The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, October 03, 1906, Image 7

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    PERUNA PRAISED.
a:
t'Tf 41,. "
i t " ?
MRS. ESTHER M. MiLNER.
Box 321, Detlraff, Ohio.
Or. 8. B. "artman, Columbus, Ohio.
Dear Sir:
1 u a terrible sufferer from
ftlvio weakness and had headache
conttnxtounly. I was not able to do my
housework tor myself and husband.
1 wrote, you and described my condition
as nearly as possible. You recommended
1'eruna. 1 took four bottles of it and was
completely cured. I think 1'eruna a
wonderj'ul medicine and have recom
mended it to my friends, with the very
best of results.
Esther M. Milner.
Very few of the great multitude of wom
en who have been relieved of some pelvic
disease or weakness by 1'eruna ever con
cent to give a testimonial to be read by
the public.
There are, however, a few couraneous,
elf-sacrificing women who will for the sake
of their suffering sisters allow their cures
to bo publishoi!
Vn. Milner is one of these. In her
fratitiide for her restoration to health she
is wining mat me
nip 1
A GRATEFUL women of the whole
LETTER TO world should know
DR.HARTM AN it. A chronic inva-
1 im Drougni Dacs to
health is no small matter. W ords are in
tdeqiiate to express complete gratitude.
Constitution for China.
China's emperor has announced that
It has been decided that the Interests
of the empire demand the granting
of many reforms and eventually a
constitution, the latter to be formulat
ed when the people have ben suflW'i
ently educated. The question of re
forms and of a constitution Is being
studied by Chinese commissioners
who have been visiting Europe and
America, and the emperors announce
ment Is the result of their observa
tions and reports. The granting of a
constitution to China may not be very
remote. The fact that Japan lias been
working under one for some years and
has achieved most valuable results
cannot fail to have a great effect up
on her neighbor.
Qjfnensions of Sea Waves.
A recent article by Dr. Vanghan
Cornish, In the London Geographical
Journal, furnishes some extremely
interesting data respecting deep sea
waves. From many hundreds of ob
servations made during 40 years by
independent observers, ho shows that
on the average the height of a wave
in feet (measured from crest to
trough) is In round numbers one-half
of the wind's velocity in statute miles
per hour. By this rule, which does
not express a dynamical law, the
height of a wave raised In the deep,
open sea by a wind of full hurricane
force i. e.,' having a velocity of 90
statute miles per hour would be 43
feet.
To Save Cotton Waste.
It Is estimated that at least 2,000,
000 bales of cotton are lost through
out the South every year because of
the fropt and scattered cotton left In
the field by the pickers. According
to a correspondent of the Manufac
turers' Itecord of Baltimore, a ma
chine lias been invented which will
save nearly all this loss.
THE WAY OUT
Change of Food Brought Success and
Happiness,
An ambitious but delicate girl,
after falling to go through school on
account of nervousness and hysteria,
found in Grape-Nuts the only thing
that seemed to build her up and fur
nish her the peace of health.
. "From infancy," she says, "I have
tot been strong. Being ambitious to
learn at any cost I finally got to the
High School, but "-n had to aban
don aiy studies or. account of nervous
prostration and hysteria.
"My food did not agree with me, I
grew thin and despondent. I could
not enjoy the simplest social affair
tor I suffered constantly from nerv
ousness in spite of all sorts of medi
cines. "This wr''chel condition contin
ued until I was twenty-five, when I
became interested in the letters of
those -who had cases like mine and
who were being cured by eating
Grape-Nuts.
"I had iitUe faith but procured a
box and after the first di3h I ex
perienced a peculiar satisfied feeling
that I had never gained from an)
ordinary food. I slept and restet
better that night and in a few days
began to grow stronger.
"I had a new feeling of peace and
restfulness. In a few weeks, to my
great Joy, the headaches and nerv
ousness left me and life became
bright and hopeful. I resumed my
studies and later taught ten months
with ease of course using Grape
Nuts every day. It is now four years
aince I began to use Grape-Nuts, I
am the mistress of a happy home and
the old weakness has never re
turned." Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.,
"There's a reason." Read the lit
tle book, "The Road to Wellville.'
4ft pfcgfc
GARDEN, FARM and CROPS
SUGGESTIONS
FOR THE
UP-TO-DATE
AGRICULTURIST
Hard-Mouthed Horses.
Here is something of rcul practical
value to any one driving a horse that
pulls on the bit: Fasten a small ring
to each side of the bridle and as near
the browband as possible. Pass lines
through bit-rings and snap them Into
rings at browband. This, with a com
mon jointed bit, will enable a child
to hold a "puller" or hard-mouthed
horse with ese under almost all cir
cumstances. It can he used on a fast
horse in double team, or on both, as
desired. It is cheap and easily ap
plied, and it won't make the mouth
sore. It is better than any patent
bit. The Epltomlst.
Rations of Live Stock.
The desire to have some fixed rules
for feeding live stock has Introduced
many experiments in various ways. If
the exact amount of feed necessary
for the support of an animal could bo
estimated, the farmer would be ena
bled to avoid many mistakes. Long
ago the Germans Invented a table to
be used In the feeding of animals In
proportion to the live weight of each.
It must be admitted that "system is
half the battle," and It Is applicable
to feeding stock. There Is much to he
gained by measuring and weighing
the feed, and such a system should he
practised wherever stock Is fed. It
Is a waste to give it too much and
it is an injury to give it too little.
Animals have their characteristics in
feeding as well as Individuals, and are
given to loss of appetite, daintiness,
Bnd gorging. Some cows, when In full
flow of milk, require certain rations,
variable in quality, as the regulation
of tho milk flow Is affected thereby.
Horses, whpn performing hard work,
as all know, require more nourishing
food than when at rest. Judicious
farmers, when feeding, by measuring
and weighing, adapt not only the qual
ity, by mixture, but also the quantity,
according to the purpose subserved by
each animal. AVith all classes of ani
mals, the Individuality of each member
of a herd or flock must be consid
ered. The Epltomlst.
Harvesting Potatoes.
More or less Judgment Is required
In doing any kind of work and the dig
ging of potatoes Is no exception to the
rule. In the first place, so many
should not be dug out at one time
that they cannot be handled readily.
A good way is to dig during tho fore
part of each half day, and then gather
the tubers before quitting. As soon
as dry they should always be picked
up and if the weather is reasonably
dry the length of time necessary for
drying dependB almost entirely upon
tho nature of the soil. If sandy, an
hour may be long enough, but If a
moist clay It may take several hours.
Potatoes, once dug, should certainly
not be left out on tho ground over
night. If they are, tho frost has every
chance to get at them, and only a lit
tle freezing is required to spoil a good
many bushels for market. It Is poor
practice, too, to pick up potatoes with
out any regard to grading. Two class
as, anyway, should be made of them;
all those of good marketable size
should bo gathered first, and the un
dersized ones left till later. It also
pays to have crates or bushel measures
In which to pick them up. Easy to
distribute about the field these, after
being filled, can readily be placed on
a wagon and drawn off. Furthermore,
they prevent the tubers from being
Jammed and marred. Thirty or forty
of them, or even a less number, may
profitably be owned by every farmer
who makes a business of raising po
tatoes and similar crops. Fred O.
Blbley, Mllford, N. Y.
Sifting a Dairy Herd.
The dairy herds of Illinois have been
quite thoroughly looked over by the
experiment station workers of that
state. Interesting results were ob-talnedl-from
eighteen average herds lo-,
cated in the southern part of the
state.
Of the 221 cows included, the aver
age production per cow was 5,617
pounds of milk and 227 pounds of but
ter fat, with an average milk test of
4.03 percent. The best herd averaged
850 pounds, the poorest 142 pound-)
butter fat per cow. The butter fat
produced by the best cow was worth
$119. while that of the poorest was
worth only $19.58, showing an excel
lent profit for the good cow and much
less than nothing to pay pay her board
for the poor cow. It was found that
at least one-third of the cows were un
profitable reckoning the food they con
sumed in market price.
An interesting example was a pro
cess of weeding out a herd by the use
of the Babcock test. Five cows were
taken out, and the average profit of
the herd wrts increased by $7.62 per
head. A study of the feeding system
used in that section led to the conclu
sion that those who fail to provide
silage were making a serious mistake,
and that they should also use more
clover and alfalfa hay, which would
replace the expensive, concentrated
foods to an extent and reduce the cost
of milk production. '
Buttermilk may be built up along a
vegetable route, a feature which Is
generally neglected by truck men.
These products sell at about half the
price of fresh milk. A great deal of
poultry may also Ik, sold If the pedler
knows how to dress fowls neatly and
thoroughly, so as to make a good ap
pearance and save further work oa
the part of the cook.
Whatever Is grown should be the
best of its kind. If obliged ;to sell
second quality stuff, sell It as such
and charge a corresponding price.
Study your customers and learn their
likes and dislikes, then build up a
trade that cannot be taken away.
Boston Cultivator.
Clover Silage.
The filling of silos with clover Is
still an unsolved problem. In the lat
est bulletin of the Michigan Agricul
tural Station the summary of this
question, which for some time there,
ban been In the experimental stage,
was about this: Make the clover Into
hay, and feed with corn silage as part
of the protein ration. The facts as
they presented themselves to Director
Smith were that making clover silage
was slow and expensive work and in
volved drawing too much water to th
silo. Clover Is hard to rake up, to
load, and to get Into the silo, and It Is
uncertain In tho siloing part; so it
seems the better way to cure it Into
hay and feed as the dry part of the
ration, except In years where there Is
a great amount of rain and curing is
about impossible.
So far as I know, cattle eat good
clover silage with much relish, hut
the question Is this, "floes It pay to
draw a crop to the silo that will dry
out. In the field 65 pounds of water to
the 100 pounds?" The director thought
not, when he needed some dry hay to
go with his corn silage. The real
trouble with clover seems to be In its
high protein content, causing It to take
on a greater heat in the silo than corn,
and so it throws off too much mois
ture and Is liable to burn. Some ex
periments were made where clover
was closely pressed Into huge casks
and headed up air tight, so that no
moisture could escape, and excessive
heating could not take place, owing to
the exclusion of further supplies of ox
ygen, and the keeping was about per
fect. This Is a point in which the hen
men might, find profit by filling small
barrels with clover and heading it In,
for hen silage in the winter.
Some have succeeded well with si
loing clover by cutting it, as they do
corn, and wetting down with fair addi
tions of water, making tho mass de
cidedly wet, and adding weight to the
cover to promote more absolute set
tling and exclusion of air. All agree
upon this: that the clover should be
cut. when coming into blossom and be
got Into the silo without wilting, and
there be spread uniformly, and the
more closely packed the better. I
have not answered Mr. D. to do or not
to do. It's a matter he must decide
upon, and then do some experimental
work for himself. Those who seek
out new ways and methods are said to
be favored by the gods. Tribune Far
mer. Farm Notes.
If there are ticks on tho sheep, dip
them and the lamps when the shear
ing Is done.
Besides the profitableness of grow
ing the better animals, there is th
advantage In that there Is always a
demand for such stock.
Regulate the amount of grain accord
ing to the amount of work done. Do
not feed too much grain on idle days.
Serious results sometimes follow.
In selecting a setting hen, where
there Is a choice in the matter, only
the tame, less nervous and fidgety ones
should he used as brooders and nurses.
For farm work the farmer wants
good sized horses, yet there are some
fmall horses which will stay with any
of them. There Is a great deal of dif
ference In the way horses are built.
If you want the horses to do th
most work feed them on the proper
feed, so that they may develop strength
and be able to do the required work.
Try some oats instead of so much corn.
Good healthy fowls, properly killed
and cooled, ought to keep in any or
dinarily cool place at a temperature of
forty or fifty degrees, for a week at
least, and be all tho better for being
kept.
Fifty breeding ducks, if property
cared for, should keep three 220-egg
Incubators going and turn out between
2000 and 3000 ducklings during the
season. This would keep one man
quite busy.
In feeding fowls, always keep in view
the fact that the excess of food met
and above that required for warmth ol
body and egg production will be con
verted into fat which will decrease the
production of eggs.
Look for brains as well as feet, limbs'
or body when buying a horse. An
animal that is sound in every mem
ber but has not a level head is never
a pleasant horse and seldom a valua
ble one. Horse Breeder.
Eggs will hatch best near the ground,
The good old housewifely way is to
make a coop of lath, four by t x feet,
place a box without a bottom in one
end of the coop, on the ground. In this
the nest Is placed. Feed and water
the hen In the other end of the coop.
This arrangement does not allow thi
ether hens to disturb the nest.
SHAD BECOMING EXTINCT.
Comm'"--liner of Fisheries Says Run
for Spawning Has Been
Wiped Out.
Yl; at there U grave danger that tho
shad will become extinct Is pointed
out by United States Commissioner
of Fisheries George M. Bowers. Ex
plaining how the toothfomo fish may
follow the way of the bison and the
wild pigeon, he says In his annual re
port :
"Under the conditions which have
been becoming more and more pro
nounced the run of fish for spawning
purposes has been practically wiped
out In many of the most Important
streams, nnd unless the Slate prompt
ly take some action by which a fair
percentage of the shad may reach
their spawning grounds, the future
for this fish Is gloomy."
The Passing of the Frog.
Owing to the fact that he bus como
to be steemed as an article of diet
to no less (legree than his European
cousin, tho American bullfrog (Rami
catesblana) has been bunted so close
ly that his loud voice Is seldom heard
on our rivers or the many small lakes
adjacent to this city. The edible frog
of the south of Europe (Rnna esculcri
ta) Is inferior in size and flavor to
our own bullfrog and Is raised for the
market exactly as American farmers
raise chickens or vdueks. Canadians
have started in the business of frog
ralslng during the last 10 years In the
endeavor to supply the growing mar
ket. Ten years ago the Chentnngo
river, even within the limits of Blng
hamton, was a favorite lurking place
for frogs. Noyes's raceway, the small
pools in and around the Island Just
above the railroad bridges and the
upper reaches of the Chenango river
then were never silent during the
summer nights. The Susquehanna
river for miles In either direction also
harbored hosts of large frogs. But
today the familiar booming calls of
othfr years flannel lures nnd small
caliber rifle haave done their work.
Rlnghnmpton Tress.
Barbers In Early Days.
The origin of the custom of shaving
the face Is lost in antiquity. The
Creeks nnd Romans had public shav
ing places In connection with their
baths. In the fourteenth century tho
barber's craft was recognized as a
profession, being allied to surgery.
The barbers were confined, as to sur
gery to the letting of blood and
leeching, nnd extracting of teeth, but
the surgeons were prohibited from
shaving the face. The barber's sign
was a striped pole as far back as 1050
the stripes nromid the polo being
symbols of the bandages used In
wrapping the arm or part from which
the blood was to be let. New Tork
Herald.
Leprosy Increasing.
Leprosy is increasing in both North
nnd South America. Columbia, where
there were only 400 lepers 40 years
ago, Is said to have 40,000 now, and
many find their way Into the United
Slates. Such a medical authority
as Dr. Athmead. who was formerly
chief medical adviser to the Govern
ment of Japan, says tho increase is
alarming. When leprosy is brought
Into a new country it takes 50 years
for the seeds to take root and It be
comes epidemic after some 200 years.
It has been shown that, mosquitos are
active in transferring leprosy bacilli.
Bricks of Sand and Lime.
The first factory for making bricks
of sand and lime was built in the
United States in 1001. Now about
110 plants are in operation In various
parts of the country, and their yearly
output is about 400.000,000 bricks. It
is a striking Illustration of the results
of scientific use of old and familiar
materials, is new combinations or
forms.
Race Track Trick.
Albert Corman, a London book
maker, Is charged with attempting to
obtain money by a trick from Harry
Cavanaugb, another bookmaker. He
handed Cavanaugh a paper with in
structions to back certain horses for
forthcoming races, and by means of
chemical Ink the original Inscription
vanished nnd another appeared, back
ing horses for races already won.
Practical Evidence of Ruin.
A few years ago Russia was annu
ally exporting more than $200,000,000
worth of grain. Now she Is import
ing indication of the ruin which the
revolutionary disturbances have
brought upon her. New York Tri
bune. BABY'S TORTURING HUMOR.
Ear Looked aa If They Would Drop Off
Fare Mhh of Sores Cured by Cutl
cun In Two Weeks For 75c.
"I fcel'it my duty to parents of other
poor Buffering babies to tell you what
Cuticura has done for my little daughter.
She broke out all over her body with a
humor, and we used everything recom
mended, but without results. I called in
three doctors. They all claimed they
could help her, but she continued to grow
worse. ' Her body was a mass of sores,
and her little face was being eaten away;
her ears looked as if they would drop off.
Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura Soap
and Ointment, and before I had used half
of the cake of Soup and box of Ointment
the sores had all healed, and my little
one's face and body were as clear as a
new-born babe's. I would not be without
it again if it cost five dollars, instead of
seventy-five cents. Mrs. George J. Steese,
"Ul Coburn St., Akron, Ohio."
Movements of Electricity.
Tests made In London show that
tho electrical traction lines of that
city set in motion earth currents of
electricity which can be distinctly
recorded by delicate instruments in
the Kew observatory, six miles dis
tant from the lines of the electric
railroads. The marl j made upon a
sensitive surface are so plain that
they form a virtual time table ol the
electric traction lines.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Lmorerbrlsnter aaraater ctilorithao any other rte. One n. r colon all flbera. They dT In nolo water better thu aa. aaar dra. (nana
aav caroMBS oiummu riapuyj nwrfc Welt lot ra two.l.t-How Ul;a tueaca aad Mia Coiora, lMtOK LatlU toTt al.aaTil W.dT
tked, Nezvous Motheis
Mahe Unhappy Homes Their Condition Irritates
Both Husband and Children How Thousand
of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous
Prostration and Made Strong and Well.
1 li '
Mrs. CAester Curry j
A nervous, irritable mother, often on
the verge of hysterics, Is unfit to care
for children ; it ruins a ehild's disposi
tion and reacts upon herself. The
trouble between children end tbeir
mothers too often is due to the fact
that the mother has some femnle weak
ness, and she is entirely unfit 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 Bine
tenths of the nervous prostration, ner
vous despondency, " the blues." sleep
lessness, and nervous irritability of
women arise from some derangement
of the female organism.
Ho you enperience fits of depression
with restlessness, alternating with
extreme irritability? Are your spirits
easily affected, so that one minute you
ltiugh, and the next minute you feel
like orying ?
Ho you feel something like a, V.all rising-in
your throat and threatening to
choke vou ; all the senses perverted,
morbidly sensitive to light and sound ;
pain in the abdominal region, and
between the shoulders; oearing-down
pains; nervous dyspepsia and almost
continually cross and snappy?
If so, your nerves f re in a shattered
condition, snd you are threatened with
nervous prostration.
Proof is monumental that nothing in
the world is bettor for nervous prostra
tion than Lydin E. l'inlchain's Vege
table Compound ; thousands and thou
sands of women can testify to this fact.
Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advlce-A Woman Best Understands a Woman's Ills.
The Coming- Bath.
"The bath of the next century,"
says T. Baron Russell in his book,
"A Hundred Years Hence," "will
lave the body speedily with oxygen
ated water delivered with a force that
will render rubbing unnecessary, and
beside it will stand the drying cup
board, lined with some quickly mov
ing arrangement of soft brushes, and
fed with a highly disircated air, from
which, almost in a moment, the bath
er will emerge dried, and with a skin
gently stimulated, and perhaps elec
trified, to clothe himse'f quickly and
pass down the lift to his breakfast,
which he will cat to the accompani
ment, of a summary of the morning's
news rrad nut for the benefit of the
family, or whispered Into his ears by
a talking machine."
FITR,St.VitusTnnre:Xprvons DiRea'cp per
manentlycuted by Dr. Kline's Hrent Nerve
Restorer, i'i trial brittle nnd treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld,.Wl Arch St.. Phila., i'a.
The tonnage of Japanese vessels
at the Chinese port of Hongkong has
doubled since 18!'S.
Mrs. Winnlow's Seething Syrup for Children
allays pain.cures wind colic, ale a bottle
New Light on the Race Problem.
Robert Bennett Wean, M. D., be
lieves that scientific investigation has
proved an absolute and structural dif
ference in the brain of the white man
nnd the negro, a difference which
must be considered In any rational ad
justment of the relations between
the two races. lie has prepared for
the September Century the first full
authoritative discussion, adequately
illustrated, of the matter to be pub
lished, a discussion which cannot fail
to throw Interesting and valuable
light upon the race problem in Amer
ica and other countries. .
The Great American Hen.
Someone has figured that the Amer
ican hen each year e:rns enough to
buy all the silver and gold dug out
of tho mines, all the sheep In the
country and their wool, and leave a
balance equal to the entire year's
crop of rye, barley, buckwheat ami
potatoes. Or. as a lien enthusiast
writes, " she pays the interest on all
tho farm .mortgages, payg the entire
state and country taxes of the whole
Union, and then leaves a balance large
enough to give every man, woman and
child in the United States a dollar."
Farming Magazine.
Stations Away from Town.
It is a peculiarity of Russian rail
ways that their stations are generally
two miles distant from the smaller
towns and .villages which they serve.
This is said to be on account of the
danger of fire, the houses In small
places generally being thatched with
straw.
Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Lata PrliiutuM E Dinnr V S :,uaion Hureau.
3jrriQ mil mm-. UU MhrBUuarlAiiuH.artr niuo.
I'. N. r. an. num.
n P O P Q Y HEW BISCOVZBT ;
S 1 W I rt.M rtif ua nroa
MM Hi. ImI af I..IImI.U aaa f Daya' ImlaHl
fra. Sr. H. H. taflva aiUS, x a, atlaau, Sa.
- j Mrs.Chas.T?Srown
Mrs. Chester Curry, Leader of tha
Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 42 Sara
toga Street, East Boston, Mass.,
writes:
Dear Mrs. Plnkhurn:
" For eight years I was troubled with
treme narvoimness and hysteria, brought on
by irregularities. I could neither enjoy life
nor sleep nights: I was very irritable, uorvous
and dsKpondent.
" Lyilia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
was recommended snd proved to bs the only
remedy that bi'rt me. 1 have daily im
proved In health until 1 am now strong an
well, and all nervousness has disappear!. "
Mrs. Charles F. Brown, Vice-President
of the Mothers' Club, 81 Cedar
Terrace, Hot 8prings, Ark., writes:
Dear Mrs. Finkfaam:
" I dragged through nine years of miser
able existence, worn out with pain and ner
vousness, until it seemed as though I should
fly. I then noticed a statement of a woman
trnublwl as I was, and the wonderful results
she derived from I.vdia E. Pinkham's Vegs
tnble Compound. 1 decided to trv it. I did so,
and at the end of three months 1 was a differ
ejit woman. My nervousness was all gone, I
was no longer Irritable, and my huiband fell
In love with me all over again."
Women Ehould remember that Lydla
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is
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. Pinkham, daughter in-law ol
Lydia E. Pinkham. Lynn. Mass., invites
all aick women to write to her for
advice. Mrs Pinkham's vast experience
with female troubles enables her to ad
vise you wisely, and she will charge
you nothing for her advice.
There is no satisfaction
keener than being dry
xnn romrnrtAh n. ..
when out In the
hardest storm
YOU ARE SURE
OF THIS IF YOU
WEAR
WATERPROOf
vrr irT-v
CLOTHING J
On sale everywhere '
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.50&$3.00Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.L.Douglas $4 Gilt Edge line .
: cannotDeequalledatanrprice
W. I.. Douglas' .Tob
!!': 1 !!!? in Hie most
cmui-le!1 in tliin country
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES.
Men's Sboes. Sa to Si. 60. Boys' Shoes, S3
fn 31.25. Women's Bftoes. S4.QU to 31. ou.
Mies-e'St Children's 8hoe, S3-3B to Sl.OO.
Try IV. I.. Dnnglna Women's, Miaaes a.n4
Cliilflrcn's ahiies; for style, fit and wear
they esrel other makes.
If I could take you Into my largo
factories at Brockton, Mass., and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoe
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and are cf greater value
than any other make.
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L.
Douglas shoes. Hl name and prica U stamped
on the bottom, which protects youagalost high
prices ond Inferior shoes. Takm no aubstit
lute Ask your dealer for W. L. Doug-las shoes
nd lnsir.t upon having- them.
Anil Color e ,rlet met); thei) mill rmt war irasaf.
Write tor Illustrated Catalog; of pall Styles.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. I S, Brockton, Mass,
Drill for Water
Prospect for Minerals
Drill Test and DIsstHolss.
We make
DRILLING MACHINES
For Horst, Staam or
Gasoline Power.
Latest
Traction Machine.
LOOHIS MACHINE CO
TIFFIN. OHIO.
DON'T WORRY ABOUT YOUR FEET!
unir p(fttera
iMrnf. t-tsiioiiav
Relief.!. ibpia
Inn. But ills new
eomhlntxt lir irirmrtttsd or mriHy btvL At uru(
Usil ho utortK. or by mall postpaid.
MftMitle pi. (4 lasrt, hw mmtl sjlr.lDr.
BEft i l ITLV to., &oIMfr,,Un. JUl,IUi
PATENTS
49 p. botk frosj, HllrfH
k Co. Ptj p l. U. W aauilasj u m. D.0
ma
mi
W.. 411
0 11 t . LS
Coal 3
Gas
JOSS- .