The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, March 28, 1907, Image 3

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    MRS. A. M. HAGERMANN
ALL WOMEN
SUFFER
from the same physical disturbances,
and the nature of their duties, in
many cases, quickly drift them into
the horrors of all kinds of female
complaints, organic troubles, ulcera-
tion, falling and displacements, or
perhaps irregularity or suppression
causing backache, nervousness, ir-
ritability, and sleeplessness.
Women everywhere should re-
member that the medicine that holds
the record for the largest number of
actual cures of female ills is
Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound
made from simple native roots and herbs.
For more than thirty years
it has been he ping women to be strong, regulating the functions per-
fectly and overcoming pain.
It has also
paring for child birth and the Change of
roved itself invaluable in pre-
ife.
Mrs. A. M. Hagermann, of Bay Shore, L. I, writes :—Dear Mrs.
Pinkham: —*‘I
suffered from a displacement,
excessive and painful
functions. so thatI had to lie down or sit still most of the time.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman so
that I am able to attend to my duties.
I wish every suffering woman
would try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and see what relief
it will give them.”
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female illness are invited to write
Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. for advice She is the Mrs. Pinkham who
has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty
years, and before that she assisted
her mother-in-law Lydia E. Pink-
ham in advising. Therefore she is especially well qualified to guide
sick women back to health.
Smallest County in the Union.
The smallest county in the union
is Bristol county, R. I, which has
only 25 square miies.
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. L.d.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
The highest mountain pass in the
Western Hemisphere is at Humahuaca
in he Andes, the highest point of
which is 14,600 fcet above the sea.
Me VWinslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
athing softens thegums, reducesinflamma-
by allays pain, cures wind colic, , ®5ca bottle
The natives of Kisiba carry coffee
in bags of dried banana leaves.
It is
Take it for constipa-
sick-headache; it regu-
purities the blood, brings
A Natural Remedy—Garfield Tea!
made of simple Ilerbs.
tion, indigestion,
Intes the liver,
Good Health,
New Submarine.
The newest design for a submarine
by John P. Holland will not be a de-
stroycer, but its object will be to put
out of commission any boat it may
attack rather. than to destroy. it. He
believes that disarmament and not an-
nihilation will be the object of future
wariares.
Oto, Crry or
Lucas Connty,
Fraxg J. CHENEY makes nath i he is
renior partner of the firm of F..1. CHENEY &
Co., doing basiness in the City of Toledo.
County and State aforesaid. and that said
firm will pavthesum of ONE HUNDRED DOLU-
LARS for each and every case of CATARRH
that cannot be cured bv the use of HArL’S
CATARRIH CURE, Frank J. CHENEY.
Sworn to befare me and subseribed 4 my
44 esence, this 6th day of December, A. D.,
8286. A. W. GLEASON.
(SEATL.) Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cureistakeninternallv. and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Send {or testimonials,
free. 1.3). CaexEy & Co., Toledo, O.
Seld br all Drugeists, 5c.
Hails Family Pills are the best,
The Original Calendar.
To the modern world a “calendar”
1s merely a harmless necessary re-
minder of wecks and days, to be hung
up on New Year's Day and consulted
in dating letters throughout the year.
It has no such mournful sound as
*“calendarium’” had for the ancient Ro-
mans. The original “calendar” of
their tisne was the money lender's ac-
count book, so called because inter-
est was due front the debtor on the
calendar, or first day of each month.
That is why Seneca speaks of “cal-
endar’ as a word invented outside the
course of naturc on account of human
greed. It is 2 word which may help
to persuade us that the world has
grown Singlieyerionqon Chronicle.
STATE oF * TOLEDO, ls
Poor Paint is Expensive
If one is rich enough to repaint his
buildings every year for the pleasure
of having a change of color scheme,
the quality of the paint used may cut
little figure. But if it is desirable to
cut the painting bills down to the least
amount possible per year, it is of the
utmost importance that the paint be
made of Pure White Lead and the
best of Linseed Oil. There are imita-
tions in the form of alleged White
Lead, and there are substitutes in the
form of ready-prepared paints.
We guarantee our White Lead to be
absolutely pure, and the Dutch Boy
on the side of every keg is your safe-
guard. Look for
him.
SEND FOR
BOOK
“A Tulk on Paint,”
gives valuable infor-
mation on the aint
subject, nt {ree
upon request.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
in whichever of the follow,
ng cisige is Bsurest you :
ead a i ii On adel-
a s. ol-
Hs Gast & Br Bove. ; Pittsvurgh
Onion Eaters Good Humored.
“If people would eat more onions,”
said the man with the smothered
beefsteak, “the world might have to
hold its nose, but the population of
St. Louis would be a great deal
healthier.
“Most of us eat too much meat and
grease and bread and bufter and not
enough vegetables, and the conse-
quence is our systems get clogged up
with grease and starch, our livers
get out of order, and we grumble at
our wives and scold our children and
fuss when the baby cries and quarrel
with the street car conductors, and
get into rows at the office and lose
our jobs, not because we are natural-
ly sulky or quarrelsome, but because
we are bilious. Why are we bili-
ous? Decause we don't eat onions.
You never saw a dyspeptic man eat-
ing onions. He thinks they are poi-
son, hut, in fact, they are the medi-
cine he most needs.
“Whenever you see an onion eater
you sce a whole-souled, open-hearted,
jolly good fellow, who knows what
he ought to eat to keep him good-hu-
mored. Talk about the staff of iife,
why bread is only a crutch. There
is more nourishment in an onion
than there is in a roll. The onion
lovers keep the world moving, to say
nothing of providing it. with much of
its fun.”-—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Tunnel Delimitation.
Delimitation in a tunnel is probab-
ly one of the novelties of international
Jaw. It has just been carried out be-
tween Italy and Switzerland in the
Simplon. There have been several
incipient disputes as to the precise
point at which one jurisdiction ended
and the other began, and to place such
incidents out of the range of possibili-
ty for the future, a mixed commission
was appointed to draw a boundary line
in the bowels of the mountain. Their
work nas just been successfully com-
pleted. It is noted as a curious de-
tail that the temperature in the tun-
nel during the work was about 52 de-
gress Fahrenheit.-—Philadelphia Rec-
ord.
Preferred Sword to Book.
Pope Julius 1I., who died in 1513,
was the first Pope to allow his beard
to grow in erder, it was said, to in-
spire greater respect among the faith-
ful. He was called the military Pope.
When Michael Angelo was making his
statue he said to him: “Holy Father,
shall I place a book in your hand?”
“No,” answered His Holiness, “a
sword rather--1 know better how to
handle it.,’
Camphor Farm.
A camphor farm is to be established
near Floresville e, Tex., under the aus-
pices of the Bureau of Plant Industry
of the United States Department of
Agriculture. The Government has al-
ready a large experimental farm in
operation near Wharton, Tex. It is
believed that the new industry has
wonderful possibilities, and that the
time is not far distant when Texas
will be one of the greatest camphor
producing regions of the world.
FIFTEEN YEARS OF ECZEMA
Terrible Itching Prevonted Sleep—
Hands, Arms, and Legs Affected
—Cured in 6 Days by Cuticura.
*] had eczema nearly fifteen years. The
affected parts were my hands, arms and
legs. They were the worst i= the winter
time and were always itchy, and 1 could
not keep from scratching them I had to
keep both hands bandaged all the time,
and at night 1 would have to scratch
through the bandages as the itching was
so severe, and at times I would have to
tear everything off my hands to scratch
the skin. 1 could not rest or sleep. 1 had
several physicians treat me, but they could
not give me a permanent cure, nor even
could they stop the itching. After using
the Cuticura Soap, one box Cuticura Oint-
ment and two bottles Cuticura Resolvent
for about six days the itching had ceased.
and now the sores have disappeared, and
I never felt better in my life than I do
now. Edwara \Worell, Band 30th, U. S.
Infantry, Fort Crook, Nebraska.”
Typhoid Decimates Army.
In India alone the losses to the
British army from typhoid fever
amount to half a battalion a year.
The latest reports furnish proof that
the practice of anti-typhoid inocula-
tions in the army has resulted in a
substantial reduction in the incidence
and death rate of enteric fever among
the inoculated.
A fresh fallacy is often more pleas-
ing than a twice-told truth.
An English novelty designated as a
mufl’ and pocket warmer consists of an
hermetically sealed tube which is de-
clared to contain a special chemical
preparation which will maintain its
heat for an usually long time. To use
it the case is immersed in boiling wa-
ter for five to ten minutes and when
taken out is incased in a red flannel
felt cover. It is asserted that the
warmer will retain its heat for from
three to four hours.
Water-proof - glue is manufactdred
of gum shellac three parts and India-
rubber one part by weight, these: con-
stituents being dissclved in ~~ separate
vessels in ether, free from alcohol
subject to a gentle heat. “When thor-
oughly dissolved, the two solutions arc
mixed and kept for some time in a
vessel tightly sealed. This..glue re-
sists the action of water, both hot and
cold, as well as most acids and alkalies.
If the glue is thinned by the admix-
ture of ether, and applied as a varn-
ish to leather along the seams where
this has been sewn tczether, it ren-
ders the joint or seam water-tight,
and almost impossible to separate.
The cost of copper refining by elec-
tricity has teen reduced greatly in
recent years in the American refineries
by the introduction of mechanical de-
vices for castinz the anode slabs of
crude copper and for charging and
discharging the vats. According to an
article by Mr. John B. C. Kershaw
in Cassier’'s Magazine, the expenditure
on hand labor has thus been greatly
reduced, and the time during which
vats are laid off for rechanzing and
cleaning has been curtailed. The cur-
rent density used hag also been great-
ly increased by the use of improved
methods of circulating the electrolyte,
and by the addition of a very small
percentage of hydrochloric acid to the
copper sulphate solution.
When natural gas was first brouzht
into use in America there seemed to be
a general idea that the supply was
inexhaustibl It was sold at low rates
and usually without measurement.
This method encouraged waste in the
censumption of gas, and was shortly
abandoned by the larger companies.
Teday nearly all consumption is sold
by measurement. It is believed, says
the Iron Age, that the time has now
come when it is possible to procure
statistics of the quantity of gas
sumed, and next year this will be un-
dertaken. The method will give such
figures in the future that a more di-
rect knowledge will be obtained of the
capacity of areas to maintain a
commercial supply of gas for a cer-
tala number or years.
£as
Carbon tetrachloride is being made
an important new product in France,
Chemical works at Moutiers in Savoy,
especially haviriy undertaken its pro-
duction on a large scale. It is a coler-
less, mcbile liquid, like petroleum in
appearance, and has the composition
of about ninety-two perceat, of chlor-
ine to eight percent of carbon. It can
be profitably made only where chlor-
ine is an industrial residue, as in the
producticn of soda cor potash by the
electrolytic method. It boils at 77 de-
grees C., is entirely volatilized without
odor, and is so stable that it does not
tack metals, fabrics or colors, even at
high temperatures. It is uninflamma-
ble and incombustible. It dissolves
all fats, and it is expected to take the
place of such extremely dangerous sol-
vents as carbon sulphide, benzine,
chloroform, alcohols and ether. It
dissolves certain gums and resins,
making it probably available in var-
nish manufacture.
Tunnel Work Kills Sixty-Eight.
According to the coroner's report
for Manhattan for 1906, which was
made public last night, 68 deaths were
due to accidents in-the various tua
nels now building in and about the
boroughs. Of these’ 43 are reported
to have occurred in the Pennsylvania
tunnels, 12 by caisson disease, 29 by
fractures and other injuries causec
by falling stone, descending elevato
buckets, fiying rock, ete., and 2 from
drowning caused by the sudden inflow
of water into the submarine tunnecls
In the Belmont tunnels the ‘tota;
loss of life is said to have been 20-3
by caisson disease, 9 by drowning
In the Battery tunnel only two deaths
were reported, one by fracture of the
skull and one by caisson disease, and
in the excavation under Church anc¢
Dey street three deaths all caused by
caisson disease—New York Tribune
Hicvory and White Oak Scarce.
Since hickoy and white oak timbel
have becomie scarcer and more diffi
cult to obtain wehicle makers have
turned their attention towards sub
stitutes for these woods, in the man
ufacture of spokes, axles and tongues
Now the eucalyptus or red gum of
California is being used for spokes,
and tests show is as well adapted
to this purpose as thef avored hick
ory or white oak. In making axles
maple has taken the place of hickory
and whit. ash, and for tongue and
pole material yellow pine has been
substituted for ash and hickory with
satisfactory results. Farmers, fortu
mate enough to possess woadlandz
containing ash,’ hickory, white ocak or
maple trees wlll do well to be con:
servative in the matter of disposing
of them at present. They will contin:
ue to increase in valae.
mr ———
In the towns of Feru the fire engine:
ere drawn by men.
con-’
THE ELOCUTIONIST'S CURFEW.
England's
your
F illing
was slowly setting— (Raise
right hand to your brow),
all the land with beauty—(Wear
a gaze of rapture now),
And the last rays kissed
of a man and maiden
(With a movement slow
You may now push
He with sad, bowed head-—(A drooping
of your head will be all right
you hoarsely, sadly whisper)’
few must not ring tonight,’
sun
the forehead
graceful
your hair);
“Cur-
“Sexton,’”’. Bessie's
(Try here to
white lips faltered—
resemble Bess,
Though of course you know she'd never
worn quite such a charming dress),
“I've a lover in that prison’’—(Don’t for-
get to roll. your r’s
And to shiver as though gazing through
the iron prison bars)
“Cromwell will not come
{§poais each word as
bit
Every
not
till sunset’’—
though you'd
‘syllable to pieces)—*“Curfew
ring tonight.’
must
“Bessie,” calmly spoke the sexton—
: (Here extend your. velvet palm,
Let it tremble like the sexton’s
> though striving to- be calm),
Long, long y'ars I've rung the curfew—
(Don’t forget to make it. y
With a pitiful inflection that a
sorrow bears),
“I have done my duty ever”
yourself up to your height
For you're speaking as ‘the sexton),—
“Gyurl, the curfew rings tonight!”
as
rs
world of
— (Draw
Out she swung, far out—(Now here is
where you've got to do your best;
Let your head be twisted backward,
_8reat sobs heave up vour chest,
Swing your right foot through an arc of
lineal degrees,
down and swing
and be sure don't
let
come
oot,
knees
this up
your left
bend your
for fifteen
face is worn
Then gaze at vour
“Curfew shall
minutes
and white
not ring
O’er the distant hills came Cromwell-—
(Right hanfl to the brow once more;
Your eves look down “the distance,
say above the entrance door)
At his foot she told her — (Lift your
hands though hur 1) ?
And her sweet young 3 haggard—
(Now your rs sert
Then you straighten
na be
Let
Story-
they
face
you
up - as
sure you get
as
Crome n,
Don 3
en “Curfew
night!”
—W. D. Nesbit, in Harper's Magazi
“Is be a close friend?
£0.
iar,’
should say
He wouldn't e len > a dol-
or Clevernd Plaii
s just crazy
»” remarked the new bride.
what everyLbody thinks.”
Sentinel.
to marry ‘me,
“Yes. That's
—Milwaulee
An English wit remarked of English
women that - while romance made
wrecks of them, marriage made them
look like -public buildings.— Harlequin.
Copy Reader—A2Alan
a Turkish bath. ! ead
story? . Night Editor—Ancther
Shop Qutrage.—-Clevelund Plain
er.
det
in
the
al
Swent
Deal-
“I've just heard of 'an auto that
will annihilate time and space.” “Well,
the present sort is good enough for me.
It annihilates everything in sight.”
Life.
Ethel: I hear that Mrs. Newwed is
taking the Jiu Jitsu training.
Maude: Well, she had to do some-
thing to enable her to handle that ba-
by.—Life.
Dentist—I’ve filled ail our tecth
that have cavities, sir!” Mahoney—
“Well, thin, fill th’ rist av thim, too—
thin whin th’ cavities come they'll be
already filled, b’gobs!’—Puck.
Mamma—*“There, Dick; you just go
right to bed without a mouthful of sup-
per.” Dick—*'Ch, mamma, 1 can’t
sleep on an empty stomach.’ Vom
ma—:"Then turn over cn your back.’
Judge.
Joakley—*“I understand Crooks is
anxious to be a Congressman-at-large..
Coakley—* ‘You mean ex-Cengressman
Crocks? Why he's in the penitentiary
serving sentence——’ Joakley—"Ex-
actly.”—Philadelphia Press.
A joke came into an editorial sane-
tum where it was ill received. “Con-
sidered as a mere jest,” it admitted,
“I may not be without defects. Never-
theless, there is due to age such respect
as should guarantee me civil treat-
ment.” This view, indeed, seemed sc
reascnable that in the end it pre-
vailed.—Philadelphia Public Ledger.
of ¥
British Stupidity and Art.
If Whistler and Wilde and Moore
had had to deal with the French in-
stead of the British public their en-
tire devotion probably would have
been given to art. Their “conscious
superiority” would not have been
aroused—their egotism would not
have thrived on more or less exag-
gerated persecution. But perpetually
reminded of British conservatism—
its reverences, superstitions, hypoc-
risies, lies and stupidity—reminded
always of British indifference to
—its antimacassars, chandeliers, pub-
lic statues, its Dicksees and Trollopes
—they substituted the pese of super
jority for the poise of supremacy.—
Chicago Evening Post.
The Unkindness of Belle.
Kadley Rich—I saw a great deal of
Belle Swellman last winter. 1 saw
you talking to her this morning.
Goodley Bullion—Yes; she was
ing me she hoped you were gcir
winter at Palm Beach again this sea-
son.
Kadley Rich—Ah!
eh?
Goodley Bullion—No;
California.—Catholic
Times.
tell-
she’s going there,
she’s going to
Standard and
Toledo lost its biggest tres recently
—a silver maple and a very old set-
tier.
art’
PE-RU-NA A MEDICAL COMPOUND
In any medical compound as much depends upon the manner in which
it is compounded as upon the ingredients used.
First, there must be a due proportion of the ingredients.
in the pharmacopceia has its special action.
Each drug
To combine any drug with other
drugs that have slightly different action, the combination must be made
with strict reference to the use for which the compound is intended.
The
drugs may be well selected as to their efficacy, but the compound ENTIRE-
LY SPOILED BY THE PROPORTION in which they
are combined.
It takes years and years of experience to discover this proportion. There
is no law of chemistry, of pharmacy, by which the exact balance of propor-
tion can be determined.
EXPERIENCE IS THE ONLY GUIDE.
In compounding a catarrh remedy Dr. Hartman has had many years®
experience.
tarrh remedy, I’eruna, he has learned,
In the use of the various ingredients which composed the ca=
little by little, how to harmonize the
action of each ingredient, how to combine them into a stable compound, how
to arrange them into such nice proportions as to blend the taste, the opera
ation and the chemical peculiarities of each several ingredient in order to
produce a pharmaceutical product beyond the criticism of doctors, pharma~
cists or chemists.
WE REPEAT, THAT AS MUCH DEPENDS ON THE WAY IN WHICH
THE DRUGS ARE COMBINED AS DEPENDS UPON THE DRUGS THEM-
SELVES
The compound must present a stability which is not affected by changes
of temperature, not affected by exposure to the air, not affected by age.
ain just the same whether used in the
must be so combined that it will rem
Ic
logging or mining camps of the northwest or the coffee plantations of the
tropics.
A complete list of the ingredients of Peruna would not enable any drug-
gist or physician to reproduce Peruna.
It is the skill and sagacity by which
these ingredients are brought together that give Peruna much of its pecu-
liar claims as an efficacious catarrh remedy.
However much virtue each ingredient of Peruna may possess, the value
of the compound depends largely upon the manner
The right ingredients, put together rightly, is the only
they are combined.
r and proportion in whicl
way a medical compound can be made of real value.
Trolley in Damascus.
A French company has secured the |
of al
franchise for the construction
trolley linc in the city of Damascus.
The concession is virtually a
poly of all electrical privileges,
cluding telephones telegraph, light
and power Sanmiasion. The power
will be secured from the falls of the
River Barada, at Et Tekive, 22 miles
from the city. At the present time
in-
three and cne-half miles of trolley line |
suburbs with the city!
connecting the
are under constructicn:
II. II. GREEN'S Soxs,of Atlanta, Ga. are
the only succe il Dropsy Sp ccialists inthe
worid. See their libe ral offer Jn edvertise-
ment in another column of this paper.
The thin | paper on which the Ox-
ford Eible is printed is made after :
secret process by the Oxford Univers
ity Press. The secret is valued at
$1,250,000.
WP GOGO TS ogo wars = Sg a PY
D
LUMBAGO
AND
SCIATICA
Penetrates to the Spot
Right on the dot.
25¢ and
Price S0c
a a ad ar af af oP oF of of oF of of to oF ed at a a A SS
Boceensecococnenoronen
Mica Axle Grease
Dest lubricant for cxles in the
world—long wearing and very sd-
hesive.
Makes a heavy load draw like a
light onc. Saves half the wear on
wagon and team, and increases the
earning capacity of your outfit.
Ask your dealer fcr Mica Axle
Grease.
becronsrencmonessasscnonas SoS Wim |
| Immense Area of Canada.
Canada is as lar as 30 United
Kingdon:s. She has received over
half a million immigrants in ten years.
oe
mono- |
| People appreciate the delicate taste and
| natural action of Garfield Tea, the mild herb
| laxative. Best for liver. kidneys and bowe
| goa antced under the Pure Food and Drugs
LAW.
A man is never too busy to listem
when the lady on the: dollar talks.
i Skin Tortured
Distigured Babies
SHOULD
KNOW
And gentle anointings with
Cuticura, the great SkinCure,
afford instant relief, permit
rest and sleep, and point to a
speedy cure of torturing, dis-
figuring eczemas, rashes,
itchings, and irritations of
infants and children when all
else fails. ,Guaranteed abso-
lutely pure, and may be used
from the hour of birth.
ie ¢ Props..
etn
Fouier em. Corp.
Ee Cuticura Book on Care
P. N. U. 13, 1907.
DROP SY YEW DISCOVERY;
gives gulek rellef and cares
worst cascs.
Book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment
Free. Dr. I. H. GREEN'S BONS, Box B, Atlasta, Ga.
deal from the pleasure they shou
at a trifling cost with one cc~t of
d afford.
buggies and curria
other paint on the market,
weather and muddy roads,
Carriage and Bury) y P»int.
Busfalo Boston
PAINT YOUR VEHICLES
8hoddy or weather-beaten “Shoufd a buggies. sleighs or other vehicles detract a great
Buffalo Carriage
and Buggy Paint
- mixed ready for nse. No rubbing or varnishing necessary.
ges, and can be easily applied by anyone who can handle a brush.
Dries quickly and fiard and fives you a bright, glossy, piano finish, unequaled by any
he Kind of 5
Made in eight colors and black.
ments ground in the best and most dnrable coach varnish.
If your dealer does not keep it, send us his name and we
will gend you our coe chart and our beautiful Buffalo-head Stick-pin Free,
Buffale Oil Paint & Varnish €o.,
Chicago
You can make such vehicles look like new
Specially made for painting
t that wears and resists the ray ages of the
Made from the finest pig-
Insist on getting Buffalo
Sole Makers
San Francisco
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES 3 orkw
. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES GANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE.
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES:
Men's Shoes, 85 to $1.50.
Shoes, $4 to 1.50.
V
Boys’ shoes, 83 to &1.25. Women's
Misses’ & Chiidren’s Shoes, $2.25 to $1.00.
WV. L. Douzlas shoes are 1ecognized by expert judges i Sh ear
LR
tobe the best in style, fit and wear prouucea in this cou
Each
part of the shoe and every detail of the making is looked after
and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without recard to
tine or cost.
Brockton, Mass., and show vou how carefully W. L. Dougl-s -
shoes are made, yu would ther vnderstand why they hold their ne
wear longer. and are of greater valna than
If I could take you into my large factories at
A
fit iy
any other makes.
W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped, on the bottom. which protects the wearer against high
k
prices and inferior shoes.
Fast Color
wn bugitute.
velets used ecclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. L. DO
Sold by the best shoe deniers every where.
u GlAS, Bruckion, Ma