The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 20, 1906, Image 7

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The” Age of Machinery.
~ We live in the age of machinery.
he thinking, directing mind be-
‘comes daily of more account, while
mere brawn falls correspondingly in
value from day to day. That eccen-
tric philosopher, Elbert Hubbard,
says in one of his essays, “Where a
‘machine will do better work than the
human hand, we prefer to let the ma-
chine do the work.”
It has been but a few years since
the cotton gin, the ‘‘spinning jenny’
and the power loom displaced the
‘hand picker, the spinning wheel and
the hand loom; since the reaper and
binder, the rake and tedder, the
mowing machine took the place of
the old cradle, scythe, pitchfork and
hand rake; since the friction match
superseded the flint and tinder; since
the modern paint factory replaced
the slab and muller, the paint pot
and paddle.
In every case where machinery has
been introduced to replace hand la-
bor, the laborers have resisted the
change; and as the weavers, the
sempstresses, and the farm laborers
protested against new-fangled looms,
sewing machines and agricultural
implements, so in more recent times
compositors have protested against
typesetting machines, glass blowers
against bottle-blowing machines, and
painters against ready mixed paints.
And as in the case of these short-
sighted classes of an earlier day, so
with their imitators of to-day, the
protest will be in vain. It ifs a pro-
test against civilization, against the
common weal, against their own wel-
fare.
The history of all mechanical im-
provements shows that workmen are
the first to be benefited by them.
The invention of the sewing machine,
instead of throwing thousands of
women out of employment, increased
‘the demand to such an extent that
thousands of women have been em-
ployed, at better wages, for shorter
‘hours and easier work where hun-
dreds before worked in laborious
misery to eke out a pitiable exist-
ence. It was so with spinning and
weaving machinery, with agricultural
‘implements—in fact, it is so with
every notable improvement. The
multiplication of books in the last
decade is a direct result of the in-
vention of linotype machinery and
fast presses.
The mixed paint industry, in which
carefully designed paints for house
painting are prepared on a large
scale by special machinery, is an-
other improvement of the same type.
The cheapness and general excellence
of these products has so stimulated
the consumption of paint that the de-
mand for the services of painters
has correspondingly multiplied. Be-
fore the advent of these goods a
well-painted house was noticeable
from -its rarity, whereas to-day an ill-
painted house is conspicuous.
Nevertheless the painters, as a
rule, following the example set by
the weavers, the sempstresses and
the farm laborers oi old, almost to a
man, oppose the improvement. ji 4
is a real improvement, however, and
simply because of that fact the sale
of such products has increased until
during the present year it will fall
not far short of 90,000,000 or 100,-
000,000 gallons.
" Hindsight is always better than
‘foresight, and most of us who de-
plore the short-sightedness of our an-
cestors would do well to see that we
“do not in turn furnish ‘terrible ex-
amples’ to our posterity.
PC.
Water Power in Japan.
The almost unlimited water power
of Japan has been little used except
for the operating of rice mills. Now,
however, a notable development is
taking place in the utilization of
water for power purposes and the
generation of electricity in the neigh-
borhodod of Kobe. Ever since the war
the increased cost of coal has caus-
ed many concerns to look around for
some more economical motive power
than steam, and with this object in
view a number of undertakings are
now in course of formation.
King Edward Not an Author.
King Edward has never followed
the example of Queen Victoria by
writing books, but a biographer who
is about to publish an account of his
early life has succeeded in finding a
drawing which the King made more
than 50 years ago, and this will be
given to the public, as well as some of
Queen Victoria’s infantile efforts.
This is early Victorian art with a
vengeance.
FADED TO A SHADOW,
Worn Down by Five Years of Suffer-
ing From Kidney Complaint.
Mrs. Remethe Myers, of 180 South
Tenth St., Ironton, O., says: ‘I have
worked hard in my time and have
been exposed again
and again to charges
of weather, It is no
wonder my kidneys
gave out and I went
all to pieces at last.
For five years I was
fading away and
finally so weak that
for six months I could not get out of
the house. I -wvas nervous, restless
and sleepless at night, and lame and
sore in the morning. Sometimes ev-
erything would whirl and blur before
me. I bloated so badly I could not
wear tight clothing, and had to put
on shoes two sizes larger than ‘usual.
The urine was disordered and pas-<
sages were dreadfully frequent: I
got help from the first bex of Doan’s
Kidney Pillg, however, and by the
time I had taken four boxes the pain
and bloating were gone. I have been
in good health ever since.”
“Sold by all dealers. ' 60 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn, Co., Buffalo,
NY
THE DIFFERENCE.
This is my dog, my very own. Youll think
it strange, but we
ng, you see
While wk as old, or most as old, as any
dog can be.
He is no Fighes than my weidh; and he is
too,
nd Fo ph as tall as Jane, and I'm
not nearly through
With growing, for I mean to be as big,
perhaps, as you.
The thipgs we like are not the same: I
and race, and run
And ji: or down before othe fire, or
stretches in the sun
But each of us would be ’forlorn without
the other one
—Caroline McCormick, in St. Nicholas.
AFTER-DINNER TRICK.
Here is a little trick that any of
vou can master. The next time you
have chicken for dinner, save the
wishbone and wind some strong
thread severrl times about the ex-
tremities of it, passing it around
both ends. Insert a match between
the two passes of thread thus formed
and turn it in a cirele several times,
until the thread is very tight and the
ends of the wishbone are drawn close-
ly together. Then suddenly let the
match go and it will describe a com-
plete circle, producing the most cu-
rious optical illusion.
The rotary motion of the match is
so quick that no eye can follow it,
and it seems as if the free end actual-
The Cleft Wishbone.
ly cleft the wishbone in passing from
one side to the other.
No matter how often the trick is
done nor how closely the audience
are watching, the illusion will re-
main. Try it and see for yourselves.
—New York Evening Mail. . -
UNCLE PHILS STORY.
“Tell us a story, Uncle Phil,” said
Rob and Archie, running to him.
“What about?” said Uncle Phil,
as Rob climbed on his right knee and
Archie on his left.
“Oh, about something that bap-
pened to you,” said Rob. ,
“Something when you
little boy,” said Archie. :
‘““Once, when I was a little boy,”
said Uncle Phil, “I asked my mother
were a
play by the river.’
‘“Was Roy your protest asked
Rob.
‘No, but he was very fond of
playing with me. My mother said
yes, so we went and had a great
deal of sport. After a while I took
,a shingle for a boat, and sailed it
along the bank. At last it began
to get into deep water, where 1
couldn’t reach it’ with a stick. Then
I told Roy to go and bring it to me.
He almost always did what I told
him, but this time he did not. I
began scolding him and he ran to-
ward home.
“Then I was angry. I picked up
a stone, and threw it at him as hard
as I could.”
‘Oh, Uncle Phil!” cried Archie.
“Just then Roy turned his head,
and it struck him.”
‘“‘Oh, Uncle Phil!” cried Rob.
“Yes. He gave a little cry, and
lay down on the ground.
“But I was still angry with him.
I did not go to him, but waded into
the water for my boat.
‘“‘But it was deeper than I thought.
| Before I knew ft, I was in a strong
current. 1 screamed as it carried
me down the stream, but no men
were near to help me.
“But as I went down under the
deep waters, something took hold of
me and dragged me towards shore.
It was Roy. He saved my life.”
“Good fellow! Was he
cousin?” asked Rob.
“No,” replied Uncle Phil. ;
“What did you say to him?’ asked
Archie.
“I put my arms around the dear
fellow’s neck and cried, and asked
him to forgive me.”
“What did he say?’ asked Rob.
“He said, ‘Bow, wow, wow!’
“Why, who was Roy anyway?”
asked Archie, in great astonishment.
“He was my dog,” said Uncle
Bhil—‘‘the best dog I ever saw. I
have never been unkind to a dog
‘to any other animal since, and
hope you will never be.”—Sydney
Dayre, in Our Dumb Animals.
your
KEEP, RIGHT AT IT, BOYS.
3
® “I have seen boys,”’ said the mas-
jer, “who would start to make a sled,
#nd by the time the first runner was
For the
XY aunger
Have ges that are fost alike, and I am Ei two hours for it
‘of a hollow tree,
J extremely
to let Roy and myself g0 gu: and
finished decided they wold rather
have a wagon. When one wheel was
the : right kind
notion to go skating. You -know
what kind of men such boys make?”
We smiled and said we thought
we did.
“You ought to,” said the master;
“you have seen plenty of them.
When a boy of that kind grows up
ke will rent a farm, and by the time
the crop is half made, trade it for a
span of mules, sell the mules, and
put up a little grocery store. The
grocery store fails, and he decides to
be a carpenter. He gets a second-
hand set of tools, and when he gets
a job, quits it so often he is dis-
charged. Then he borrows money
o:. his wife's father to start a dray,
and the first time he gets a good job
of hauling, goes off duck-hunting.
“That kind of a fellow will potter
three days over a seventy-five-cent
clock, and put in a month of good
plowing weather trying to make a
windmill.
“It was not a bad plan the Indians
had of teaching their boys to swim.
They just threw them in, you know,
80 they had to swim.
“If you want to succeed, you must
make yourself finish what you under- |
take. No matter how hard itis, no
matter how much better something
else looks, do ‘what you have started
to do.
. “Get that habit, boys, and success
is half won. It is very tempting to
try to do a half-dozen things without
finishing of them, but that is the
road to ‘failure. Centre your mind
on the thing before you, and do it—
and do ‘it the best you can.”—The
Boys’ World.
TWO KINGS.
Usually there was oae child in the
ward who reigned over the other
children and in the hearts of the
“grown-ups,” through some natural
superiority over the other little pa-
tients. But, once upon a time,)there
were two kings who reigned with
equal popularity over this little
white-cribbed kingdoia.
Visitors could never decide which
was the more attractive. Both were
friendly, and equally
spoiled. Both were typical boys,
much freckled, and at the age when
the falling of the first tooth sets
one far above his fellows. Both
made equally amusing naive remarks.
And no real kings sitting on thrones
could have been moro envious.
When a doctor would stop to chaff
with John, Paul would soon sidle up
and display all his charms. When a
visitor gave John an orange, he
would wait for hours, if need be,
until he could eat it with much gusto
before Paul. ‘And you may be sure
that people who came into the ward
dié much to kindle this rivalry.
Both happily were still! below the
‘| age when childhood learns to be con-
.{ scious, and their little arts were very
innocent and funny.
I happened to be loitering in the
ward one day when the two were
eating their luncheon. They were
sitting in their red chairs at the same
low table devouring cornéd ‘beef
hash.
John stared at Paul for a second,
and then announced, ‘I know ho
hash is made.”
“Pooh! Sc do I,” retorted Paul.
“My mother puts it in a bowl and
then she chops it and chops it and
chops it.”
“And then what does she do?” de-
manded John, who was evidently
well up on the various stages of hash-
making..
Paul had thought this was all, but
suddenly a happy thought struck
him.
“Then she puts in pepper
salt,” he returned triumphantly.
“And then what?’ persisted John.
Paul had told all he knew, so
John slowly and distinctly concluded.
“She puts it in a bug.”
>“In a bug!” screamed Paul. “She
decesn’t either, she puts it in a spi-
der.’
“Well,” asked John, drawing him-
self up, ‘isn’t a spider a bug?”’—Chi-
cago News.
and
"A Smile or Two.
Laird—‘“Well, Sandy, you are get-
cing very bent. Why don’t you stand
straight up like me, man?”
Sandy—“‘Eh, mon, do you see that
field o’ corn over there?”
“1 do.”
“Weel, ye’ll notice that the full
heids hang down, and the empty ones
stand up.’’—Glasgow News.
Dogs Clean Sewers.
The municipality of Nice ‘has
trained dogs to'araw a cord, with a
brush fixed to the end of it, through
the small sewers of the city, and so
clean them. rs
The population of Brooklyn at the
time of consolidation was 838,000;
it is now 1,358,000, a gain of 520,-
0Q0, relatively larger than Manhat-
tan’s. !
Quill pens came into use in 553;
the first steel ones in 1820, when
the first gross of them sold for $36.
The first top buggies that ap-
peared frightened horses far more
than automobiles do now.
‘would take a | E
¥ "A BOCAL’ MANAGER WANTED.
An Independent Income Assured.
We are going to place at once a lo-
cal manager in every town or county
in the United States. We want men
and women of character, tact and
perseverance.-to represent us. The
reward is complet ndeperidegce and
a remuneration nm ‘generots. “Our
proposition is. ‘without exception the
most. liberal and best paying one ever
4 ered capable, ambitious ‘men or
nen. You can secure at once a
steady and assured income. Previous
experience is not mecessary.. All you
‘need iis confidence in your ability.
We have a straight, clean-cut money-
maker, It is the kind of a money-
‘maker that you have been looking
for. There is no limit to the income
that you can make. We want to
hear from every man or woman who
desires to secure a regular income
and are willing to make money. We
have just what you want and can
start you at once. Write us to-day
before others secure your district.
Address CIRCULATION, No. 182
Main street, Buffalo, N. Y.
. Marriage Laws.
In Virginia a man cannot legally
marry his deceased wife's sister. The
law is an inheritance of the common
law of England, and has never been
repealed.
Whites and Indians are forbidden to
marry in some states, as are also
whites and Chinese in some of the
Pacific coast states. Yet many white
men and women have married In-
dians.
Lunatics are not allowed to marry,
but the ceremony is valid if it takes
place during a sane period.
New Jersey law states specifically
that the deaf and dumb: are not im-
beciles under the law, and, therefore
may marry. Most of the other states
make the same provision.
Connecticut forbids any woman who
is an imbecile or feeble-minded to
marry.
_Therlegal age of marriage differs in
various states. In the majority the
murriage of maies under 14 years or
of females under 12 years is voidable.
In Ohio the age is fixed at 18 for
males and 16 for females. In Cali-
fornia, 18 and 15; in Iowa, 18 and 14;
in North Carolina, 16 and 14.—Cleve-
land News.
Monkeys and Ranches.
Not Irish, but delightful, is the
story of the automobilist who, in mak-
ing ‘a cross-country tour in Dakota,
had the misfortune to have his ma-
chine break down. He saw a small
house not far off and cut across to it.
The only man about the place was a
Swede, who was much amused by the
| sight of the strange rig the automobil-
ist wore. ‘““My friend,” said the auto-
mobilist, “my machine has had a bad
break and I would like to know if you
have such a thing as a monkey-
wrench about here?’ The Swede
looked at the automobilist with great-
er curiosity than ever, and then
laughed. He had met some strange
folks and heard some odd things since
he had come to America, but this was
the worst! ‘“‘Monkey-wranch?’ he
asked, sarcastically, ‘I got sheep
ranch and my cousin Ole he got cow
ranch, and Meester Ferguson he ban
have wan pig ranch, but I tank anny-
wan start monkey ranch in Nord
Dakota ban wan fool!”’—Success.
Grafters Buried Alive.
The Ameer of Afghanistan, on re-
turning recently to Kabul, his capital,
after: his prolonged tour, found high
prices being charged for grain in the
capital, and caused supplies to be is-
sued at cheap rates from the state
granary at Bamian. When the Ameer
was about to leave Lughmann for
Kabul three muftis of the courts were
brought up for trial for taking bribes
and maltreating the poor. The Asmeer
gave orders to the governor that ‘the
three muftis were to be buried alive.
and the sentence was duly carried out
after the Ameer’s departure.
Not Unprofessional.
A capital story is being told of a
K. C. now much in the public eye.
He once took up a brief for nothing
and won the case. The grateful cli-
ent, however, sent a postal order for
15 shillings, which the K. C. accepted
through fear of giving offense by
sending it back. At the bar mess one
of the barristers jocularly accused him
of unprofessional conduct in accept-
ing less than gold. ‘Excuse me,” re-
plied the K. C., “but I took all the
poor beggar had. 1 consider that is
not unprofessional.”’—London Daily
News.
WELL PEOPLE TOO
Wise Doctor Gives Postum to Con-
« valescents.,
A wise doctor tries to give nature
its best chance by saving the little
strength of the already exhausted
patient, and building up wasted en-
ergy with simple but powerful nour-
ishment.
“Five years ago,’ writes a doctor,
“I commenced to use Postum in my
own family instead of coffee. I was
go well pleased with the results that
I had two grocers place it in stock,
guaranteeing its sale.
“I then commenced to recommend
it to my patients in place of coffee,
as a nutritious beverage. The con-
sequence is, every store in town is
now selling it, as it has become a
household necessity: in many homes.
“I'm sure I prescribe Postum as
often as any one remedy in the Ma-
teria Medica-—in almost every case
of indigestion and nervousness I
treat, and with the best results.
“When I once introduce it into a
family, it is quite sure to remain. I
shall continue to use it and prescribe
it in families where I practice.
“In convalescence from pneumonia,
typhoid fever and other cases, I give
it as a liquid, easily absorbed diet.
You may use my letter as a refer-
ence. any way you see fit.” Name
given by Tostum Co., Battle Creek,
Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville”
in pkgs. ‘There's a reason.”
Greek, Slav or Teutonic lineage,
‘modern Roumanian makes it a point
"The Panera Sport.
A balloon trip gives one a sefise of
utter and complete stillness and also
a beautifully serene feeling of: aloof-
ness from men and tiresome matters,
a contempt “for the puniness of earth
and an unbounded sense of sociability
and camaraderie with those with
whem one is basketed aloft in those
few square” feet of wicker. It is a
philosopher’s joy, ballooning; the
sport of the scientific, and the idea
that it provides a new thrill or cardles
the blood of Father Vaughan’s jaded
and sinful butterflies may be good
enough for the half-penny press, but
not for the wiseacres of the Aero
Club. —London Bystander.
Mixed "Races in Roumania.
Roumania is inhabited by a bewild
ering variety of races, but whether of
the
of honor to claim descent from the
colonists whom Trajan planted in the
conquered province of Dacia, A. D.
107. alling themselves Romuni and
their language Romunie, the proud
citizens seldom draw out a legal docu-
ment without some allusion té their
founder, whom they style ‘‘the divine
Trajan.” The Roumanian language
reflects the composition of the race,
and now only faintly suggests the lan-
guage which Trajan spoke.
FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per-
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Arthur Stringer, the author, is an
enthusiastic farmer, and has a fine
fruit farm at ‘Cedar Springs, Ont.,
where he spends his summers.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums,reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
Queen Well Baptized.
The new Queen of Spain has been
baptized three times, once as an in-
fant when she was taken into the
Presbyterian Church, second time
when she was made a member of the
Church of England, and lastly, a few
weeks ago, when she was baptized as
a member of the Roman Catholic
Church.
WORST FORM OF ECZEMA
Black Splotches All Over Face— Affected
Parts Now Clear as Ever—Cured by
the Cuticura Remedies.
“About four years ago I was afflicted
with black splotches all over my face and
a few covering my body, which produced
a severe itching irritation, and which
caused mie a great deal of annoyance-and
suffering, to such an extent that 1 was
forced to call in two of the jeading phy-
sicians of my town. After thorough ex-
amination of the dreaded complaint they
announced it to be skin eczema in its
worst form. ‘They treated me for the
same for he length of one year, but the
treatment did me no good. Finally my
husbanu. purchased a set of the Cuticura
Remedies, and after using the contents of
the first bottle of Cuticura Resolvent in
connection with the Cuticura Soap and
Ointment, the breaking out entirely
stopped. |! continued tke use of .he Cuti-
cura Remedies for six moths, and after
that every sploteh + as entirely gone and
the afiected parts were leit as clear as
ever. The Cuuicura Remedies not only
cured me oi that creadlul dise:se, eczema,
but other comp:.catel ircubles as well,
Lizzie E. Sledge, 540 Jones Ave., Selma,
Ala. Oct. 28. 1905.”
No Wonder.
An old woman on the witness stand
at Bellinzona, Switzerland, gave her
age as 102. But it was ascertained on
cross-exaniination: that she was 106.
She explained : that, she was “ashamed
of being so old.”
1HOLD UP
land consider}
LIKE ALL
TOWER
/ CLOTHING.
Tsmade of the best
Sleds ike, ow
Ul AT
ohn jing aie
417 STICKTOTH
SIGN OF THE Fish ®
count.
iron TIRES. SS
NN
Wl we Tower ae
COLLEGE,
DUFF'S PITTSBURG, PA.
A High Grade Commercial and Shorthand
Training School, qualifying young men _ and
women for positions of trust and responsibility
demanded in this great financial and manu-
facturing center. Positions secured fer
graduates. Write for circulars.
DON'T WORRY ABOUT, YOUR. FEET!
d 25¢ today fo! 5 pkg.
| 25 PACKAGE =.5' RRO
rn
skin.
ELTA IN RET ness. Peaceand comfort
combined.
Cure guaranteed or iE Jones back. At drug
and shoe stores, or by mali p L
Samp BYR 4 Lr by mall only, 10e.
BEST s UPPLY CO., Sole Mfrs., Dept. , Jollet, Ill
48 Be beok free. Highest refs,
Long experience, Fitzgerald
&Co.Dept. 54, Washington,D.C
Leaves no fore-
WOMEN’S NEGLECT
SUFFERING THESURE PENALTY
Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia
BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
How maly women do you know who
are perfectly well and strong? We
hear every day the same story over and
over again. ‘‘Ido not feel well; 1 am
80 tired all the time!”
Mi . yr d
More than likely you speak the same
words yourself, and no doubt you feel
far from well. The cause may be easily
traced to some derangement of the fe-
male organs which manifests itself in
depression of spirits. reluctance to go
anywhere or do anything. backache,
bearing-down pains, flatulency, nerv-
ousness, sleeplessness, or other fe-
male weakness.
These symptoms are but warnings
that there is danger ahead, and unless
heeded a life of suffering or a serious
operation is the inevitable result.
The never-failing remedy forall these
symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound.
Miss Kate McDonald of Woodbridge,
N. J., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
‘‘ Restored health has meant so much to me
that F cannot help from telling about it fon
the sake of otter suffering women.
“ For a long time I suffered untold agony
with a female trouble and. irregularities,
which made me a physical wreck, and no one:
thought I would recover, but Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound has entirely
cured me, and made me well and strcng, and
I feel it my duty to tell other suffering women
what a a medicine it is.”
For twenty-five years Mrs, Pinkham,
daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham,
has under her direction, and since her
decease. been advising sick women free
of charge. Her advice
always helpful. Address, Lynn, Mass.
W. L. DOUCLAS
$3.50 &°3.00 Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.L.Douglas $4 Gilt Edge lin
cannotbe equalled atany price
fe Shoe Dealers
L. Poe Job-
TL House is the most
gompleted in this country
end for Cutalog
A
SHOES FOR TY AT ALL PRICES.
Sh 5 t
Me Wo Sof 2 $4.00 os 50.
Misses’ & Children’s He $2. 25 2 1.00.
Try W. L. Douglas Women's, Misses and
Children’s shoes; for style, fit and wear
they exc el other makes.
If I could take-you into my large
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any other make.
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L.
Douglas shoes, His name and price is stam
on the bottom, which protects you against high
prices and Inferior shoes. Take no substis
tute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes
and insist upon having them.
Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy.
Write for [llustrated ‘Catalog of Fall Styles.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. 15, Brockton, Mass.
You R
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con-
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
'Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. go cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass.
P. N. U. 88, 1906.
If afflicted
= we<k Thompson's Eye Water
WINCHESTER
REPEATING SHOTGUNS
are strong shooters, strongly made and
so inexpensive that you won’t be afraid
to use one in any kind
of weather.
They are made 10, 12 and 16 gauge.
A FAVORITE OF AMERICAN SPORTSMEN
Sold_ Everywhere.
is free and °