The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, February 04, 1909, Image 7

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PE-RU-NA TONIC FOR
COUGHS, COLDS, CATARRH
JOSEPH HALL CHASE.
Peruna Drug Co., Columbus, Ghio:
Gentlemen: I have used Peruna and
find that it cannot be equaled as a
tonie, as well as a cure for coughs, colds
and catarrh.
You are authorized to use my photo
with testimonial] in any publication.
1 ~ Joseph H. Chase,
804 Tenth St, ‘Washington, D. C.-
Cold and La Grippe.
Mr. C. Happy, Hardin, Ray Co.. Mo.,
writes: “I can safely recommend Peruna
as a remedy that will cure all catarrhal
troubles.
“Jt was of great benefit to me, as it
cured me of catarrh of the throat, and I!
took a very bad cold and had la grippe last
February. It settled in my throat and
lungs. i took three bottles of Peruna and
it cured me.
“1 highly recommend it to all who are
sick. and I am glad to add my endorsement
to that of others.”
Pe-ru-na For Colds.
Mr. L. Clifford Fieg, Jr., 2929 East
Marshall St., Richmond, Va., writes that
when he gets a cold he takes Peruna, and
it soon drives it out of his system. For
several years he was not entirely well, but
Peruna completely cured him.
People who object to liquid medicines
can now secure Peruna tablets.
For a free illustrated booklet entitled
“The Truth About Peruna,” address The
wa Co., Columbus, Ohio. Mailed post-
pai
The thimble was at first worn on
the thumb and was called ‘“thumb-
bell.”
Macaulay’s history brought the au-
thor $100,000 during its first 10
weeks’ sale.
No Substitute for Rubber.
Millions have dreamed of the possi-
bilities and fortunes have been pre-
mised as the result of a process pro-
ducing a rubber substitute. Artifi-
cial or synthetic rubber would seem
so easy; take only ten atoms of car-
bon ‘and combine them with only 16
atoms of hydrogen and you have rub-
ber. But the little trick of adding life
to this inert molecule has not yet
been learned. The fortune is still
there for the lucky inventor who can
accomplish it, because carbon and hy-
drogen are cheap, inexhaustible even,
while rubber may get costlier year by
year. The discussion of artificial rub-
ber may therefore be dismissed with
a phrase—there is no such thing.
Either the exploited article is a hum-
bug, or it contains some proportion
of real rubber mixed with substitute
ingredients. Rubber substitutes ore
often of value in the trade because
the article manufactured from them
only needs that small proportion of
rubber they contain.
. A Multi-Cycle for the Blind.
An English. institution for the blind
has acquired a number of multi
cycles for the outdoor exercise of its
inmates. Each machine seats 13, and
with 26 feet working the pedals they
run very easily and smoothly. The
leader is of course an attendant and
can see. The pairs of wheels are
mounted upon independent axles, so
that the long machine can be easily
turned about or driven along winding
paths. Popular Mechanics for Febru-
ary contains a picture of the machine
and riders.—Popular Mechanics.
PIDN'T KNOW
{ dent is Signora Luz
Coffee Was the Cause. !
Many daily habits, particularly of |
eating and drinking, are formed by
following our elders.
In this way ill health is often fast-
ened upon children. A Ga. lady says:
“1 had been allowed to drink cof-
fee ever since | can remember, but
even as a child I had a weak stomach
which frequently refused to retain
food. :
“The taste of coffee was in my
mouth all the time and was, as 1
found out later, the cause of the
stomach rebelling against food.
“] now see that it was only from
foliowing the example of my elders
that I formed and continued the mis-
erable habit of drinking coffee. My
digestion remained poor, nerves un-
strung, frequent headache, and yet I
did not suspect the true cause.
“Another trouble was a bad, mud-
dy complexion, for which I spent time
and money for creams, massaging,
etc.. without any results.
«After I was married 1 was asked
$0 try Postum, and would you believe
it, 1, an old coffee toper, took to Pos-
tum from the very first. We made it
right—according to directions on the
pkg. and it had a most delicate fla-
vor, and I at once quit coffee, with
the happiest results.
clear,
“1 now have a perfectly
smooth skin, fine digestion and
haven’ t had a headache in over two
years.’
“There'sia Reazon.’
Name given by Postum Co.. Battle
Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to
Weliville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
fnierest.
There are 157,000 models in the
Patent Office which are about to be
lodged in the National Museum.
Many of them are of historic interest.
They will be under the care of the
Commissioner of Patents.
The women of Mexico have orgap-
ized a mothers’ congress. The presi-
Gonzales de
Lopez, and the object is to aid all
mothers who need protection, advice
or assistance.
Plant life rarely thrives under yew
and ash trees.
The sound of a bell carries better
under water than through the air.
A monthly postal service by canal
has been established recently in the
Sahara Desert.
A bottle-nosed whale, twenty feet
long, was caught the other day at
Torcross, Devonshire, in a dragnet.
China has asked six prominent mis-
sionaries there to accept chairs in its
universities and teach Christianity.
. The Turkish day begins exactly at
sunset, and at that time the Turk
sets his clocks and watches on the
hour of 12,
In a single minute a machine
which cuts up wood to make matches
will turn out 40,000 “splints,” as they
are called.
The transient hotel population of
New York is figured at 250,000 peo-
ple a day. The hotel properties are
valued at over $80,000,000.
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer pub-
lishes a cut of a pear, grown at Ya-
kima, and says this fruit weighed
three pounds and measured seventeen
inches around and nine and one-half
in height.
Elm bark, cloves, oilbanum, put-
chuck, sandalwood dust, garoo, laka,
aniseed, musk, orange peel, galango,
dried ginger, sapanwood, rhubarb,
myrrh, cassia and camphor enter
into the composition of Chinese in-
cense.
The total amount of sugar avail-
able for consumption in India during
the year, imported and home-made,
was 51,112,901 hundredweight, or
over 5,000,000,000 pounds, or about
seventeen and one-third pounds for
each inhabitant.
Clarence B. Cralle, a policeman of
Louisville, Ky., at a recent sale of
rifies discarded by the Government,
purchased one which proved to be the
identical gun he had carried through
the Spanish War.
There is a noticeable increase in
gambling by boys in the streets of
New York. The police sometimes in-
terfere, as was the case recently,
when a policeman chased a score of
urchins from in front of a well known
gambling house within a stone’s
throw of Herald Square, where a
game was going on.
HUMUS BURNED OUT.
Effect of Forest Fires Upon Vegeta-
tion and Soil Fertility.
The real loss is far greater than
any estimate shows, based upon the
amount of timber consumed and the
value of the property of the settler
and the houses and improvements of
villages and towns. The greatest
loss, probably, is one that is never
taken into account—the loss of young
trees and the loss in humus.
After one of these terrible con-
flagrations has swept over a timber
slashing not a living thing of vegeta-
tion is left. Nature has tobegin again
the work of furnishing protection for
the naked earth; years must elapse
before the traces of the dreary deso-
lation are hidden. The farmer who
| returns to rebuild his home upon the
ashes is without material for building
or fencing, and soon he is without
material for living except what he
buys.
But the loss of humus is a far
greater loss. The vegetable matter
so abundant on the surface of the soil
in a new country is devoured by the
flames. The top soil with all that it
contains is turned into ashes. For
two or three years good crops may
follow because of the abundance of
ashes lying over the soil, but the
stimulating effect of these is soon
lost. The area thus burned over will
not recover what it lost by such a con-
flagration in a score of years, or in a
period much longer.—St. Paul Pio-
neer Press.
Cleveland’s Religious Belief.
He (President Cleveland) came to
live more and more in the region of
the higher affections. An® he pon-
dered much, though he said very lit-
tle, regarding his religious belief.
Yet it was always there, deep within
him, as they know well who knew
him best. It was simple, elemental,
childlike. He had chosen to believe
in God, and so he had chosen to be-
lieve also in Christ. The mystery re.
mained a mystery, not a thing for
analysis and debate, and he received
it as he received the springtime and
the sunlight or the intimacies of
friendship and home.—From Andrew
F. West's ‘‘Grover Cleveland: A
Princeton Memory,” in the Century.
People scldom forget the names or
faces of those whom it may pay to
know.
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
WEEKLY NEWS SUMMARY
Stocks Greatly Depleted, but Mer
chants Hesitate to Place Orders.
R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review
of Trade”. says:
“Some irregudarilty continues in
industrial and mercantile activity. A
fundamental factor of strength is. the
seadily ' multiplying evidence that
stocks are so depleted as to render
a large and general resumption of
the Nation’s industries inevitable and
measurably nearer as confidence is
restored. pa
“There are numerous reports of
enlarged industrial activity at wide-
ly scattered points throughout the
West and South and distributers of
merchandise in all lines anticipate a
slow but steady return to the normal
volume of transactions:
“Uncertainty, regarding the ulti-
mate tendency of prices of finished
iron and steel restricts improvement
in the general trade and thé volume
of new business is still ‘disappointing,
although January is usually a dull
month. Concessions in quotations are
not large, but the fact that they are
becoming more general has a disturb-
ing effect. Reports are generally
conflicting, some branches of the. in-
dustfy noting a slight Improvement
in demand .while. in other diversions
business is smaller than during the
latter . part: of .1908. © The railroads
are not entering the markets ta’ any
extent and sales of rails continue un-
important. Current business in
structural material is not large, but
prospects are considered good.
“In the dry goods markets traders
are apparently more convinced of the
stability of the situation and are anx-
ious to cover some of the future re-
quirements. There is still some con-
servatism but buyers have discovered
that orders are sometimes subjected
to vexatious delays because of ina-
bility to obtain shipments of mer-
chandise, and this has induced more
freedom in purchasing ahead.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Wheat—No. 2 red,. $ 85 9)
Rye— o-No NEGRI
Cori No.2 ellow, ear.. 70 et
No. 2 yellow, shelled. . 67 6%
Mixed 6AF............ 64 08
Oats—No, 2 white 54 5»
0.3 Bees coies . H2 53
Flour—Winter patent. 580 5 90
Fancy straight wint
Hay—No. 1 i othy..... 1350 14 5)
Clover No.1........ 1B np
Feed—No. 1 oil te mid. ton 2950 30
Brown ildalinge etesviees 260) 270)
Bran, bulk.. 2400 245)
Straw—Wheat... 800 850
Qat.. - ves 8 85)
‘Dalry Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery $ 34
Cheese—Ohio, new...
New York, DOW........oceuuue n 14
Poultry, Etc.
Hons—per ID......c.ccoeeeeenns oP 15
Chickens—dressed........... ‘ 18 20
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh 81 35
Frults and Vegetables. -
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 85 90
Cabbage—per ton............ «« 850) 38 0)
Ontions—peér-barrel........... a.ve 11407150
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent.............! $ 57 59;
Wheat—No. 2 rod. Strats cevieen 106°
Sora=unadss Th 76
FATE TR 84 85
Por Oo creamer: 32 84
: PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent = 57
Wheat—No. 2 re 97
Corn—No. 2 3 38 38
Jats—No. 2 uli ot 54
Butter—Creamer; 33 33
onal en LAY firsts. . 32 34
NEW YCRK,
Flour—Patents. 59)
Wheat—No. 2 re 19)
Corn—No. 2..... 9) 90
Oats—No. 2 whit
Butter -Creamer; Ye
Kggs—State and ennsylvania.... 33 40
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
CATTLE
Extra, 1450 to 1600 poundS.......... 63)» @ » 5)
Prime, 1300 to 1400 Da ... 610@ 6 35
Good, 1200 to 1300 pounds .......... 585 @ 6 00
Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds. ys mye arene DW (@® 08S
Fair, $00 to 1100 pounds . .. 465 @ 550
Common, 700 to 900 pound 40 @ 4°0
Bulls. L800 @ 500
Cows. ~1160) 95 00
Prime, heavy. ic. ive cncvencsnss 665 a 67)
Prime, medium weight. . 650 @ 655
Best heavy Yorkers.......
Light Yorkers
CoOL
CSCO Or
DJ He OT CT
Heavy to thin calves
STRAWBERRY POLLYS.
Take gq quart of strawberries, wash
them well, then place scme powdered
sugar in a shallow dish, about 1-2 cup-
ful, moisten this ‘with essence of
vanilla, making a regular paste. Then
make some patty shells, these can be
made like pie crust, and placed on
the cutside of individual cup cake
tins. When baking these patty shells
this way, it makes the shells nice
and smooth inside, and the tins can
be turned bottom side up when bak-
ing.
After the shells are made placa
them in a large dish and then roll
your strawberries in the vanilla; su-
gar one by one and put these in your
shells.
Then whip 1-2 pint of cream, and
in this put a tablespoonful of marasch-
ino cherry juice, and pour it over
each shell. This will be found a
very delicious and beautiful dessert.
1f candied violets can be obtained,
these could be placed on top, but 1%
will taste just as well without this
embellishment.
This is an entirely new dessert,
and has been tried and found true.
They can be left in the dish and plac
ed in a cool place until ready to
serve, placing one on a small plate
to each guest.—Boston Post.
BUYS WASHINGTON'S SWORD
Morgan Will Present It to Mount
Vernon Association.
J. Pierpont Morgan of New York,
has purchased from Miss Virginia
Tayler Wise of Baltimore, the sword
worn by General George Washington
when he resigned his. commission as
Commander-in-Chief of the American
Army in Annapolis in 1783. Mr.
Morgan will in’ due time, it under-
stood, present the relic to the Mount
Vernon Association. °
The price paid was not divulged,
but an idea of its value may be glean-
ed from the fact that some years ago
the United States Senate passed a
bill appropriating $25,000 for its pur-
chase, This bill failed of passage
by’ the House of Representatives.
3 #5 =
ITCHED FOR TWELVE YEARS.
Eczemi Made. Hands : and Feet Swell,
Peel and ‘Get Raw—Arms Affected,
Too—Gave' Up All Hope of Cure
—~Quiickly Cured by Cuticura.
“I suffered from’ eczemé on my hands,
arms and feet for about twelve years; my
hands:and. fees.would swell, sweat and itch,
then. would becqme-calloys. and get very
dry, then peel off and get raw. I tried
most every kind of salve and ointment
without success. T tried several doctors,
but at ‘last gave up ‘thinking there was a
cure for eczema. 'A:7friend of mine “in-
sisted on my trying the Cuticura Remedies,
but I did: notigive them a trial until I got
so bad I had to do something. I secured a
set andy hy-the time they were used I could
eat were-healed up in no time.
no trouble since. Charles. T. Bauer, R. PF.
D. 65, Y-olant, Pa., Mar.j11, 1908 :
Potter Drug. & Chem. Foro, Sole Props.
of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. _
No Undertakers in Japan.
There are no undertakers .in Japan.
When a person dies it is the custom
for his nearest relatives to put him
into a coffin and bury him, and the
mourning does not begin until after
burial.
Bud Doble,
The greatest of all horsemen, says: “In my
years’ experience with horses I have
found Spohn’s Distemper Cure the most
Success of all remedies for the horses.
is the greatest blood purifier.” Bottle,
Soc. and $1.00. Drugglsts can supply you
or manufacturers gents tT Send
for Free Book. Spohn Medical Co., Spec.
Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
Worth a Trial.
A Connecticut hypnotist has
brought back to memory of a man
who, through an accident, forgot his
identity. This method might be
tried on those forgetful capitalists
whose minds fail them so regularly
on the witness stand.
“To Break in New Shoes,
Always shake in Allen's Foot-Ease, a
wader... It cures hot, sweating, aching,
swollen feet, corns, ingrowing nails and
bunions. All’ druggists and shoe stores, 25¢c.
Dore aceept any a, Sample ipalled
en S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Bread and. Butter Good Enough.
Being once asked whether he had
read any of the books of a popular
novelist, Thackery rejoined: ‘Well,
no. You see, I am like a pastry cook.
I bake tarts and I sell ’em; but I eat
bread and butter.
A Domestic Eye Remedy
Compounded by ESpesienced Physicians.
Conforms to Pure Food and Drugs Laws.
Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drug-
gists for Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine.
A minister who makes marriage a
business is Rev. Alfred H. Burroughs,
who. lives just across the Virginia
line in’ Tennessee, popular with
southern couples because of its easy
marrige laws. He has a record of
2,811 marriages for the past 18 years,
and has built a 22-room hotel for the
purpose - of entertaining bridal ou-
ples. 2
The Horb laxative, Garfield Tea, aids Na-
ture in maintaining ‘the general well- -being
of the body, it corrects constipation, puri-
fies the blood, brings health.
‘The reconstruction of the bridge
of Notre Dame at Paris has been
commanced. None of the bridges
across the Seine has undergone more
transformation than the one which
Wikos its name from the great cathe-
ral.
Throat Troubles. To allay the irritation
that induces coughing, use Brown's
Bronchial Troches. A simple remedy.
In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free,
John I. Brown & Son, Boston, Mass.
7 Future Forest Supply.
edple who are in despair over the
rapid ‘disappearance of timber sup-
ply may find’ comfort in the knowl-
edge that the production of cement
in the United States has increased
from less than 100,000 barrels in 1882
to 48,000,000 barrels in 1907. Cement
will be a leading factor in forest con-
servation.—Wall ‘Street. Journal.
STATE OF OHIO, CiTY OF TOLEDO,
Lucas CouNTy, 3s
FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is
senior partner of the firm of ¥.J.CHENEY &
Co., doing business in the City of 'l'oledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay thesum of ONE HUNDRED DOL-
LARS for each and every case of CATARRH
that cannot be cured by the use of HALL’S
CATAREH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY.
Swen: to beforc me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December, A. D.,
1886. WW, (GLEASON,
(SE AL.) Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cureistaken internaily,and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur-
faces ot the system. Send for testimonials,
“Do you know of any woman who ever received ‘any
benefit from Bic Lydia E. Pinkham’s 3 Vegenble Com-
pound! pr
~If any woman who i is ‘suffering with any ailment peculiar
to her sex will ask her neighbors" this ‘question, she will be
. surprised at the result.
There is hardly a community m=
this country where women cannot be found who have beem
restored to health by this famous old . remedy,
“made
exclusively from a simple formula of roots and herb: )S.
During the past 30 years we have published thousands
of letters from these grateful women who have been cured
by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and never
in all that time have we published a testimonial without
the writer's special permission.
Never have we knowingly
published a testimonial that was not truthful and genuine.
Here is one just received a few days ago.
If anyone doubts
that this is a true and honest statement of a woman's exper
ence with Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound write
and ask her.
Houston, Texas.
—<¢ When I first began taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound I was a total wreck.
I had beem
sick for three years with female troubles, chronic dyspepsia,
and a liver trouble.
nothing did me any good.
I had tried several doctor’s medicines, bul
«For three years I lived on medicines and thought I would
never get well, when I read an advertisment of Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, and was advised to try it. /
“ My husband got me one bottle of the Compound, and it did
me so much good I continued its use.
and enjoy the best of health.
I am now a well womam
«1 advise all women suffering from such troubles to give
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial.
regret it, for it will surely cure you.”
819 Cleveland St., Houston.
They won’t
Mrs. Bessie L. Hicks,
Any woman who is sick and suffering is foolish surel
not to give such a medicine as this a trial.
Why should it
not do her as much good as it did Mrs. Hicks.
Being a Good Fellow.
No man is a real good fellow who
knowingly lives beyond his means,
no matter what may be the imme-
diate success he appears to gain by
such conduct. Sooner or later he will
be found out. Then, though he may
still be tolerated, beneath the tolera-
tion there is always contempt. He
may not be actually shunned, but he
is regarded as one certainly more or
less.of a fool and to be watched by
the prudent as potentially a knave.
The businessman of any age who
finds that he is becoming usually
spoken of as a “good fellow” in a
certain tone, and that for censures or
criticisms of his conduct the defense
that he is withal a “good fellow” is
offered, had better pull up short and
do some hard thinking about the way
he is headed.
Peruna Almanac.
The druggists have already been supplied
with the Peruna almanac for 1909. In ad-
dition to the regular astronomical matter
usually furnished in almanacs, the articles
on astrology are very attractive to most
people. The mental characteristics of each
sign are given with faithful accuracy. A
list of Jucky and unlucky days will be fur-
nished to those who have our almanacs,
free cf charge. Address The Peruna Co.,
Columbus,
The
The right hand, which is more -sen-
sitive to the touch than the left, is
less sensitive than the latter to the
effect of heat and cold.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
6
From one day’s observation at five
points of greatest vehicle congestion
on Manhattan Island it was learned
that there are 63 horse-drawn and 37-
power-driven vehicles in each one
hundred.
VU VY VY VY VVIVVV UV UN
POOP 00000 90900003009
A Saie and Sure
Cough Cure.
Kemp's Balsam
Does not contain Opium,
Morphine, or any other narcotic
or habit-forming drug.
OHALE
Pov
Nothing of a poisonous or harm-
ful character enters into its com-
position.
This clean and pure cough cure
cures coughs that cannot be cured
by any other medicine.
It has saved thousands from con-
sumption.
It has saved thousands of lives.
A 23c. bottle contains 40 doses.
At all druggists’, 25¢., 50c. and $1.
Den’t aceept anything else.
POV VV VV VV VV VV VII IVVVVVIVVYVVIT VV
VOPPPOVPVIPPVIVPIIVIIVIVIVIIVIYVIYYY
A Aaa apes sass EARAReOd
BBE NAAOANEODOODREAOLLE
PIPPI PPIVIIVOVOPIVOVPPYIVISIPY
free. . CHENEY 2 Jo, ‘l'oledo, OQ.
Sold by all Drug Bgists, 75
Take Hall’s Family Pills Sr constipation.
Curious reasons assigned for the |
decline of the pottery trade in Eng-
land are that in many London hotels
the German employes give the préfer-
ence to Germany in ordering their
ware, and that among Londoners the
growth of the habit of dining out has
caused a marked diminuition in the)
demand for dinner sets.
SEED BARLE Ne
a bu.
Per Salzer’s catalog, page 129. ERE
Largest growers of seed barley, oats, wheat, 3
8 speltz, corn, potatoes, grasses clovers and he
jl farm seeds in the world. Big catalog free; or,
® send 10c. in stamps and receive samples of
81 barley yielding 173 bu. Billion §¥
Bl Dollar Grass, Oats, S ey ., easily [8
fl worth $10.00 to get a start with. Or, send |
B 14c. and we add a , sample farm seed novelty §
8 never seen by you before.
E SALZER SEED co. Box A.C.
LOL OPPOPVOPOVOVPPOLOOVIPIYIPIVIYIVYIVIVFEVV
Fun, But Expensive.
It cost Cuba a little more tim
$5,002,700 to be pacified by an Awucewi-
can army, and Uncle Sam is going
collect every cent of the money. Fas
sibly the expense of going on a jxme
boree may finally persuade the dems
to get a steady job and stick to #.—
Baltimore News.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is foaranteed to cure esg
case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrudsag
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. She.
Emile Richebourg used to get $2%-
000 each for his novels before thew
appeared in book form.
For “Middlemarch” George Eo
got $40,000 and{for Romola” $35,008.
DOUGL.
RET SHOES. ER} Sp
a
99 Shion
2
Boy's gore i
Nr $1.00 TO%3.
The Reason I Make and ol More Men's $3. e
& $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer:
is because I give the wearer the benefit of the most
complete organization of trained experts acd skilofl
ghoemakers in the count:
The selection of the leathers luv,
and every detail of the making in every deparime 3
looked after by the best Samer in tle roe indus Bw.
If I could show you how carefully W. L. Dovglas sha
are made, you would then understand why they hold thay
shape, fit Detter, and wear longer than any ciber maa
My Method of Tanning the Soles mukes them Mow
Flexible and Longer Wearing than any olhers.
Shoes for Every Member of the Family,
Men, Hoy s, Women, Misses and Childrens
For sale by shoe dealers ever: YW hele:
Hi UTION | § Noe genuine without W. L. Dousim
A name and price st: amped Is Dotivaw.
Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively. Catalog mailed free.
W. L. DOUGLAS, 1¢7 Spark £t., Brockton, Mass.
for each part of thes
SUNDAY CREEK CO. 5s 124%
KEYSTONE TELEPHONE 1st
5s 1935
LONDON UNDERGROUND
SCRIP & BONDS
DEALT IN.
E. BUNGE
4
20 Broad Street, New York Cit.
SS TANTISHED 3895
re TIS IS WOT
Rueze RE Urroncrusrs
HILBLAIN PLASTERS
Quick relief and permanent cure
refunded. One plaster does it. By
cents. GRAY SPE€IALTY Co. , Taylors sville, M,
ELL: OUR PATENT by our new method,
monstrate it to the leading caricalits ani
manufacturers at Madison Square
New York. Write NATIONAL PATENT & NOV!
EXHIBITION CO., 1023-5-7 Real Kstate Bldg., Phils. #w
P. N. U. 6, 1999.
If afMicted
| ith w = THOmpSr sEyeWate
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye.
Write for £~¢e b
ean dye any garment without ripping apart.
>. package colors all fibers.
They dye in cold water
How tC Lye, Bleach and Mix Colors.
better than
MONROE DRUG CO.
any other
» Quincey, Pine