New that the the dis- - rsed | hird lition f the rance firm- absti- They 1eans raffic nend- ation on a mong “hools ad. 11 users f sup-' 0 per- many f the 132 of stricf, >ngag: om R. an ex- at he gold, a dis- again g- the n the sed 50 ion in Dick- | here, t law- a vast t the | R. A. ted at it half Uccess- t made t with g from that in prinei- le hav- in the 3 built penses pher. a x A Fa . ’ - / - a» Tale £ A The cleanest.— lightest.—and_ most comfortable at the same time , cheapest in the end because it wears longest 300 Everywhere Every garment quar- anteed” waterproof Catalog free A J TOWER CO T Fowir, ERAS INTE fit IN USA MITED TORONTO. CA {CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS) CURE FOR PILES SAMPLE TREATMENT of Red Cross Pile and Fistula Cure and book explaining Piles sent free. REA CO..Dent.B4.Minneapolis.Minn On Wife's Tombstone. Here lies our wife, Samantha Proctor, Who ketched a cold and wouldn’t “« doctor, She could not stay, she had to go— Praise God from whom all blessings flow. Judge. ° In Madagascar there is a natural fortress with precipitous walls 1,000 feet high. The only means of ac- cess is a subterranean passage. 45 Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle. MEAT EATERS, BEWARE. Prof. Metchnikoff Warns Against In- dulgence in Fleshy Food. Paris.—Dyspeptic, gouty and rheu- matic men and sufferers from dia- betes are scientifically warned by Prof. Metchnikoff that the present popular idea on the danger of eating “uch flesh is well founddd. He reports that the human intes- tine encloses ‘“putrefying” microbes of at least three classes. One of them, discovered by an American sav- ant, produces violent toxines. The second, of Belgian origin, is as poi- senous, but its toxines act less ener- getically than that of the: American- discovered microhesfl ,. This is the cage with the third microbe, which was discovered by an English bacter- fologist. : : Hot Food ‘Injures Teeth. There is no doubt that most people ruin their teqth and digestive system by taking food at too high a temper- ature. One cannot get into a hot bath if it is over 112 degres; 105 de- grees is dangerous, and even 100 de- grens is warm. But from experi- ments made it appears that we eat meat at 115 degrees temperature, beans at 132 degrees, potatees at 150 degrees. The average temperature of .tea is 135 degrees, and it may be sipped, but cannot be swallowed in large quantities, if it exceeds 142 de- STEELS, Snake Bite Remedy. An view of the large number of deaths caused annually in Burma by sngke bites it has been decided to as widely as possible thidugh the province thé lanecets de- signed by Sir Lauder Brunton for the tregtment of snake bite with perman- ganate of potash, the efficacy of wh if the treatment is at onée 4p- pliell, is now established. General Lee’s Spyglasses. Edward R. Dellinger of Washing- tof} county, has a spyglass that one beipnged to General Robert E. Lee, lefferal ‘Lee lost it while crossing ths Potomae at Williamsport with his trabps. It was foumd shortly aftér- ward, with some other things, in a box floating down the river. It is in firstclass conditiom, and Mr. Dellin- ger prizcs i* hi-hly.—Baltimere Sun. PUZZLE SOLVED Cofiee at Bottom of Trouble, It takes some people a long time to find out that coffee is hurting them. But when once the fact is clear, most people try to keep away from thé thing which is followed by ever increasing detriment to the heart, stomach and nerves. “Until two years ago I was a heavy coffee drinker,” writes an Ill. stock- man, ‘and had been all my life. 1 am now 56 years old. “About three years ago I began to have nervous spells and could not sléep nights, was bothered by indi- gestion, bloating and gas on stomach affécted my heart. ‘1 spent lots of money doctoring— ong doctor told me I had chronic ca- tarrh of the stomach; another that! I had heart disease and was liable to dig at any time. They all dieted me until I was nearly starved, but I seémed to get worse instead of better. ‘“Having'heard of the good Postum had done for nervous people I dis- carted coffee altogether and began to use Postum regularly. I soon got ‘better and now, after nearly two years, I can truthfully say I am sound and well: “1 sleep well at night, do not have the nervous spells and am not both- ered with indigestion or palpitation. I weigh 32 pounds more than when I began Postum, and am better every way than I ever was while drinking coffee. I can’t say too much in praise of Postum, as I am sure it saved my 1if&” “There's a Reason.” ‘Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever rcad the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of hvwman interest. with mercy. ”—Judge. ied too soon.”’—Tit-Bits:. Friendly Collaborators, A little widow now and then lays havee with the single men. —Houston Post. Because a widow loves these men : Like mother, sweetheart—and some then, —Judge. For a little widow's heart is large Enough to take them all in charge. —Chicago Journal. So, bachelors, don’t trust ‘to luck, But when you see one coming, duek. -3-* —Judge. Incorrigible. Stella—*“Is she a souvenir fiend?” Bella—“Dreadffil! The last dinner she atterided she carried away the cook.”—New York Sun. = No Sooner. Investor—*“ When will the company be on its own feet again?” ~ Receiver—“ When it is out of my hands.”—Harper's Weekly. Either Woyld Do. “Could you be happy in a cottage?” “Why; certainly, Harold. Where is this cottage? At Newport or Sara- toga? ”—Lonisville Courier-Journal. Hard Labor. Churech—“Did you ever work for a railroad company?” i” Gotham—*“Well, yes; I've tried to open the car windows.”—Yonkers Statesman. The Little Joker. “Papa, is there not such a word as ‘obey’ in the marriage service?” “Yes, but it’s like the joker in a deck of cards—no one uses it. '— Houston Post. Feminine Amenities. “I am going to have my photos takén. 1 hope they will do me jus- tice.” ! “I hope so, too—justice tempered Wanted to See It First. o Farmer—“I s’pose you're lookin’ out purty sharp for work?” Weary Walker—“Well, I ain’t tak<| F in’ no chances of runnin’ upon it una- wares. "—Illustrated Bits. A Cinch. Professional Faster—*I should like to undertake a fast of four weeks in this show of yours. How. much will you pay me?” : Showman—“I can’t give you any salary, but I will pay for your keep.” —VFliegende Blaetter. oe No Reason to Dread. “There is one thing I dread,” re- marked Johnson, “and that is a pre- mature hurial.” “Don’t worry about that,” replied Brown; “the thing is impossible. There’s no danger of your being bur- - Bad Policy: “Every man should know himself,” remarked the Wise Guy. : ““Perhaps;” agreed the Simple Mug, “but in doing so he wastes 4 16t of time that might be spent in making more desirable acquaintances. ”’— Philadelphia Record: ~~ Well and Good. Willie—*“I sayy father; what is the difference between ‘well’ and ‘good 923 3 Father—"I have noticed; my son, that about the only time when you are good is when you are not well. ’— Philadelphia Inquirer: Compensation. Mrs. Baker—*“My -husband costs me a good deal of money.” Mrs. Barker—*“Yes, and he isn't véry good to you, either.” Mrs. Baker—*“I know it, but I got 4 dandy lot of wedding presents with him.”—New York Times, Erroneous Hunch. The visiting parson was handing eonvict No. 1313 consolation in small chunks. “You should not complain, my misguided friend,” he said. “It ig Jou to take things as you find them.” “Youse is on de wrong track,” re- plied the prisoner. “It was practicin’ dat theory dat got me pinched. ’— Chicago Daily News, Anything to Oblige. Farmer—“Have wou seen buil?” Golfer—“Graeious me! Ne! Where is he?” Farmer—*“That's just it; he's got loose, and we want to find him. Seo if you meet him, you might just keep on that there red coat o’ your’'n and run this way!” ”—London Opinion. my For Father's Sake. Wiggins (to his new neighbor's son) —“Where did you live before you moved here?” Johnny—*“Louisville. We meved there from Memphis and before that we lived in Mobile.” “My! Your folke move around some, don't they?” “Yes. We're huntin’ for a place where pa’ll find it easier to work. "— Woman's Home Companion. s}-ially in . coke-making,’ coal: FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW RAIL ORDERS ARE PLACED Recent Reductions in Pig Iron Prices Bring * Great Number . of Inquiries. od . : A New York.—Unsettled weather and pre-election quiet are in evidence this week in a great many cities. Ex- cept at Chicago and New York, where | some good ‘business has been done in some wholesale lines for spring, first: and second-hand distribution has been confined to fill-in and immediate ship- ment proportions. ’on Current distribution zs a whole is still reported below that of last year at the corresponding date, except’ at :a. few points in the Northwest. Per- “haps the most active line at wholesale is that of cotton goods for spring. The low stage of. water in streams ‘affects manufacturing from the Alle- ghenies eastward -to the coast, espec- mining and paper and textile manufacturing. Pig iron is quiet and weaker at Pitts- burg, but more active = at Eastern markets, and mild weather restricts demand for coal the. country over. Finished iron reports are of more do: ing in the placing of actual specifiea tions #ur industrial, and railway: work, but rails: are still neglected. . The grocery trade reports fair activ- ity on quick order business. x Business-‘failures for the week nuni- ber 239, against 231 last week, 223 in the like week of 1907, 163 in 1906, 160 in 1905 and 200 in 1904. : “Weekly R. G. Dun: &: Company's - Review of' Trade” says: “Improvement is noted in most trade reports this week, especially in respect to distributive departments. Orders have come to manufacturers more freely, in many cases accompan- ied by requests for immediate or very early delivery. “Recent moderate reductions in prices of pig iron and the large amount of steel business about to be placed have resulted in increased in- quiries for material. Purchases are no longer confined to immediate needs, deliveries during the first quar- ter of 1909 Being arranged, and still longer contracts could be taken, if producers would name current prices. MARKETS. ; PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 red : $ 8 yo—No.2...... Corn—No 2 yellow, 93 No. 2 yellow, shelled... 87. : Mixed: ear........ 7% Oats—No. 2 white 54 No. 3 white....=... £49 Flour—Winter patent........ 58) Fancy straight-winters... or Hay—No. 1 Timothy.... 140) : Clover N fl 115) Feed—No. 1 white mid 30 10 Brown middlings 270) Bran, bulk.......- 25 0) Straw—Wheat..... 7 00 OBL. Bierce rine sisitainsserion 700 Dairy Products. Butter—Eilgin creamery...........§ 10 32 Ohio creamery...... 24 26 Fancy country ro 19 231 Cheese—Ohio, new. 14 15 New York, now. ve 14 15 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b............:.. visa MH 15 Chickens—dressod.........cieuuie 18 20 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 2) 21 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fandy whito per bu.. 5 Cabbago—per ton............ 135 150 Onicns—per barrel........... 2 295° BALTIMORE. , Flour—Winter Patent ¥ 70 590 Wheat—No. 2 red............. 102 Corn—Mixed Ti 76 BES. rs ssn sre irra na at - 12 13 Butter—Ohio creamery............ 28 32 ren PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent..... Re eens $ 560 57 Wheat—No. 2 red........... ve 97 Corn—No. 2 mixed.......... : 38 8 Jats—No. 2 white......... 3 54 Butter—Creamery........ , 20 31 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts...,.... 26 29 NEW YORK, Flour—Patents....... rR I Ne) Wheat—No. 2red.... ow 1M Corn—No, %........ 9) 90 Oats—No. 2 white... 54 55 Butter -Creamery .. 30 52 Eggs—State and Pon 27 33 LIVE STOCK. — Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE IN ny Extra, 1450 to 1600 pounds .575@ 500 Prime, 1300 to 14)0 pounds .85)@b5 7) Good, 1200 to 1300 pounds. .550@ 550 Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds... 44 @ 50) Fair, 90) to 110) pounds ...... W330 @4D Common, 70) to 900 pounds......... 300 @ 440 BME. 1.0 300 @_ 450 COWS. 2. ei. i 160) @540) HOGS Prime, heavy., .......... .. .600@01D Prime, medium weight 565 @575 Best heavy Yorkers. .H5)@560 Light Yorkers... .515®525 gsc .475.@500 Roughs, . LAB @07) SUAS... ii oi reir caries iin 40) @t?S SHEEP Prime wethera..........;emps ssi icei SD @ID Good mized. .,................ . 365 2 40) Fair mixed ewes and wethors .30)@3 5) Culls and common 180 @e’ Spring lambs.... 40) @3 2 Veal ealves....., BD @77 Heavy to thin calves.... : 80) @15) RECIPES Macaroons.—One cup sugar, 2 eggs, well beaten, pinch salt, 1-2 eup shredded cocoanut, 1 1-2 cups prepar- ed cats, from the package, dry. Fiaver with vanilla. After mixing thoroughly, drop on buttered tins and bake about 10 minutes in a eom- paratively hot oyen. This will make 17 or 18. If they spread too mueh when they begin to Dake take a knife and push the outside edges in a little to make them a better shape. Raspberry Jelly.—Take fresh rasp- berries, simmer over fire until the juice flows; then strain and weigh the juice. Now boil for ten minutes again adding the sugar, which must be in the proportion of one pound and a quarter to one pound of juice. Boil five minutes longer, skim it and pour into jelly glasses which have beeu heated. This is a goed jelly for f oring creams and requires nos sugar to be added for that purpose. Ny cap fies > F lixivsf Sema Cleanses the System Effect- Sa i and fect aches due to soustipation; 2 anally acts truly as “Bestor MenWonien and Child- ren-VYounsg an : To. tits Bene ieial Effects : fae! buy the (Jicialk ffeets hashe fl name of the Com- Py, "” GALIFORNIA . He Syrup Co. ‘by whom fo mgoufecture printed on the * ont of every package. SOLD BYALL LEADING DRUGGISTS, oné size only, regular price 50¢ per bottle. +The Immcral Hat. © The: hat, femiinine vor masculine, is not necesgarily’ a ‘moral issue. We doubt if even St. Paul thought it was, under all circumstances. It is plain, however, that_the hat can be carried too far. And whatever is carried too far i§in some degree immoral. Very deferentially we inquire of the ladies whether they do not think that two hats. occupying car space designed for five persons are not extensively un- civil and intensively immoral?—Inde- pendent. KEPT GETTING WORSE. Five Years of Awful Kidney Discase. Nat Anderson, Greenwood, S. C. says: ‘Kidney trouble began about five: years ago with dull backache, which got so severe in time that I could not got around. The kidney secretions became badly disordered and at times there was almost a complete stop of the flow. 1 hk 18 : was examined again and again and treated to no avail and kept. getting worse. I have to praise Doan’s Kidney .Pills for my final re: lief and «cure. Since using th®m I have gdined in strength and flesh and have no'sign of ‘kidney trouble.” : ‘Sold by all dealers. “50 cents a box. -Fostegr-Milburn Go., Baffalo, N. Y. ugh mn a 3 TRE ar * adie. Woman's’ Town. Boe Norway, *Maine, ‘boasts ‘that ‘it is the mos| disinctive woman's town in Anjcriea. - and finance, trade and profession, is successfully carried on by women: Wonien not only clothe, hat and shoe tire’pcpulation; but they own ‘and run the. meat markets, the three hotels; they bury the dead and marry the liv: ing : Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocalapplications as theycannot reach the seased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti- tutional remedies. Deafness is caused byan inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tubeis in- flamed youhave a rumbling sound orimper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafnessis the result, and unless the inflam- mation can be taken out and this tube re- stored to it§ normal foglition, hearing will bedestroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten re causdd bycatarrit, which isnethingbutan inflamed, condition of the mucous surfaces. We wi pve One Hundred Dollarsfor any case of Dda Jess cauged Dycatarm) that can- noth curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F.J.CHENEY & Co.,Toledo,O. Sold or Dru all's Rgists, me. Takd amily Pills for constipation, POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Critisicm is the friend of sueeess. An occasional failure doesn’t dis- cburage a hustler. The love of money is the easiest of all roots to eultivate. 2 A woman says that all men may be equal, but none are superior. ~ The wise man who has a good opin- ion of himself keeps it te himself. It’s easy for a man to get in the swift class if he’s on the down grade. Beware of the little fellows. Mos- quitoes are more bloodthirsty than lions. Luggage Vans for Ladies’ Hats. A correspondent of a Belgian jour- nal suggests that traveling nowadays might be considerably simplified if a number. of luggage vans on each rail- way were reserved for the exclusive transport of ladies’ hats:—ILonden Daily Mail. FIFTEEN YEARS OF SUFFERING. Burning, Painful Sores on Legs—Tor- tured Day and Night—Tried Many Remedies to No Avail—Used Cuticura; Is Wel Agaim. “After an attack of rheumatism, running sores broke out en my husband’s legs, from below the knees to the ankles. There are no words. te tell. all the discomfort and great suffering he had te endure might and day. He.used every kind of remedy and three physicians treated him; one after the other, without any good results whatever. One day I ordered some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resol- vent. He began to use them and in three weeks all the sores were dried up. The burning fire stopped, and the paiits became bearable. After three months he was quite well. I can prove this testimonial at any time. Mrs, V. V. Albert, Upper Frenche ville, Me., July 21, 1997.” A large painting, representing the seven Bishops who were committed Every line of commerce | to the Tower of London in 1688 has been presented to the Archbishop of | Canterbury for Lambeth Palace. J PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster can dye any garment without ripping apart, F colors than any other dye, Write for free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix C BAD ENGLISH. Club Starts Movement for More Cul- tured Talk in This Country. A movement for the teaching of better English in the public schools was begun by the Chicago English ciub here, following charges by vari- our educators that the enunciation of Americans and particularly those of the middle west, was slovenly and un grammadtical. .. Miss J. - A. Wilcox in enumerating instanges, asserted she had overheard a teacher say, “I ain’t particular how my pupils say a thing. What“I'm after is facts.” . “When Edwin Arnold visited: his country,” said Miss Wilcox, “he tcok a certain .society lady out to dinner. She called attention to the elegant room they were in and described as ‘elegant’ a pickle that had been:served her. 3 “If we paid a little more _ attention to teaching English in our schocls we would not hear young ladies speak eof Rebecca in Scott's “Ivanhoe” as ‘perfectly grand,” of Rowena as ‘aw- fully sweet’ and of ‘Front, de Bueof as “fierce.” ”’ - Colored Gloves. : If you are tempted to cover your hands in the colored gloves that are now “in”—beware! Both feet and hands should be of perfect proportions before one plays tricks with them. Pronounced colors are not size-de- creasing, and pronounced, nay shriek- ing, are some of the new gloves. ‘ H. H, GREEN'S Sons. of Atlanta, Ga., aro the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal ‘offer in advertise- went in another column of this paper. Woman to the Rescue. The story that a town in South Da- kota. was saved from a prairie fire by a woman’s ingenuity and energy in sacrificing her skirt is good enough to be true, and has an historic prece- dent. When Commodore Decatur was blockaded at the mouth of a Con- necticut river, the Thames, during the war of 1812-14, the rumor was circu- lated on shore that he lacked flannel for the manufacture of cartridges for his cannon. Thereupon a patriotic resident of the town of Groton, “Mother” Bailey, gained access to De- catur’s ship, interviewed the "commo- dore and cerified the report. Her next act was a fine exhibition of dex- terity as well as a surprise to all who witnessed it. She took off her flan- nel petticoat, tossed it on the deck and cried: “There! Use that!’— New York Tribune. no New Occupation. for Women. A new occupation for women is that of ”* the ‘grateful patient.” dressed women are hired by unscrup- ulous men in Paris to sit in their waiting rooms, enter into conversa- ‘| tion “with ‘geniwitfe *pAtierts; "and hold .| forth in. glowing terms on the benefits derived from the doctor's reatment. 25 For Sale 6050" Money. making Farms Strout’s mame = - mothillustrated catalog of bar @ ¥13ains with State maps mailed free; we = pay RR. fare. E. A. STROUT CO., World's Largest Farm Dealers, Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia 7 SYDENHAM . : REMEDIES Heart, Stemach, Liver, Bowel, Kidney, Nerve, Rheumatism and Blgod. Absolutely Pure and Effective. . Describe your case; send us 235c. for trial bottle, SYDENHAM TABLET co., 146 East 60th St.,, - New York City. HELP Insist on Having Dr. MARTEL’S Preparation FOR The Standard Remedy. WOM EN AT DRUGGISTS, Send for book, “Relief for Women.” FRENCH DRUG CO., 30 W, 32d St, N. Y. City, 12 000 Angora and Milch Goats for Kale. 1 Wo are located on Government Timber Reserve and must vacate. GILA COUNTY ANGORA GOAT COMPANY, Globe, Ariz., or Millersburg, O. RHEUMATIS sults speedy;guarantee given;price low. Write qutek. THE WRIGHT MED. CO., Peru, Ind. P. N. U. 43, 1903, WIDOWS’ under NEW LAW obtained PENSIONS "Wahlen Sra For é Lamene in Horses 0 Well. now curable; thousands cured; re- J How many American women in lonely homes to-day long for this blessing to come into their lives, and to be able to utter these words, but because of some organic derange- ment this happiness is denied them. Every woman interested in this subject should know that prepara- tion for healthy maternity is accomplished by the use f LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of West Union, S. C,,writes to Mrs. Pinkham : “I was greatly run-down in health from a weakness peculiar to my sex, when Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It - not only restored me to perfect health, but to my delight I am a mother.” Mrs. Josephine Hall, of Bardstown, Ky., writes: “I was a very great sufferer from female troubles, and my physician failed to help me. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound not only restored me to perfect health, but I am nowa proud mother.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from ‘roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera- tion; fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that hear- ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges- tion, dizziness cr nervous prostration. ‘Why don’t you try it? Ta Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. $300" SHO Ny W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men’s 83.00 and $3.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, be- cause they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children W.L.Douglas $4.00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoes cannot be equalled at any price. W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes are the best in the world Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively. z= Take No Substitute. W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any are of the world. Catalocue free, . L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockton, Mass. R Oo PSY NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worst cases. Book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment roe. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S S0XS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga, Much of the chronic lameness in horses is due to neglect. See that your horse is not allowed to go lame. Liniment on hand and apply Keep Sloan’s at the first signs of stiffness, It’s wonderfully penetrating—goes right to the spot—relieves the sorgness — limbers up the joints and makes the muscles elastic and pliant. Sloan's Liniment will kill a spavin, curb or splint, reduce wind puffs and swol- len joints, and is a sure and speedy remedy for fistula, sweeney, founder and thrush. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Price, 50c. and $1.00. Boston, Mass. Sloan’s book on horses, cattle, sheep and poultry sent free. of its proper lines, will foundation: them. FRE ADELE One 10c. package colors all fibers. T! FOR MEN The bottom of your foot, if twisted out troubles. SKREEMER shoes fit at the the bottoms match the | bottoms of your feet. That’ they ; are comfortable. Look for the label. If you do not find § Skreemers ERED write us for directions how to secure F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass, & cause foot swh gi as S E dye in cold water better than any other d 1 1 dye. You rs. MONROE VRUG CO., Quincy, Illinois,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers