J y Than S de Re- 1as not re any . lamb. nprove- ny. men r desks* icing a cunt of discov- ms for nerease every- hopeful will be 1s it is er will ving of bly the . of the e. The $0 per on, and demand 1 to an favor- the in- is. Or- he past )0 tons, ere has upplies, In the es have naterial ~~ statis- ,233,074 >d with he mer- produc- output ng steel e were the last the last NGED » Three re terror o death ity in a 1d Duke M. Cht- ce, and | yester- chief of at day- opposite d death Italian, rhen ar- the real corres- rs, and were 18 oly. MONEY Govern- rivers of ompany, le house lvocated 50 acres e to be a naval e asked the pur- Repre- ia. : red that an owed mpany’s xclusive go that purchase out the ymmittee Sane. 1, slayer declared itbmitted er today seases. e is au- eras big | ornia by The bill = nber on forests. 1arles D. Sigsbee, deceased ~ f engin-""* 5 prohib- 3% work on e canal, ‘gencies” rers. . egun ‘an: ble and »# to find-:% er .class openin he crim country Supreme? mbia by; the New man Lil-*™ damages .: >d by the cases of hicago & d others re fined . on the to Sch- npany of r of In- ling that receive The res- orto Rico included ite is 10 niting. a J. Mar- >» of hav- Supérior rch, 1907. € woman a» § 11 i purpose -cnly along the =coast. ’ “1907” yup pf Fiss acy Sema acts, ently yet prompt: 1 onthe bowels, cleanses Fhe systomeffectually ey - m overcoming habitual consti ation evmanently. by To get its nan effects buy the denune. anufactured bythe ALIFORNIA Fic Sxrup Co. SOLD BY {FADING DRUCGISTS-50¢ siwiliin Se ‘Remarkable Influsnce, Love is the wonderful influence whose alchemy. fills this earth with blessing and happiness. : It softens the coarseness, the asperities; the rudeness, the bitterness and malice of human life so that kindnéss, gentle- = ness, courtesy and good will prevail ‘in society and make this world a fit: place to live in.—Rev. Dr. 'W. H. _. Vincent. r What Causes Headache, From October to May, Colds are the most frequent cause of Headache, axative Bromo Quinine removes cause. E. W. Grove on box. 25c. This Kind May Work. A Nebraska woman sewed her hus- band between two blankets and bela- bored him with a rolling pin until he agreed to sign a temperance pledge. ‘We rather suspect this is one variety of prohibition likely to actually pro- hibit.—Washington Herald. For Over Half a Century Brown’s Bronchial Troches have been- unexcelled as a cure for boarseness, coughs and sore throat. Tastes an Index of Character. A man’s tastes better than his words are an index to his character. These show whether a man is a friend of God or.a friend of the world.—Rev. Dr. S. 'H.'W ainwright. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children fon af softens thegums, reducesinflamma- on, allays pain, cures wind colic, ca bottle Using Sea Weed. Of late years the chief use to which sea weed has been put in this coun- ‘try is as fértilizer, and in this direc- tion the department of agriculture has made some interesting investigations. As sea weed taken directly from the. rocks -contains. about 80 per ‘cent of water, and as it is most valuable for “fertilizer when it is only partly dried, it is clear that it is useful] for that But it has been carried eight or ten miles inland and still used effectually. Sinte the COWNTY was settled. In ve! I that locality it perpetuates itself and grows on the same land year after year without reseeding.—Washington Post. No 1907 Dollars. A clerk at the Bingham House who has been blessed: with a boy baby du- ring the last year wanted among other little gifts, to give his young hopeful a silver dollar marked “1907” which could be suspended about his neck on a string and used to help cut the little teeth which were begin- ning to show signs of appearing. He inquired among all his friends for a silver dollar and it was not until he had been on the vain search for nearly a week that some one told him the call at the mint, and there he received official information that under advices from Washington they had not coined any silver dollars since 1905.—Philadelphia Record. THE DOCTOR'S GIFT Food Worth its Weight in Gold. We usually expect the doctor to put us on some kind of penance and give us bitter medicines. - A Penn. doctor brought a patient something entirely different and the results are truly interesting. ‘Two years ago,” writes this pa- tient, "1 was a frequent victim of acute -indigestion and biliousness, be- ing allowed to eat very few things. One day our family doctor brought me a small package, saying he had found something for me to eat, at last. “He said it*'was a food called Grape-Nute, and even as {ts golden color might suggest, it was worth its weight in gold. | was sick and tired, trying one thing after another to no avail, but at last consented to try this new food. “Well!" 1t surpassed my doctor’s fondest anticipation, and every day since then | have blessed the good doctor and the inventor of Grape- Nuts. *1 noticed improvement at once, and in a month's time my former spells of indigestion had disappeared. In two months 1 felt like a new man. My brain was much clearer and keen- er, my body took on the vitality of youth, and this condition has contin- ued.” “There's a Reason.” by Postum Co., Read pkgs. Name given Battle Creek, Mich. “The Road to Wellville,” in Aristide Charette’s claim that he can make diamonds is to be investigated by tlie French Academy of Science. Professor McMillan Brown, ethnolo- gist, holds that the future Australian people will, in all probability, be black. An electrical instrument recently in. vented for avoiding the pain incident to the extraction of teeth has attract- ed considerable attention. Briefly it consists of adjustable prongs, carrying buttons and connecter with an electric battery. The buttons are placed on the face over the nerves leading from the teeth to the brain, and a circuit is established the moment the extracting instrument touches the tooth. In a German mine recently a bore .| was being sunk, and‘at-a depth ‘of al- most a thousand feet the hardened end of the steel bit broke off. To get the broken piece of steel out ‘a soft bar, five feet long and about three inches in diameter was surrounded by a single winding of india rubber- covered wire. It was ‘then magnetized and let down the hole, ‘and raised the steel to the surfaced ‘withbit further trouble. a The hundredth anniversary of the birth of Dr. L: D. de la Loza, an emi- nent physician and chemist in Mexico during the last century, was cele- brated by official decree with due hon- ors to his memory. Besides a special ceremony on November 15, a souve- nir volume was published containing articles on chemistry from the pro- fessors of this science throughout the republic, and Loza’s works are to be collected and published in a separate volume. - The culture in France of the soy bean, whose products are so import- ant in the ‘dietary of the Chinese and Japanese, is being urged by Chinese in Paris. A puree pressed from the boiled seeds yields both milk and cheese, thinning with water producing a very good substitute for animal milk, and coagulating, with a miner- al salt fitting the material for cheese- making. The cheese is usually eaten fresh, though it may be preserved by salting or smoking, first being cooked. Plugged sleepers have been used with marked success in large numbers by Chief Engineer Fredericia, of the Danish State Railway. A plain 1 1-2 linch cylindrical creosoted : plug of beech or birch is driven" tight inal 1-2-inch hole bored in the sleeper and the spike is driven in a hole bored in this plug. Worn-out sleepers plugged in this way have been found to give good service, as the rail seems to be held down with exceptional firmness, {and= deterioration due’ to the “pouna- in of loose rails is: prevented. EVAPORATED APPLES. Make a Valuable ‘and Staple Article of Food ‘Supply. the evaporatéd or dried apples pro- duced in the extensive orchard re- gion of Western Central New York have been for many years a staple article of commerce anl a valuable food supply. Evaporated apples are more read- ily transported, are less in bulk and can be kept in store with less difficul- ty and expense than green fruit. When the apples are dried the water is ex- pelled, leaving the syrupy juice in the fruit cells in a condition that renders the fruit available for culinary pur- poses when green fruit is not avail- able. A handful of evaporated apples, which can be kept without care in a paper bag for months, will furnish a valuable and healthful food by the simple process of soaking and stew- ing. For all the adaptability and great usefulness of evaporated apples the product has not received the attention it deserves from housekeepers or the public press. While the wheat crop, the green apple crop, the potato and bean crops receive marked attention, the staple product of the evaporators receives little notice except from trade journals. One reason is, perhaps, the extent of the business and the lack of knowledge by any single individual of this valuable resource and great factor in the wealth of the state. Many years ago it was made known that the most important diplomatic communication of our minister to | Greece. related to the production of the Zante currant. At the time over wise persons smiled, thinking the mat- ter was of trivial importance. In reality the communication was of more value than all the political dis- cussions that might arise from our relations with the kingdom of Greece. The Zante currant is on the shelf of every grocer, and it is better known to the housekeeper than the more valuable evaporated apple, fresh from the great orchards of New York.—H. C., in the New York Tribune. Time, Three A. M. Husband—A storm prevented my coming home sooner. wWife—A storm! What kind—rain, hail, wind, barn or brain?—Judge. ! The far famed diamend mines of Kimberley, have produced since their incorporation over 12 tons’ weight of diamonds, whose estima $500,000,C00. ted value is| FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW ACTIVITY IS INCREASING Jobbers Report More Pregsure to Renew Depleted Stocks of Staples. New York.—R. G. Dun & Company's “Weekly Review of Trade” says: “Favorable symptoms are more nu- merous in the commercial outlook, especially in respect to the growth of confidence. Jobbers note more pres- sure io replenish depleted stocks of staple merchandise, orders in many cases being for delivery next fall. The advancing season has. also con- tributed to the bettter feeling by ac- celerating the distribution of spring goods and stimulating interest in the building trades. “Industrial plants are more active, pig iron preduction rising to the best weekly average in three months. Credits are still closely scanned and mercantile collections are by no means satisfactory, vet payments are more prompt and the volume of bus- iness is distinctly heavier. “There is an appearance of per- manence in the steady improvement in the steel and iron industry that would be lacking were recovery more sensational. Each week brings a few more mills ‘and ‘furnaces into the ac- tive list, while specifications on old contracts constantly call for a larger tonnage. “Dry goods jobbers have done more business ‘than was expected but thus far there is little improvement in the primary market and few. mills have. resumed activity. Jobbers- will not begin operations as’ ‘early as. usual, so that sales will B& closer to actual Ye- tail ‘distribution, and the season's aggregate business will be much less speculative than in anv recent year. Contracts extending well into the summer have been placed for sheet- ings and inquiries from the bag trade promise good improvement of odd constructions.. “Many buyers have left the woolen market after placing moderate orders aud liberal supplementary contracts will be needed to make up a normal aggregate. “Production of England factories footwear at New is still much cur- tailed. Quotations are nominally un- changed.” MARKETS. "PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 Ted. ...oreenrrinn. $ 9» 9: e—No. 2... Fh 72 73 Corn—No. 2 ello Ww, ‘ear... ww 78 No.2 yellow, shelled. . 69 7 1x Sis eke 66 67 Oats—No: 2 White 53 54 No.8 ©. 5) 52 Flour—Winter patent.. 49) 50) Fancy Fireight winters. 46) 47% Hay—No. 1 Timothy........ 150) 15% Clover = 1500 1550 Feed—No. 1 white ‘mid. ton. 275) 28)0 Brown middlings..... 2600 2700 Bran, bulk. -255) 235) Straw—Wheat 95) 100) Beseasoseas sesiienes we 359 100) Dalry Products. Butter—Elgin creamery...........8 2) 31 Ohio creamery.......... te 22 24 Fancy Souniry Toll sive ces 13 20) Cheese Onis, b ast esaes . 13 17 New York, Po ewer Somensariae : 16 17 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b 7 =a8 Chickens—dAresse 12 13 Egat, and Ohio, fresh.. 21 32 Frults and Vegetables. otaloge Fenty white per bu.... 70 73 Cabbage—per ton............ ola. Onlons—per barrel. : ssistigies. 153 305 BALTIMORE. eo Patent . 3 5 8) : 73 32 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent. $30) 30 Wheat—No. 2 red..... 93 Corn—No. 2 mixed i 73 Oats—No. 2 irks 41 45 Butter—Creamery............ 31 33 er firsts........ 42 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patonts.,... «cose rpees 8 13) 4D Wheat—No. 2 red. 103. Corn—No. 2......... 65 67 Oats—No. 2 white 52 57 Butter Cream ery. : Eggs—State and ennsylvania... at 88 4) LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,45) to 1,60) I1b3....... eee. 3 5 60 5 8 Prime, 1,300 to 1,40) lbs. 5 65 57) Go od, 1,200 to 1,30) lbs... 5 30 5 60 Tidy, 4, 050 to 1,150 lbs 5 10 5.3) Common, 700 to 9)) 1b. 42 500 Oxen,............:..h.. 835) 1.5) Buns 30) 1 20 OWS. ooo nuns (Furic cnininses 15) 3 0) Hoifors, T00 to L103... ....... 23) t 65 Fresh Cows and Springers........ 13)) 8549) Hogs. Primeheayy....................... $463 47) Prime medium weight . 49) 403 Best heavy Yorkers.......... 49) 49 Good light Yorkers....,...... 475 4 8) Pigs.. 4140 45) Roughs 193, 4 Stags ee 40) 41) Sheep. Prime wethers, clipped. 57 600 Good mixed............. 5 40 563 Fair mixed ewes gaa wethers 42 47 falls and com oe 20) 23) sre nsvecanie shebisises i ibaa ense 4 3 625 Ss 50) 32 Heavy and thin calves. . 39) 50) The question was recently asked In a newspaper, “What is the most dis- mal of professions?’ Among those that occurred to the British Medical Journal as having a claim to be con- sidered were grave digging, scaveng- ing, listening to Panliamentary ora- tions through an all-night sitting and the writing of pocems—or articles— that nobody reads. The washing of dishes may be made interesting if dons scientifically. The question was recently asked in a newspaper, “What is the most dis- mal of professions?” Among those that occurred to the British Medical Journal as having a claim to be con- sidered were grave digging, scaveng- ing, listening to Parliamentary ora- tions through an all-night sitting and the writing of poems—or articles— that nobody reads. The washing of dishes may be made interesting if done scientifically. x In our faces.- ' nearer to heaven.—Rev. A WELL MAN, AT 81. Phe Interesting Experience of an Old Settler of Virginia. Daniel S. Queen, Burrell Street, Salem, Va., says: “Years ago while lifting a heavy weight, a sudden pain shot through my back and after that I was in constant mis- ery from kidney trou- WE ble. One cpell kept mi. ‘nu bed six weeks. My ara: and legs were sti an’ I was nelpless as a child. The urine was dis- ordered and though I used one remedy after another I was not helped until I used Doan’s Kidney Pils and I was so bad then that the first box made only a slight change. To-day, how- ever, I am a well man, at 81, and 1 owe my life and health to ihe use of Doan’s Kidney Pills.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.’ Foster-Milbur Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Négessity of Ideals. It is absolutely necessary for us to have ideald. If we have none, then we will sink to the level of the beasts of the field. “'Wé will go. ‘through life ‘as dumb’ diiven ‘cattle’ and not as heroes with the light of God shining: If we wish worthily. to achieve our destiny, then there must { ever be before:us “the vision splen- did.” Our religion as the highest of ideals. beckons us upward. and bids us go forward and practice what we. believe /in.:daily: life and duty.—Rev.| . George Downing Sparks. . Reduced Colonist Rates. One way tickets. at special low rates on sale daily throughout March and April, from all points on the North Western Line to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland and Puget Sound points. Daily and Personally conducted tours in tourist sleeping cars via the Chicago, Union Pacific & North Western Line. Double berth only $7.00, through from Chicago. For full particulars write S. A. Hutchison, Manager Tourist Dept., 212 Clark t., Chicago, Ill., or address nearest ticket agent. An Apology for Idlers. : Somebody said that dirt is matter in the wiong place. The same defin- ition applies to nine-tenths of those called ldzy. They are people gone astray in a direction that does not answer to their temperament nor to their capacities. In reading the bio- graphy of great men, we are struck with the number of “idlers” among them. They were lazy as long as they had not found the right path, and af- terward laborious to excess. Very often the idler is but a man to whom it is repugnant to make the eighteenth part of a pin all his life, or the hundredth part of a watch, while he feels he has exuberant energy which he would like to spend elsewhere.—The Craftsman. THREE CURES OF ECZEMA. Woman Tells of Her Brother's Terris . ble Suffering—Her Grandchild and .. Another Baby also Cured— Cuticura Proved Invaluable. “My brother had, eczema three. different E summers. Fach summer it came out be- tween his ‘shoulders and down his back, and he said’ his suffering was terrible, When it camé on: the third suminer, he “bought ‘a: box :of Cuticura’ Ointment and gave it a faithful trial. Soon he began to feel better and he cured himself: entirely of eczema with Cuticura. A lady in In- diana heard of how my daughter, Mrs. Miller, had cured her little son of terrible eczemsa by the Cuticura Remedies. This lady’s little one had the eczema so badly that they thought they would lose it. She used Cuticura Remedies and they cured her child entirely, and the disease never came back. Mrs. Sarah I. Lusk, Coldwater, Mich., Aug. 15 and Sept. 2 1907.” The Scarcity of Lumber. The Russian government has re- cently granted to an Australian cor- poration a concession for the cutting of 30,000,000 feet of timber in Siberia, some 900 miles from Vladivostok. The timber is to be shipped to Melbourne, about -§,000 . miles from the point of cutting. It is not claimed that Ium- ber has particular value on account of its size or quality; it rather illus- trates the increasing scarcity of tim- ber the world over. The threatened lumber famine does not face the Un- ited States alone. Piles Cured in G to 14 Days. Pazo: Ointment is Suaremsed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Drtedia Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. Christian Fellowship. The majesty of God's doings is un- derstccd by those whom he has - brought to full Christian fellowship by: inflicting the suffering and pain that beautify the soul and bring it R. Van de Water. Itch cured in 3) minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. A commission agent in the Paris fruit markets recently shipped a bas- ket containing 63 selected peaches to London. “The price paid for the lot was $540, or about $9 each. 4= MOTHER GRAY'S d \) SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Qertain Cure for Egverighness, Constipation, a oh e, Stomach Troubles, Teeth: ng 3 rs, Mether Gray, Sou s. “They freak n oe i Im t all Druggists, 25 cts. Rusia onild- Ernie FRED. hadrons, New York. City. A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy. N.Y P. KN. U. 11, 1903 DROPS worst cases. &Free. Dr. REW DISCOVERY; gives quick relicf and cures Sock of testimonials and 4@ Days’ treatment . H. GREEN'S SONS, Bex B, Atlanta, Ga Eating and Living. There is a school of hygienists whose motto is “Eat less and live lcnger.” Abstemiousness is commend- ed as the first of virtues. Persons, of course, who lead a physically ac- tive, or laborious, life are conceded larger rations than are allowed to persons engaged in sedentary occu- pations or without occupations, but in any case there is danger, it is con- tended, of eating too much. The hu- man engine requires just so much fuel and no more. If given too much, the only result is to burn out the boilers and clog the pipes, with the effect of indigestion, dyspepsia, rheu- matism, Bright's disease and the hun- dred cthey ills caused by excessive feeding and deficient exercise. ‘Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die,” is commended as a wise say- ing, for the reason that those who look chiefly to eating and drinking for their merriment are sure to die tomorrow, or next day. It is pointed out that octogenarians commonly lead the simple life and are content with simple food and little of it.—Baltimore Sun. % How's This? 3 We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hal s Catarrh Cure. ¥. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O We, the undersigned, have known F. J Cheney for the last 15 years, and ba: him ‘pegfectly honorable; in ‘all business transactions: and: financially ible to carry out any ebligations made by his firm. WALDING, KINNAN & MARVEN, Whole- sale Druggists, Toledo, O. . Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuous sur- faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 73c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The Honor of An Indian. It is for you to show in your own lives that the -honor of an Indian is not for sale, the word of an Indian something more than an empty form of speech; that you care for your parents and friends and your country, not becausé you expect to get some- thing out of them in the way of re- ward, but because you are ready to give them whatever they need at your hands. If you can accept this for yourselves, and believe it of others, and say so plainly, you will do good to your country and your fellowmen beyond all ‘power to calculate.—Car- lisle (Pa.) Arrow. The Editor of the Rural! New Yorker, than whom there is no better Potato Ex- pert in the eountry says: “Salzer’s Earli- est Pofato is the earliest of 38 earliest sorts, tried by me, yielding 464 bu. per acre.” Salzer’s Early Wisconsin yielded for the Rural New Yorker 736 acre. bu. per See Salzer’s eatalog about them. JUST SEND 10c IN STAMPS and this notice to the John A. Salzer Sead Co., La Crosse, Wis., and they will mail you the only original seed cataloj ublished in America with samples o Emperor William Oats, Silver King Bar- NE Billion Dollar Grass which produces ns per acre, Sainfoin, the dry soil ES ete., ete., ete. And if you send ldc we will add a pack- ege of new farm seeds never before seen FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN No other medicine has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women or received so many gen- uine testimonials as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In every community you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable "Compound, Almost every one you meet hag either been bene- fited by it, or has friends who have. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,Mass., any womanany day may see the files containin g over one mil- lion one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, and here are the letters in which they openly state over their own gigna- tures that they were cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has saved many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is made from roots and herbs, without drugs, and is whole- some and harmless. The reason why Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound is so successful is because it contains in. gredients which act directly upon the feminine organism, restoring it to a healthy normal condition. Women who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of thesa facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore their health. by you. A:C. L. What the. “Bridegroom Wore. The blazing’ spot in the description of {he Vanderbilt wedding is the par- heh feather IS eation of a 'wo- man’s dressmaker and milliner éver equaled™ the decorative toggery’ in which this young man- arrayed him- self! Tt must have been a’ vision to paralyze with envy the mere men wearing plain black coals. and long trousers. Alaskan Winters Cause Insanity. Long winters spent in isolated sec- tions of Alaska have so greatly in- creased the percentage of insanity that the senate passed a bill author- izing larger expenditures for the maintenance of the Alaskan insane. A good way to keep well is to take Gar field Tea frequently; it purifies the blood, insures good digestion and good health! The poor children of Exeter, Eng- land, are provided with breakfasts at school at a cost of a farthing. ? Original of “Jim Bludsoe” Dead. A Mississippi river hero, John Jones, said to be the original of John Hay’s “Jim Bludsoe,” is dead at Da- kcta, Minn. He once saved a burn- ing ferry boat full of passengers, be- ing the last to leave the craft. FITS, St. Vitus’Dance: Nervous Diseases per manently cu by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. &3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Honesty .the Best Policy: Recent events have served to bring home to the minds of multitudes of people the wholesale lesson that dis- honesty aor trickery or the obtaining of special privileges by manipulation and deceit, or the creation of wealth by methods which do not square with the economic law, does not payv.—Wall Street Journal: Only One “Bromo Quinine” That iz Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used She World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. Fighting the Friction Match. The South Carolina legislature has enacted a law prohibiting the sale or use of friction matches, and the gov- ernor is expected to sign it at once. The same sort of regulation was pro- posed in the hoard of aldermen of New York some months age, but was ahandoned on the ground that it was one for legislative rather than mu- nicipal action. ST PATRICK oe Drove all the snakes from Drives all aches from the body, cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia and CONQUERS PAIN 25c.—ALL DRUGGISTS—50c. = SHOES AT ALL ~ PRICES, FOR EVERY MBER OF THE FAM than any BES world, are of J shoes nthe world to-day. LUTION Sold by the hest shoe dealers sorSrywhere. trated Catalog free to any add Dye Successfully with Putnam Fadeless Byes Write for free Booklet ME AILY, AEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. pe Ww. L. Douglzs makes and sells more <0 men’s $2.80, $3.00 and $3.50 shoes other manufacturer in the becawse they hold thelr “E20 shape, fit beiter, wear longer, and reater value than any other W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on bottom. T° Shoes mailed from factory to any p W. L. D 0 2 Fae Krelusively. nke No Bat etifute. t of the world. Illus- Bjreeli tan, Mass. uU GLAS, ‘‘How to Dye, Bleach and Alix Cclors.” Color doukle quantity of goocds--and better--fcr ordinary dye--At your druggists, 10 cents, o sent on rs Monroe Drug Company, sama price of ceipt of price. Quincy, illinois
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers