MBS. EMMA FLEI88NZB Buffered Over Two Yeart Beabh Wat in aPrecariou Condition Caused by Peine Catarrh. HEALTH m STRENGTH RESTORED BY i , PE-RU-NA. i Mrs. Emms Flelssuer, 1412 Sixth Avenue, Botttlo, Wash., Worthy Trensurer Boas of Temperance, writes : "I suffered over two yearn with r a regular and painful, periods. My health watt In aver 1 pn carious con- dttion and 1 was anxious to find something to restore my health and Btrength. "I was very glad to try Puruna and de lighted to And that it was doing me good. I oontinued to use it a little over three months and found my troubles removed. "1 consider It a splendid medicine and shall never be without U. taking a dose occasionally when 1 feel run down and tired." Onr files contain thousands of testimonials Whioh Dr. Hartman has received from grate ful, happy women who have been restored to health tiy his remedy. 1'nrnna. Cages for Grasshopper. There Is a regular business In Italy of making little wire cages for grass hoppers. The insect Is regarded as lucky and if one can be kept alive In the cage for a month it 1b believed the year will be prosperous. The sup erstition arose from this incident; A cardinal of the Medici family invit ed a bishop to dine with him in his garden. The cardinal handed the Bishop a glass of wine. A grasshop per fell from a tree into the wine and the bishop did not drink it. The wine was afterward found to have been poisoned. Lona Service. )John B. Atkinson, 75 years old, and tv Pennsylvania who has been for 40 successive years in me omce or. me Second auditor of the Treasury de partment, claims he is older by 10 years in point, or. service, loan any other government employe in Wash ington. A STRONG STATEMENT ttj Col. J. M. GnfTuy, Democratic Nation ml Committeeman of Pennsylvania, Col. J. M. Guffey, of IMttsburg, Dem ocratlc leader of Pennsylvania, and one of the greatest producers in the world of oil, coal and gold, writes: Gentlemen: It is a pleasure to endorse Doan's Kidney Pills. Having found them of great value I have always been glad to recommend them to my friends. They are excellent. J. M. GUFFEY. (Signed) Doan's Kidney Pills, a specific for backache, bladder troubles and all kid ney disorders, are sold by all dealers. Fifty cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A New Motor Roadway. A roadway or track for motor-pro-pellod vehicles has been Invented re cently by Dr. T. A. Johnson of Xenia 111., which promises a valuable means of transportation. It consists of two paralled tracks of concrete formed so as to present an outer flange, and a broad treadway with a istrongtbenlnf; rib running down into the ballast, which has been rolled firmly in the ditches previously exca ivatotl. This roadway is designed for Vnotor vehicles, both passenger and Freight, the cars having rubber tires. fl'he track can be used as a toll line for hutomobllcs. The Inventor has also k device which can be attached to he steering lugs of the vehicle, pre entlng contact of tires with flanges, bid obviating steering by motonnaa. Scientific American. (VE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195 o introduce. Uuy duvet and save the dlf- fcrenoe. Jiasy terms, wnta us and we u ell you all about It. f llOfr'KMANN) MUSIC HOUSE, 837 BmlthfUld Utrt, Pittsburg, Pa. The Gamine TOVYEW POMMEL SLICKER HAS MEN ADVERTISED AND SOLD FOR A QUAITEK of a gntuex LIKE ALL 'SmS QOIHIHG. , ft l nl of the set Mtowl, m slack or jrdoK fully funnUci uttuM by 'fCMNC attlcf f KiisasUt. MKS. TO nit SIGN OF THE FISH. I Be Of Good Courage By Clara Augusta Trask. 0HERE is nothing more Important and necessary to Bliccess la life than good courage. The cheerful, persevering, ener getic, undiscouroged man is the one who wins every time. The man who says "I can't" never gets anywhere. Let not valuable time be wasted in envying the man of millions. Everybody cannot be a capitalist. There must be laborers, and the laborers want to realize and accept the fact that if there were no great fortunes, the whole vast sys tem of political economics would speedily go to ruin. And on the other hand, capitalists want to bear in mind that without labor wealth could not be developed, and progress would stop at its very inception. Envy is at the root of untold evils. And envy the lowest and meanest of all human passions has no business in the breast of an honest man. It should be a matter for rejoicing that prosperity Is abroad in the land. No man's path to progress should lie across the shipwreck of any fellow-man's hopes and as pirations. Courage makes a man the peer of kings. It lifts him above worldly disas ters. It keeps him true to his purposo, loyal to his convictions, and earnest and untiring In his labors. It says to Doubt, there Is no such word as fall. Disappointment that discourages Is impossible, for courage shall in the end prevail over everything adverse, and victory shall crown patient and persistent "endeavor. Do not sit down in idleness because the right opportunity does not He ready to your hand. Work at what offers, and work faithfully, and in the meantime be on the lookout for the opportunity you long for. Do not allow any would-be philosopher of a pessimistic turn to dishearten you by the kind of cheap talk which would have you believe that all tho best positions in the world are filled, and that there Is no longer any chance for the earnest and willing work er. Look, for your chance, and when you have found It put your trade-mark Upon it, nnd stick to It. Persistent effort. wins. Faith can remove mountains. Seas have been converted Into dry land, continents havo been reclaimed from the wilderness, deserts have been transformed into blossoming Edens, the ocean has been made the medium by which the far East speaks to the far West, and the peo pie of the setting sun have been brought within a few days' distance of each other by courage and effort. No good thing is brought forth from thestorehouse of Nature without labor. Work is God's own law and method. Be glad that it can be yours, also. Make the most of the powers you have, and don't waste time In vain and weak re pininga. And no matter what betides, cultivate a cheerful, happy spirit, and In so doing you not only make your own chances of success tenfold greater, but you are the means of putting new hope and vigor into many a despondent and dis heartened traveler along the pathway of life. How Witnesses Err 1 ? L By Prof. Cesare Lombroso. ssf PART froyi the frequency of the pathological lie (the lie told II I by those who are inclined to falsehood without reason) it is I necessary to remember that many have been led into error I through Inaccurate observation. It is a well-known fact that iyk I a square divided horizontally appears greater in breadth If? Hi I than in height, but when divided vertically it appears great- 1 er in height than in breadth. Similarly, a man dressed in laVSFketJ black seems smaller and thinner than when clad in white We know, too, that when objects suddenly loom upon us on a dark night we see them magnified extraordinarily. The causes of psycholog ical error are numerous. Fear and sorrow Intercept sensations and falsify them. An ordinarily courageous man, unnerved in a railway smash, declared that he had seen a hundred bodies wedged between the carriages. As a mat ter of fact, there was only one. On the same occasion another man ray away, imagining that he could hear the derailed engine behind him for three-quarters of an hour. A, criminal named Gusio threw himself upon his warder and the warder took to his heels in the belief that he saw a knife In the prisoner's hand; in reality it was a fish. The Image of a moving object is the Aim total of a series of images of partial movement Some of these images are perceived only by one set of per sons; others by another set. Grassl records in his "Criminal Psychology" how, assisting at an execution where the hangman wore gloves, he asked four others present of what color the gloves were. One said they were white, an other deposed they were black, a third was sure they were gray, while the fourth swore that the hangman wore no gloves at all. In a game of dominoes the player does not count the spots one by one, but, having before his eyes a focused image, decides that there are seven or nine, as the case may be. But, supposing these images did not conform to a type, the player would be obliged to ascertain carefully each time before making his total, and he would still be liable to make mistakes. Something like this happens in all our perceptions. Prof. Lutz, who has applied to Jurisprudence so many of the conclusions reached by criminal anthropology, one day had a homicide with dagger thrusts enacted unexpectedly In school by two students. Immediately after he assem bled all his pupils who had witnessed this sham tragedy and made them give evidence as if in court. Of sixty eye-witnesses of the same age, and all of them well educated, scarcely ten gave really accurate evidence. All the rest fell into more or less errors of detail. More recently Weber has related his experience with the members of the Society of Local Psychology at Gottlngen. Weber requested from each of them a written statement of a sham crime per petrated under their very eyes. Over half their number gave inexact Inform ation, while many of them gave imaginary details and agreed about the affair only on general lines. The "Hotel Child" Dangers That Beset Offspring of Restless Parents : By Miss Martha S. Bensley, a flursery Governess. T is not the material aids to existence which are the bane of the hotel child; it is the mental and spiritual attitude accompanying this life which is to be depreciated. It destroys a democratic spirit through emphasizing the difference between the servant and the served; it exaggerates the pow er of money, fosters a spirit of dependence, and unfits the pampered individual for any other kind of life; and, worse of all, in a child so brought up there can be no understand- standing or love of home. There may be some future for the child who knows nothing of art some function for the one to whom literature makes no appeal and who is not sensitive to music, but there is no place in the state for the man who baa neither initiative, self-reliance, patriotism, nor love of home. He is a social menace, a disease. .The community is better off without this satelite of the manager, parasite of the bellboy, and source of supply for the waiter. - If there is one child In our community who is superfluous. It is the bdtel child. As places for temporary occupation by homeless and childless adults, hotels are to be tolerated; but aa residences for children, they are without the possibility of excuse. Everybody's. 1 1 j the Unfortunate MR. WILKINS. Mr. Wilkin had a dollar, (o he uld bt giiPHHert he'd pay A little pitm he'd borrowed from a gentle man uomed liruv ; Then (irny be took that dollar, and hi Hnlil, "It Beems to me I'd better pay that Utile debt I owe to Mc Afee :" Then McAfee the dollar paid upon a bill to Smart ; By Smart 'twna paid to Thomson, and by ThoniHon paid to Hart. And to that coin kept rolling, as a very hiiK.v "plunk," t'ntll It paid InilebtedneHa amounting In the ebunk To more than forty dollnra, and It may be rolling yet, And all heeame thin Wllklns thought he'd better pay a debt. For when a dollar's started On Its deht-detttroylng way. There hardiy Is a limit To the sums that It will pay. Mr. Wllklns knew a kindness that he might have done for (irav. But he wasn't feeling kindly, so he thought It wouldn't "pay ;' Then t;ray, not being grateful, said, "It really seems to me I've done sultlelent favors for that blasted MeAfee ;" Then McAfee felt ugly, and he took a whack at Hmart, Who passed It on to Thomson, who passed It on to Hurt. And so no act of kindness was done through all that day. But many nn mt Hint rankled In a most unplenvnut way, And mnny n soul was longing for the help to lit Its need. And all because this Wllklns didn't do a kindly d"ed. For a dollar or a kindness, Itule Is mIIII the fame. I tny ; If you wish to see It rolling. Better start It on Its nay. San FiniK-lwo Cnll. JUST FOR FUN Tommy 'roe. what is fret-wnrk?" Tommy's Pop "Wrinkles, my son." rniiuaeipiua Record. Mrs. Knicker "I wonder what to do to improve Johnny's memory." Knick er Uon t try. He will make a grand witness when he grows up. Puck. "I didn't know you were In the choir What's your position there?" "Neu tral." "How do you mean?" "I don't side with either fnction." Philadelphia Ledger. "He says he cannot live without me," said the Impressionable heiress. "Don't believe It," returned Miss Cayenne "He will live. But he mary have to economize." Washington Star. Friend "Did the lawyers get you confused?" Ex-Witness "Did thev get me confused? Why, I testified that Jones lived next door to me. but I couldn't remember the street number." Puck. Little Girl (in church) "Why does so many people put thoRe little envel opes on th' contribution plate?" Little Boy "Then's to keep the pennies from makln' so much noise." New York Weekly. First schoolboy "What do they mean by compulsory education?" Sec ond schoolboy "Oh, I suppose that's when you don't want to go to school, and your father or mother makes you." Brooklyn Life. "Do you believe that education pro motes morality?" asked the inquisitive person. "Undoubtedly," answered the cheerful idiot; "at least It Is responsi ble for a more Intelligent class of crim inals." Chicago Daily News. Polly "Mr. Greenleaf tells me that ne spent three years at a German uni versity after he came out of cnllecR " Dolly "He must have been frightfully unpopular. He hasn't a single scar on his face." Somervllle Journal. Owner of Automobile (to chauffeur) "Have you any recommendation from your last employer?" Chauffeur "No, sir; but I guess I can get one in the course of a month or so." "Why the delay?" "He's in the hospital." Life. "I've been to see Bludeerlv'a latest painting, and it's a perfect daub. And yet you said it bordered on the su blime." "That's the way it struck mo. old man. It is enclosed in one of the most magnificent frames I ever saw. Judge. ' "What do you think of the Trust problem?" "It is becoming more diffi cult than ever." answered Senator Sorghum, with a tinge of Badness In ills tone. "The Trusts are growing so arrogant that there Is no telllne whnm they will put off the pay roll next." Washington Star. Ethel "Mamma, don't von thlnir women should know how to cook so that they may be able to look after Cielr husband's digestion when thev marry?" Mamma "Certainly, dear." Ethel Mayn't I go to the kitchen, then, and practice making butter scotch?" Town and Country. The Illusion of Being Busy. A ridiculous notion Is common that we live in a time when there are more Important world affairs on hand than have ever been known before, and there are silly people, both men and women, who expect to be admired for a useless expenditure of their nervous and physical energies on all sorts of absolutely foolish objects Into which no particle of Intellect enters. Sim ply to be always busy, always occu pied, always doing something, passing restlessly from one piece of work to another, to have their hands full, nev er to be idle, as they say, seems to be their ideal life. These precious muddlers, who plume themselves on never being Idle, pass their time doing useless things under the pretext of being busy, and they assume credit for a purposeless ac tivity. The biggest people, those who have really thought out their plan of life, do not make the mistake of doing what need not be done. They have time for everything because they do not Imagine they are economizing time by occupying every Tew spare minutes in being unnecessarily busy. Whers They Qt Lsft when "Constant Reader" or old Veritas" writes letters to the Pekin Tslng Rao. they do not begin bv sav ing that they have subscribed for the paper over since it atarted. It has Deen published for 1,400 years. To- peita journal. Ancient Japanese Coins, Japan, which the mikado has poured In to the mlltary chest, are gold coins Is sued three centuries ago. They are ot targe size ana oi almost pure metal, and worth much more than their In trinsic value of course. Hid permanently ou red. No fits or nervous. - - ' . .1 n iuiv " ' I . jymuo s 1 T I frit KerveReatorer, 2trial bottleand treatise free MflKffm Am, .1 - ' - .. -f n t." 1 1 t - n & . a, m.iH,L,iq., ai Aron Ht., l'blla.,1' a A bee, unladen, will fly fortjL miles an H. H. Obcim's Sons, of Atlanta, Qa., are the only suaoessrul Dropsy Specialists in the World, bee their liberal offer in advertise saent in another column ot this paper. . The present Trinity Church at th head of Wall street, New York, is ths third edifice of that name, the two preceding structures erected upon the same ground having been burned. Mrs. Wltu'ew's Soothing Hynip lor Children teething, oftensthe(tums, re(licoHlnnamma tlon.alhiTg paln.eures wind collc,a5c. a bottle The biggest eannon ball ever made weignea -JUUO ponrds. Piso'aCureoannot be too highly snolten-): ttaeough oure. J, y. O'limay. 823'fhiM Avenue, N Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0,190 J, The Russian alphabet contains thirty five letters. BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA Face tike It aw Beef Thonglit she Would use an Kar-Hale! Without i L BlemishMother Thanks Catlcnra. "My little girl had eczema very bad when n months old. 1 thought she would lose her right ear. It had turned black, and her face was like a piece of raw meat, and very aore. It would bleed when 1 washed her, and 1 had to keep clotha on it day and night. There waa not a clear soot on her face wh en 1 hjiernn itvini f'ufi. enra Soap and Ointment, and now it is completely neaiea, without ecar or blem ish, which is more than I had hoped for. (Signed) Mra. Bose Ether, 291 Eckford St., Brooklyn. N. Y." Corrosion In 8teel Frames, Professor Charles L. Norton of ths Massachusetts Institute of Technology says that a great deal more cars should be taken in protecting steel work and wrought iron work from corrosln. Concrete is a far better safe guard than stone or terra cotta against fire. h Bnva Thn Rrwlnn clrv scrapers are viewed with suspicion by troreasor Norton. Bow's Tills? W offer Ons Hundred Dollars Reward for any case ot Oatarrh that cannot be ouredbr UaU'sOataiTtt Oure. ,. J- t'HKMt ft Co., Toledo, O. We. th . i -i i 'wm - Cheney for the last Uyeara.andbeUevebim perfectly honorable in all business transao- ,, - -juy main 1 tj carry oat any obligations made by their firm. W"edt flol"to Duggits, To- WaXjDiaa, 'Kimra A Miivm, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. ' Hall "a Catarrh Ourols taken Internally, a3t. Ingc-reotly upon the blood and muooussat SS8 .. ne ST9t"a. Testimonials lent free. Prioe.TSp. per bottle. Bold by all Druggists. Tuks Hall's Family Pills for constipation. t Two-8tory Autos. Added to the "Seeing Washington" ears, which for years have been one of the conveniences sought out by visitors at the capital, there are now two lines of immense, two-story automobiles, each vehicle carrying almost as i mny people as a large street car. These now make regular trips around the city, and are doing a very large busi ness. A "barker" accompanies each car and explains the several points of Interest. This service in the aggre gate gives strangers In Washington an opportunity to see the city at small cost such as is offered by no other city of the country. The large automobiles resemble in general appearances the street cars of England, with their winding steps In the rear leading to the roof. One Thing He Learned. Bishop Potter waa preaching one Sunday evening in a small town in the Adlrondacks, where he has a sum mer camp, says the New York Times. When the services were over a tall, gaunt man, with the air of a back woodsman, came up to the Bishop with outstretched hand. "I've hcerd ye preach twice afore this," he said, "an I like yer preach In'. I alius l'arn somethln' new from ye. I rid ten miles to-night to hear ye, an' I'd rid ten more, fer, aa usual, I hoerd somethln' new to-nlgbt that I never knowed afore." "Well, I'm glad of that," said ths Bishop shaking the outstretched hand: "and what was It you learned to night?" "Why, Bishop, I found out fer the fust time in my life that Sodom and Gomorrah wuzn't twins." Dairying In 8lberla. Siberia, so long stretched before the Imagination of the world as a land ot snow and desolation, that even now, when the Trans-Siberian railway has been built, and when the productive ness of that vast country is beginning to be understood, one is rather sun prised to hear that more than ten mil lion dollars' worth of butter is annual ly exported from Siberia. Its great plains afford good grazing, and within three years after the railway was opened 1,000 butter manufactories were erected. The Government has now undertaken to furnish free in structions on a large scale in dairy ing and hnttpr making. HE ATTENDS TO BUSINESS who goes straight to work to cure Hurts, Sprains, Bruises by ths use of Tked, Neivous Mothers : Ij Mafte Unhappy Homes Their Condition Irritata Both Husband and Children How Thousand; of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous Prostration and Made Strong and WelL . j A nervous, irritable mother, often on the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care for children t it ruins a child's disposi tion and reacts upon herself. The trouble between children and their mothers too often is due to the fact that the mother has some female weak ness, and she is entirely tin lit to bear the strain upon her nerves that govern ing children involves; it is impossible for her to do anything calmly. The Ills of women act like a firebrand upon the nerves, consequently nine tenths of the nervous prorratk'!i, ner vous despondency, "the blues," sleep lessness, and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. Do you experience fits of depression with restlessness, alternating with extreme irritability? Are your spirits easily affected, so that one minute you laugh, and the next minute you feel like crying 1 Do you feel something like a ball ris ing in your throat and threatening- to choke yon; all the senses perverted, morbidly sensitive to light and sound ; pain in the ovaries, and especially between the shoulders; bearing down pains; nervous dyspepsia, and almost continually cross and snnppy ? If so, your neries are in a shattered condition, and you are threatened with nervous prostration. Proof is monumental that nothing in the world is better for nervous prostra tion than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound ; thousands and thou sands of women testify to this fact. Ask Hrs. Pinkham's Advicc-A Woman Bast Understands a Woman's Ilia PRICE, 25 Cts T0 CURE THE GRIP IM UNt DAY AMPIN I M&NOC01ULFOR1 BACK OF TAB ATKINS SAW Two eentnrlet of patient and conscientious effort to produce the uric navrs in me woria. Ten generations of blood and hralni. Thn largest plnnt In the world eiclnilvely devoted to tsw-makins, employing many hundreds of htfth-clnM, hlgh-prieed craftsmen and equipped with eoitly ipeoial machinery. world-wide bull nest amcn-gailng many millions of dollars every year. A reputation built up through two eentnrlet of steady growth, valued mora highly than any other asset of this great institution. The guaranty of thlt Company, which Is retneoted the world over. We make all types and liset of tawt, but only one grade the best. Atkint Saws, Corn Knlvet, perfection Floor Scrapers, etc, are told by all good hardware dealers. - Catalogue on request. E. C. ATrtlNS & CO.. Inc. Largest Saw Manufacturers In the World, Factory and Fxertitive Office. Indianapolis, Indiana VKANCllKS- New York, CliI, MliinfitpolU, i'prtlaml, (Orctfoni, fteattlc, San Kraib'inco, llrmiitiLs AtKnta and Toronto, (Canada). I Accept bo Substitute Insist on the Alkies Braad I SOLD BY C00D DEALERS EVERYnHFHT WWMtVIWAWAft FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to their tez, used as a douche is marvslously sac- rn.fnl. ThnrmiphtvrlncAa Irill. Aimmman i.M. ttopt discharges heals Inflammation acJ local orenesi, cures leucotiboea and natal catarrh. Paitine It in powder form to be dissolved in pore water, and Is far more cleansing, healing, germichUi and economical than liquid antiseptics for alT TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For tale at druggists, GO cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Pre. Thx R. Paxtom Company aoTon, Mass. Coxvr iNT.ANn KorvExm rrT t'AItHM. bis heatitlfi-l rolorrd scad, for Mo Cooey Jslsad Postal Card t;u.. Chohv kliml N' . P. N. U. 43. 1005. M CURES KHl ALL k: It If 111. ITT I Beat Cough ttyrup. Ya-nus 'Jood. Uts in time, eoiri nr dnurjrl .ts. St. wmi v. Wl Mrs. Chester Curry, Leader of the? Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 43 Sara toga St., Last Boston, Mass., writes I , Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "For eight years I was troubled withe tremonorvousneiaunil hysteria, brought on by? , irregularities. I could nit!ier enioy life no sleep nights; I was very irritable, nervous and despondent. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended and pro ed to be the only remedy that helped me. I have daily improved in health fiitil I am now strong and well, and all nervousness has oUcap. pearcd." Mrs. Charles F. Brown. Vice-President of the Mothers' Club, 21 Cedar Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., writes : Doar Mrs. Pinkham: " I dragged throti h nine years of micrnb!e existence, worn out with pain and nervous ness, until It seemed as though I should fly. I then noticed a statement of a woman tron bled aa I wn,i, nnd tho wonderful results the derived from Lydin E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, I decided to try it. I did so, and woinnn. My nervousness was ail gone. I waa nn Innim, lrrftliln nnd mv hnqhnnri (pll In love with mo nil over again." Women should remember that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound la the medicine that holds the record for the greatest number of actual cures of female ills, and take no substitute. ( Free Advice to Women. Mrs. Pin'.tham. Lynn, Mass., invites all sick women to write toherforadvice. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experience with female troubles enables her to tell nm, -l,,cf wlml ic In rrmi nnA sho will charge you nothing for box advice. AHTI-GRIPIHE IS GUARANTEED TO CVRE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA I won't Mil Aatl-erlplne to a dalr who won't Onarantre la, Ctll for your MONK I BACK It IT DOMS'T CUBS, F. W. Dtemer, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Jfe COLI.WOK, located at Pittsburg, Pa. Come to this great Commercial and Manufacturing center for a Business Education; don't go to a small place where Stenographers and Bookkeepers are not required. Circulars. -' Vf. II. DUFF, President. W. L. Douglas S&'SSHOESSS. W. L. Douglas S4.00 Cllt Edge Lin cannot be equalled at any price. . I Established Jnivs, vm. W.l.rWUOIJlS MAKES AND BFllB MOfif SA F.II SHHFB THAM AM? OTHER MANUFACTURER. t1fl flflfl REWARD to tnyons wht, on OIUUUU disprove this statement. W. L. Don Jim $.1.50 shoes have hv their er. eellent style, easv fitting, and tuperiorwerlrjo; qualities, achieved the largest tale ol any $.t.s5 shoe In the world. They are Just at good as threw that cost you $5.00 to S7.00 the only dllference Is the price. II I could take you Into my factory at Hrockton, Mass., the largest la the world under one rool making men's fin shoes, and show you the care with whirh every pair of Douglas shoes Is made, you would realize vhy W. L. Douiilns $4.50 shoes are the best shoes produced In the world. If I could show you the difference between the hoes made In mv factory and those el other maket, you would understand why Dougla $J. SO shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and ar of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W-.L- D2"tl Strong Mm dm Shomm torn Mmn. 2.BO, tl.oo. Baym' School 4 Drmmrn Sho4tm.Sit.BO. S3. S1.lB.S1.sa CAUTION . Insitt opon having W. L.Dong. laa shoes, i'ake no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. A shoe dnalerlnevery town where W. I. DOUff a. AliriAS Sr. nnt inM V..I1 11.. samples sent free for inspection upon reqnest. rw wmw eyeera ttff; rwy mill not sw bmig. Writ for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stvlea W. I bOl'GLAS. Braokton, Mis. Strata alvil iar. it 4 sdlcauna uuiuV."r slpS D R O P5 vNEwr""0T"T: I 1 I quttk rslLf and tors, worst ess. Sand for book of Itstunonlals and 10 Day' P-oatmott fre. Pr. H. a. Sails t SOia, AUaata, aa. Jacobs Oil and saves time., money and gets out of misery quickly. Price. 23c and 50c. 1 ekT ' JW',r--5i!.J nil f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers