the hero of
Tarfalgar, but is only collaterally de-
scended from Horatio Nelson's sister
Mrs. Bolton. He enjovs a good es-
tate and a pension of £5,000 granted
to the first Lord Nelson and his
heirs.
Chinese Cavalry.
In describing the Chinese cavalry,
a correspondent asserts that horses
in finer condition do not exist in any
army in the world. He says that the
Chinese is a born horseman, who has
nothing to learn from Curope or
America in the handling of horses,
though he is ignorant of veterinary
science.
Three States Beat Germany.
Germany's present railway mileage
is reported at 34,183. The mileage in
the United States is nearing the 220,-
000 mark. In three states, Illinois,
Texas and Pennsylvania, the railway
mileage is about equal to that ins
Germany. The lead would be great-
ly increased by including the trac-
tion lines.—St. Louis Globe-Demo-
crat.
LUMBAGO
STIFF NECK
PUTNAM
Women in Our Hospitals
Ap
Avoid Them.
Going through the hospitals in our
large cities one is surprised to find such
a large proportion of the patientslying
on those snow-white beds women
and girls, who are either awaiting
or recovering from serions operations.
Why should this be the case? Sim-
ply because they have neglected them-
selves. Female troubles are certainly
on the increase among the women of
this country—they creep upon them
unawares, but every one of those
patients in the hospital beds had plenty
of warning in that bearing-down feel-
ing, painatleftorrightof the abdomen,
nervous exhaustion, pain in the small
of the back. dizziness, flatulency, dis-
placements of the organs or irregular-
ities. All of these symptoms are indi-
cations of an unhealthy condition of
the female organs, and if not heeded
the penalty has to be paid by a danger-
ous operation. When these symptoms
manifest themselves, do not drag along
until you are obliged to go to the hos-
pital and submit to an operation—
but remember that Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound has saved
thousands of women from surgical
operations. :
When women are troubled with ir-
regular, suppressed or painful periods,
weakness, displacement or ulceration
of the organs, that bearing-down feel-
ing, inflammation, backache, bloating
(or flatulency), general debility, indi-
gestion, and nervous prostration, orare
beset with such symptoms as dizziness,
lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner-
vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy,
‘“all-gone” and ‘‘want-to-be-left-
there is one tried and true remedy.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
ing Increases in the Number of Operaticns
erformed Each Yecar—How Women May
The following letters cannot fail to
bring hope to despairing women.
Miss Ruby Mushrush, of
Chicago, Ind., writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —
‘I have been a great sufferer with irregular
periods and female trouble, and about three
months ago the doctor, after using the X-Ray
on me, said I had an abcess and would have
to have an operation. My mother wanted
me to try Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable
Compound as a last resort, and it not only
saved me from an operation but made me en-
tirely well.”
Mra. Alice Berryhill, of 313 Boyce
Street, Chattanooga, Tenn, writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — A
‘“Three years ago life looked dark to me.
I had ulceration and inflammation of the
female organs and was in a serious condition.
‘ My health was completely broken down
and the doctor told me that if I was. not op-
erated upon I would die within six months.
I told him I would have no operation but
would try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. e tried to influence me against
it but I sent for the medicine that same day
and began to use it faithfully. Within five
days I felt relief but was not entirely cured
until I u it for some time.
‘‘ Your medicine is certainly fine. I have
induced several friends and neighbors to take
it and I know more than a dozen who had
female troubles and who to-day are as well
and strong as I am from using your Vege.
table Compound.”
East
pound at once removes such troubles.
Refuse to buy any other medicine, for
you need the best,
Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of
Lydia E. Pinkham, invites all sick wo-
men to write her for advice, Her advice
alone’ feelings, they should remember and medicine have restored thousands
{ to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
pound Succeeds Where Others Fall,
WINC
RIFLE AND P
Winchester Rifle
the shells, suppl
chester Cartridges
excellence
THEY SHOOT
In 1905 there were 955 fatal acci-
dents in the collieries of Great Bri-
tain and Ireland.
MAKE EVERY DAY
—2(| COUNT-
ed? | no matter how’
, bad the weather:
You cannot
A
4
| OR SLICKER
‘When you hb
look for the
SIGN OF THE FISH
TOWERS
~~ AJ TOWER CO. TON US A,
TOWER CANADIAN CO LTO TORONTO CAN
Drill for Water
Prospect for Minerals Coal
G
Drill Testand BlastHoles,
We make
DRILLING MACHINES
For Horse, Steam or
Gasoline Power.
ates
Traction Machine,
LOOMIS MACHINE CO.
TIFFIN, OHIO.
BOLD-MINING STOCK FREE--Fors abort, ime
amount of stock free in the greatest gold-mining
proposition in the world’s history. Many fortunes
Write today Don't cers. a Eno BONIEIREY:
TOR 00, Tract Society Building, New York LA"
P. N. U. 15, 1906.
ENSION omy W. mors,
Successfully Prosecute: i
einen Yh WwSytes Claims.
yraiu civil war. 18 adj adicating claims, atty since
eS
4000000000000s000000000000 000000000000 ®00000000000COS
THE WHOLE LOT
If we don’t hed prevention, we will need a cure. ‘The Old-Monk-Cure
St. Jacobs Qil
is ready always for all forms of muscular aches or pains, from
IT CURES ALIKE THE WHOLE LOT.
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Lolor moregoods brighter and faster colors thag any other dye. O 1
€yeany germent without ripping apart. Write for tree booklet Homie Drackize and Mix Cora MS SR BEY PRU Bin phan any SL
n
PATENTS gen. book free; Highest refs,
g experience, Fitzgerald
&Co.Dept. 54, Washington b.o
RHEUMATISM
to
SPRAIN
FADELE
leach an
calibers are loaded by machinery which sizes
powder, and seats the bullets properly.
using first-class materials and this up-to-date
system of loading, the reputation of Win-
is maintained.
HESTER
ISTOL CARTRIDGES
and Pistol Cartridges of all
ies the exact quantity of
By
for accuracy, reliability and
Ask for them.
WHERE YOU HOLD
W.L. DoucLAs
$3528 *3 2° SHOES,
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Ciit Edge Line
cannot be equalled atany price.
-
ESTABL SHED
JuiY, 6" 187%;
{ 1|1CAPITAL $2 500000]
W. L. DOUGLAS MAKES & SELLS MORP
MEN'S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTH,
MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD.
REWARD to anyone who can
disprove this statement.
If I could take you into my three large factories
at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite
care with which every pair of shoes is made, you
would realize why W. L. Dougias $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,
W. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoes for
Men, $2.50, $2.00. Boys’ Sch
Dress Shoes, $2.50, $2, $1.78, $1.5
A TON .—Insist upon having W.L.Douge
las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
Fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog.
‘'W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
That Delightful Aid to Health
Paxtie
Whitens the teeth — purifies
mouth and breath — cures nasal
catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes,
and by direct application cures
all inflamed, ulcerated and
catarrhal conditions caused by
feminine ills. {
Paxtine possesses extraordinary
cleansing, healing and germi-
cidal qualities unlike anything
else. Atalldruggists. socents
LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE FREE
The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass
DROPSY FEW Discovery;
gives quick relief and cures
worst eases. Book of testimonials and 20 Days’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S BONS, Box B, Atlamta, @s,
SS DYES
3
Savile,” Misssurr
E DRUG CoO.,
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com