The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, October 10, 1906, Image 3

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    1
Cure ForJLhe Blues
ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS NEVER FAILED
Health Fully Restored and ths Jty of
Life Regained.
fflwn acheerfnl, brave, light-hearted
woman ts suddenly plutiR-ed into that
perfection of misery, the MLl'ES, it ia
a sad picture. It is usually this way :
ijfta has been feeling " out of aorta "
for soma time ; head baa ached and
back also ; has slept poorly, been qnita
nervous, and nearly fainted once or
twice; head dizzy, and heart beats very
fast; then that bearing-down feeling,
and during her periods she is exceed
ingly despondent. Nothing pleases
her. Her doctor says : " Cheer up : yon
nave dyspepsia ; you will be all right
aoon."
But she doesn't get " all rl(?ht," and
hope vanishes; then come the brood
ing, morbid, melancholy, everlasting
BLUES.
Don't wait nntil your sufferings have
driven you to despair, with your nerves
all shattered and vour courage gone,
but take Lydia . Plnkham'a Vege
table Compound. See what it did for
Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 819 12th Street,
Louisville, Ky., niece of the late Gen
eral Roger Hanson, C.S.A. She writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :
" I cannot tell you with pen and ink what
I.ydia E. Pinktiam's Vegetable Compound
has done for me. I suffered with female
troubles, extreme lassitude, 'the blurs,'
nervousness and that all-gone feeling. I was
advised to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, and it not only cured my female
, derangement, but it has riw'tored me to perfect
health and strength. The buoyancy of my
younger days has returned, and 1 do not luf
ler any loager with despondencr. as I did be
fore. I consider Lydia E. Inkham's Vege
table Compound a boon to sick and suffering
women."
If yon have soma derangement of
til female organism write Mr.
Pinkham, Lynn, tfit.it., for advice.
v TURKEYS COOK CHESTNUTS
Wise Birds that Live In the Wilds of
Pennsylvania.
Filled with an overwhelming spirit
of gratitude for the protecting- laws
thrown around them by the State of
Pennsvlvrinln. iranio hlrrln and nnimnls
which are nnw safe from pot hunters
are showing their appreciation in a
most amazing manner. This is evid
enced by the truthful reports coming
from various points and which are
here Bet forth.
. .Near Blain, Porry county, Hiram
Gibb observed a flock of wild turkeys
carrying chestnuts, just now ripening,
to a charcoal pit and dropping them
upon the hot coals. Soon the nuts
burst open, and the intelligent birds,
raking them out with their claws, car
ried the mealy chestnuts to a cleared
spot, where, after cooling, the nuts
were eaten with gusto.
Mr. Gibb is convinced that the wild
turkeys are doing their best to ac
quire a more delicious flavor, so that
they will be highly appreciated by
the sportsmen who are lucky enough
to kill and eat them.
Coming Expositions.
The end of expositions is not yet
next year Jamestown is to celebrate
its tercentenary on the water and
shores of Hampton roads. The phe
nomenal financial success of the re
cent Lewis and Clark exposition at
Portland, Oregon, has fired the am
bition of people further north on the
Pacific coast, and it is announced that
In 1909 an Alaskan-Yukon-Pacific ex
position is to be held at Seattle, in
the' state of Washington. Half a mil
lion dollars is to be contributed by
the city, and the state legislature
will be asked to appropriate a million
more. This exposition will typify
at Jamestown will be mainly reminis
cent, although none the less Interest
ing What nitv nr -aoctlnn will fvr
come to the front with a big fair?
RIGHT HOME
Doctor Recommends Postum From
Personal Test.
No one is better able to realize
the Injurious action of caffeine the
drug in coffee on the heart, than the
doctor.
When the doctor himself has been
relieved by simply leaving off coffee
and UEing Postum, he can refer with
lull conviction to his own case.
A Mo. physician prescribes Postum
for many of his patients because he
was benefited by It. He says:
"I wish to add my testimony In re
gard to that excellent preparation
Postum. I have had functional or
nervous heart trouble for over IB
years, and part of the time was un
able to attend to my business.
"I was a moderate user of coffee
did not think drinking It hurt
But on stopping it and using
jstum Instead, my heart has got all
" ight, and I ascribe it to the change
'rom coffee to Postum.
-v"I am prescribing it now in cases
tf sickness, especially when coffee
lees not agree, or affects the heart,
terves or stomach.
' "When made right it has a much
better flavor than coffoe, and is a
'ltal sustalner of the system. I shall
ontlnue to recommend it to our peo
ple, and 1 have my own case to refer
to." Name given by Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little
book. "The Road to Wellville," la
pkgs. "There's a reason " '
The Late-Hatched rullets.
One advantage that the late
batched pullets possess is that with
proper care and attention they Just
ret to laying very nicely during the
next breeding season when good fer
tile eggs are always in demand.
Cost of Developing the Calf,
rrofessor Wing in an address
itated that an average of forty-five
experiments carried on by different
txperlment stations shows that to de
velop the calf during the first year of
Its life costs $3.50 per 100 pounds.
For the second year the cost is $7.10
per 100 pounds, and for the third
fear the cost is $11 per 100 pounds.
flood Business,
On some farms it will be a good
eusiness operation to sell off the best
timothy and horsehay and buy stand
ing grass of the lower grade to be
iut and cured for the cattle. The
crop is so good in many localities
that a great deal of this meadow hay
and brook grass Is for sale at very
low prices, farmers having enough of
the better grass to fill their barns
and not caring to stack the lower
trades. American Cultivator.
Advice For Toultry Growers.
Use kerosene to rid the hen-house
Of lice. Wash the roosts with it.
Apply it with a brush, as you would
paint, to all cracks and corners where
lice would be likely to lurk. Use it
liberally and frequently. Act on the
principle that prevention is better
than cure.
Persian insect powder, if you can
get the fresh article, is the best rem
edy for lice on fowls. It is harmless
to the fowl, but death to the insect.
Old powder is generally worthless.
Catch the hen and dust It freely
among her feathers and under her
wings.
Feed a Boft mash in the morning.
The hens seem to relish it better then
than at any other time during the
day. Make it of two parts bran, one
part middlings, one part cornmeal,
one part crushed oats. Add 'a pinch
of salt and one of cayenne pepper.
Meat can be used to advantage
about three times a week. Run it
through a sausage grinder. Use
about a pound each time to a dozen
bens. It will stimulate them to lay
ing, as a general thing, and will
prove a welcome addition to their
usual diet, which ought to be varied
occasionally. A fowl's appetite is
iharpened and benefited by a change
of food, now and then, though the
regular bill of fare should be made
up largely of corn, oats, wheat and
barley. It pays to humor a hen's
whims, somewhat, when eggs are
bringing a big price and fresh ones
are hard to get. Outing Magazine.
Rabbits and Farm Crops.
Too many of the so-called game
laws are made for the benefit of the
sportsman rather than the preserva
tion of insectivorous birds or bene
ficial animals. We have heretofore
spoken of the protection of rabbits
In many States. There is no possible
reason for the protection of these
pests of the farm, except to give
sport to the idle fellows who follow
their beagles over the farmers' land
without any regard for the farmer or
bis crops. No close season is need
ed for rabbits, for no matter when
or how they are hunted they will in
crease more than is desirable to the
farmer. And now we hear that on
Long Island they are having a pest
of Jack rabbits, which are far worse
than our common hare. Sportsmen
turned loose there a large number of
these long eared gentry and they
have Increased to such an extent that
the crops of the truck farmers have
suffered greatly. We do not believe
that if the matter was carried to the
higher courts that any farmer could
be fined for shooting any wild animal
that is a pest to his crops at any
time he chooses to do so. No one
has a right for mere sport to turn
out a lot of animals that prey on the
farmers' crops, and every farmer has
the natural right to protect his farm
and crops from trespass by wild ani
mals or by the idle fellows that hunt
them. All that is needed Is for the
farmers to unite in testing the ridic
ulous game laws that are made solely
tor the spor.smen. As It is now, the
fruit grower must stand by and let
the robins eat his cherries and the
Jack rabbits eat his garden truck,
and under the game laws he cannot
shoot them. The law guarantees
every man peaceable possession of
bis lands, and these are serious tres
passes, and we believe that under
sny sensible bill of rights the farmer
bas the right to protect his land
rrom trespass. It is mainly a craze
for sport at the expense of the farm
er. The Practical Farmer.
The Best Remedies.
The young squash plants are at
tacked when they are just appearing
above ground, to prevent which the
hills should be covered with wire net
ting, the edges to be buried under
the soil, as the bugs will endeavor
to-get under them. The netting will
also keep out the flea beetles and
fellow and black-striped bugs. As
soon as the plants have five leaves
the covers should be removed and
the bugs fought by other methods.
Some gardeners plant niche seeds
than can properly develop in order
to provide against the destruction
of the whole hill. The bugs are not
partial to clean cultivation. The
burning of useless rubbish in the
fields reduces the winter shelter, and
all vines should be collected, am
burned after harvesting the crop
The bugs may be collected by ham
from the vines, or from the squasl
plants between the rows used a
traps. The bugs also seek shelte
under leaves, in the earth, unde
clods or boards, or wherever the:
can find a covering. All eggs shouli
be destroyed and the vines examine!
twice a day. The bug will alwayi
leave the melon or cucumber for th.
squash, hence a few squash vine
among the melons and cucumber;
will trap them. Kerosene emulsloi
may be used. An eight per cent, ker
osene emulsion may injure thi
plants, about seven per cent, beinj
strong enough (seven parts keroseni
to 100 parts water). It is also im
portant to kill as many bugs as pos
sible in autumn, after the crop is har
vested, and be sure to burn ever;
vine. When spraying the vines can
should be used, as the kerosene am
water must be intimately mixed. Th
first flow should be on the grounc
for a minute, as it may contain toi
much kerosene. Spray the vine:
lightly, not too much, the spray t
be very fine. The mixture will drlv
the bugs from their covers, whei
they can then be destroyed, but, a:
stated before, everything dependi
upon destroying them by hand.
Philadelphia Record.
Some Points For Care of the Horse
Raise the collars from the shoul
ders of the work teams several timei
a day and bathe the parts with coo
water. It is not only a humane prac
tice, but will prevent galled shoul
ders.
Horses, like people, should be wat
ered before feeding, not afterward
A little attention to this matter wil
prevent colic and promotes good di
gestion in oth beasts and humans.
Lye water will act like magic ii
cleaning the currycombs and brushes
It won't take much time to give then
a thorough cleansing, and the resul
will be pleasing to you and the stock
Stock prefer salt where they car
get at it at will rather than havint
It forced upon them in their food, a
irregular Intervals. Keep a salt bo:
where horses and co-.vt can hel
themselves.
Whether your horses and colts an
easy or difficult to catch, when ii
pasture, does :iot depend so much oi
the breed of the animals as on th
master. A horse that is sure of find
Ing a taste of oats, a lump of sugar oi
some other treat waiting for him ii
his master's hand, when called, wil
not hesitate to obey the summons.
It is all right to brush and curr;
the horse's Bides and back all yot
please, but don't forget their feet an
legs. Even careful grooming of th
extremities will amount to little 1:
the animals are compelled to stand ii
dirty stables. Clean stable floors an
essential to sound feet and limbs oi
a horse and what is the animal good
for without these?
The foundation principle of driv
lng or riding is never to ask a move
ment of a horse unless you have con
veyed to him, by a delicate nianipU'
lation of the bit and reins, the intel
ligence that you are about to requiri
motion of him. This applies to start
ing, stopping, turning, backing ant!
every movement possible to the ant
mat. Its conveyance is so subtle ai
to be almost automatic electric
Indianapolis News.
Practical Advice on Horse Feeding.
A noted French horseman givel
the following in an agricultural jour
nal of Paris regarding the propel
feeding of horses: '
"Three meals are necessary and
sufficient, with an interval of four oi
five hours between to keep a horse it
good condition. Oats take at least
two hours to digest; hay takes three
hours, and because it takes so long
it should be given when the day'i
work is over. The evening mea
should be a full meal, the animal be
ing then at rest and able to digest itt
food at leisure. There should be ai
interval of half an hour between th
return of the horse to the stable ani
his getting his evening meal.
"Too much food at a meal or toe
long abstinence between meals, fol
lowed by voracious feeding, is condU'
cive to colic and indigestion. Irregu
larly fed he is given to showing hit
impatience by letting his hoofs plaj
about the woodwork of his stall. Giv
ing 'refreshers' at odd times is alsc
bad. Remember that both stomact
and bladder should never be loaded
in work time, whether light or heavj
work is done. A horse, therefore
should not be ridden or driven imme
diately after a meal, on the same
principle that it ought not to be fed
sooner than half an hour after wort
is over. Between one end of th
year and another a horse consume!
ajiamount of dry, heating food whict
calls for a special regime to neutral
ize the excessive proteid consumption
that has taken place. Thus in au
tumn a ration of carrots given before
the evening meal is good, and so ii
spring, at the fall of. the winter coat
a little grain meal is beneficial, mixec
with hay and oats, for the evening
meal. Another maxim much disre
garded in practice is that the horst
should be watered lotig enough be
fore being put to work, and thei
sparingly."
' "Germany nas just revised its rail
way tariff, which Involves a multi
plication of tickets. It la calculated
that a traveler with a small famil;
going from Mulhouse to Bale wil
find himself furnished with slxt:
tickets, in addition to which are thos
for baggage.
BEES AT ?20C EACH.
Woman Apiarist Insures "Queens"
From Italy.
Two score Italian queen bees, val
ued at from $50 to $208 each, ar
rived recently on the steamship St.
Paul. They are the property of Mrs.
R. C. Riggs, of Arkansas City, Kan.,
who herself accompanied them. .
Salerno, Italy, it seems, is head
quarters for the finest variety of
Italian queen, and thither Mrs. Riggs
went for the express purpose of buy
ing a number of these valuable little
insects.
"The Italian queen," said Mrs.
RigKB, in speaking of her purchase,
"is much larger than the ordinary bee
and is of a beautiful light gold color.
It Is worth literally dozens of times
its own weight in gold, because of its
marvellous productivity. No other
r - can compare with it In this re
spect." Of course, having a valuable lot of
merchandise In her possession her
new bees are valued at $1800 Mrs.
Riggs wanted to have them insured.
The average person wouldn't know
where to go or what to do to get a
swarm of bees insured, But Mrs.
Riggs did. An Italian company, as
sumed the risk for the tiny creatures
on their voyage to America, so that
her only danger lay in the journey
between New York and Arkansas
City.
"Of the tens of thousands of people
who eat honey or who see bees flit
ting about among the clover blooms
in summer," said Mrs. Riggs, "very
few know anything of the trouble en
tailed in raising bees or realize the
immense capital that is Invested in
apiculture. During the sixteen years
that 1 have been in the business I
have expended something like $125,
000 on my apiarl s. The returns,
however, have been fairly large, as I
market my honey in many cities.
"Bee farming is not a business out
of which the novice can ' expect to
reap much of a harvest. People teem
to think any fool can make money at
bees. It isn t so. The theoretical
and practical sides of apiculture
must be thoroughly mastered if one
is to succeed in it, and that takes
many years.
"Incidentally, the bee farmer must
not be susceptible to the virus of the
sting. Every one wtio handles bees
or Is with them much must expect
necessarily to take a certain amount
of stinging, and those who are con
stitutionally not fitted to stand it
are seriously handicapped in busi
ness." Mrs. Riggs declares that she Is ab
solutely immune. "And yet I have
been stung hundreds of times at
once," she says. "All my assistants
are equally immune in fact, I won't
engage an employe permanently who
is not."
One of the funny things about this
whole business is that getting
"stung" is supposed to be good for
the "rhenmatiz." Mrs. Riggs says
she actually has people come to her
people who are tortured by rheu
matism who ask the privilege of
placing themselves in the way of
being badly stung. Of course, sho is
always willing to accommodate them.
"And, oddly enough," she laughed,
In telling about the queer request,
"I have known cases where getting
stung really did relieve terrible at
tacks of the disease at least, the
sufferers declared it did, and they
ought to know." New York Tri
bune, Sport in America.
Before the Civil War we Ameri
cans had few outdoor pastimes.
There was considerable fishing, very
little angling. There was some fox
hunting fn the South, some shooting
In the North. Tennis and golf were
unknown to us; croquet was decor
ously played. Driving and riding
were restricted to the few who could
afford the time and expense; one or
two cricket elevens struggled for ex
istence. There were no bicycles, no
motors, of course, only an absurd
velocipede or two. Extreme youth
"flew kites," played marbles and
whipped tops. Among their elders,
however, there was a mincing, arti
ficial attitude toward all outdoor
sport which found its fullest expres
sion in a quadrille, at croquet, or a
sentimental sailing expedition under
the calmest of skies.
However, even then we had yachts
men natural corollary of our su
perb commercial navy and we had
good horses and were breeding better
ones, and we by inheritance were a
nation of men who handled a rifle
properly.
War came and left us with its im
mense accumulation of good and
evil, and it seemed then that out of
sheer weariness of sadness and
trouble the germ of the old play
splrlt, so long dormant, awoke
among us to save us from ourselves.
Collier's Weekly.
Fooled the Aborigine.
A troop of aborigines is camped in
this neighborhood, some of the mem
bers spending a good part of their
time in town. One of the braves,
so we are told, desired to quench
his insatiable thirst for the alluring
firewater, and asked a member of
the dominant race to secure him -a
bottle of the precious stuff. Some of
the boys mixed up a strong tea and
red sugar and gave it to him. ' He
immediately threw spurs into his
cayuse and struck out for the ren
dezvous of his kin rejoicing, think
ing what a revelry he would indulge
In. Poor, simple, unsuspecting Lo,
child of the hills and plains that
know no artifices! The tricks of his
palefaced brother are as manifold
s can mature in the scheming brain
at any heathen Chinee. Monument
(Ore.) Enterprise.
Don't Be a Beat.
Don't sneak In at a hnll game. Up
at Sallna last week a fellow borrowed
a boat, crossed the river, got his feet
w,et and muddy, climbed the bank,
tore a $3 pair of pants on the tiniler
hrush, got poison ivy all over his
face, slipped up to the game in the
park from the rear all this but to
find out that no admission was
charged to the game! Marquette
(Kan.) Tribune.
NO REST NIGHT OR DAY.
With Irritating Skin Ilnmor Hair Began
to Fall Out Tt'omlerrul Kesult
From Cuticura Keineillea.
"About the latter part of July my whole
body began to itch. I did not take much
notice of it at first, but it begun to get
worse all tlie time, and then 1 began to
get uneasy and tried all kinds of baths and
other remedies that were recommended
for skin humors, but I became worse all
the time. My hair befran to fall out and
my scalp itched all the time. Especially
at night, just as soon as I would get in
bed and get warm, my whole body would
begin to itch, and my finger nails would
keep it irritated, and it was not long be
fore I could not rest night or day. A
friend asked me to try the Cuticura Reme
dies, and I did, and the first application
helped me wonderfully. For about four
weeks I would take a hot bath every night
and then apply the Cuticura Ointment to
my whole body, and 1 kept getting better,
and by the time I used four boxes of Cu
ticura I was entirely cured and my hair
topped falling out. D. E. Blankenship,
319 N. Del. bt, Indianapolis, led. Oct.
27, 1905."
If a chameleon becomes blind it no
longer changes color, but remains of
a blackish hue.
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
allays pain.cures wind colic, 26c a bottle
Negro Banks.
There pre now 31 negro banks in
the United States, with a combined
capital of $350,000. Their deposits
amount to $1,192,000. Twelve are in
Mississippi, four In Georgia, six in
Virginia, two in Tennessee, two in
Arknnsas and one each in North
Carolina, Alabama and Florida. There
are also two in Muskogee, I. T.
Cl'RED OF GRAVEL.
Not a Single Stone Has Formed Since
Using Donn's Kidney I'ills.
J. D. Daughtrey, music publisher,
of Suffolk, Va., says: "During two
or three years that I had kidney trou
ble I passed about
2 H pounds of gravel
and sandy sediment
in the urine. I
haven't passed a
stone since using
Doan's Kidney Pills,
however, and that
was three years ago.
I used to suffer the
most acute agony
during a gravel at
tack, and had the other usual symp
toms of kidney trouble lassitude,
headache, pain in the hack, urinary
disorders, rheumatic pain, etc. I
have a box containing 14 gravel
stones that I passed, but that is not
4 of the whole number. I consider
Doan's Kidney Pills a fine kidney
tonic."
Bold by all dealers. CO cents a
box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo,
N. Y.
Bold Sparrow.
The Idea that birds select secluded
places to build their nests has beeia
proved false. Birds have been known
to build In the noisiest or most con
spicuous places. A sparrow's nest
was discovered In an electric light
on the Thames Embankment, London,
where the lamp was lighted and put
out each day.
STAND FIRM
"Whenyoubuy&n
OILED SUIT
or SLICKER
demand
Its Hie easiest and
only way to get
. tne oesi .
vSold everywhere
4,i..l. mm mm
lam. - cm.
P. N. U. 40. 1806.
If nfnlrtpri
with weak
eyes, use
it
T7 w m
vsn t
ftTT'Lf MM W.
4
;ens Earn Money !
If You Know Haw to Kandla Them Properly.
Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to
&o it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this
is to profit by the experience of others. We offer a book telling
all you need to know on the subject a book written by a man
who made his living
DAnltvir rtnA r- ther
aw g U 1UU11 s II U iu un
ggjjQl to experiment and spent
in
the best way to conduct the business for the
small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps.
Cf ft tri wm
It tells you how to
how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save
for Breeding Turposes and indred about everything you must
know on the subject to make a success.
SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS.
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
134 Leonard St., N. Y. City.
A Square Deal
Is assured you when you buy Dr. Pierce's"
family medicines for all' the Ingredi
ents entering Into them are printed on
the bottle-wrappers and their formulas
are attested under oath as being complete
and correct. You know just what you are
paying for and that the Ingredients are
gathered from Nature's laboratory, being
selected from the most valuable native
medicinal roots found growing In our
American fores frwdjvhile potent to curs
are pertWrl liarrnltj5Jato the most
delicate wouiiSia wcniluTeTr Not a drop
nfnlrn yil eiilcre into tpelr cpmiaisil inn.
A much l(-t lei- iiLcntlsiisi'-.l Ijutli jircT-
P4auui ami tervj.ijin i qe M'.qidjia
nri'lcilili'S used in ;;. via. iMT' I"!""-
ri-tined glycerine, 'i Ilia agent possessed
Intrinsic ineuiclna-i properties of Its own,
being a most valuable antiseptic and anti
ferment, nutritlvo and soothing demul
cent. Glycerine plays an Important part In
T)r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery In
the cure of Indigestion, dyspepsia and
weak stomach, nttended by sour r!-ilngs,
heart-burn, foul breath, coatj-d tongue,
poor nppetlte. gnawing feeling In stom
ach, biliousness and kindred derange
ments of tho stomach, liver and bowels.
Upsides curing all the above distressing
ailments, the"Golden Medical Discovery "
is a secilic for all diseases of the mucous
membranes, as catarrh, whether of the
nasal passages or of t he stomach, bowels
or pelvic organs. Even in its ulcerative
stages It will y ield to this sovereign rem
edy if its use he persevered In. In Chronlo
Catarrh of tho Nasal passages, it Is well,
while taking the "Golden Medical Dis
covery" for the necessary constitutional
treatment, to cleanso tho passages freely
two or three times a day with Dr. Sages
Catarrh Kemedy. This thorough course
of treatment generally cures tho worst
cases.
In coughs and hoarseness caused by bron
chial, throat and lung- alfwtlons, except con
sumption In its advanced stages, the "(ioldon
Medical lllscovcry" Is a most efficient rem
edy, especially in those obstinate, tiantr-un
coughs caused by Irritation and congestion of
the bronchial mucous membranes. Tho "Ills'
covery " Is not so good for acute coughs aris
ing from sudden colds, nor must It be ex
pected to cure consumption In Its advanced
stages no medicine will do that but for all
the obstinate, chronic coughs, which. If neg
lected, or badly treated, lead uptn consump
tion. It Is the best medicine that can be taken.
W. L. DOUGLAS
,3.50fe3.00 Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.LDouglas $4 Gilt Edge line l,
cannolpeequaiiedaianiprice
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES.
Mr.n'8 Shoot, $S to $1.P0. Boys' Shop, $3
to $1.23. Women'l Snoea. $4.00 to fl.SO.
MiBSl'acChildren'BShoeB. 2.2S to Sl.OO.
Try W. I.. Ionglus Women's, Mlsm-n nnd.
Children's Mines; fur style, lit and wear
they eteel other ninkes.
If I could' take you Into my largo
factories at Brockton, Mass., and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shnpe, fit better,
wear longer, and are of greater valuo
than any other make.
Wherever you live, you can oMln w. L.
Douglas shoes. His name and price Is stamped
on the bottom, which protects you against high
prices and Inferior shoes. Take no ufcl
f at e. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes
and Insist upon having them.
Fast Color lutlrin usti ; then will not war braMf.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles.
k W. L. DOUULAS, Dept. 5, Brockton, Mass.
You Cannot
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs.checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON CO- Boston. Ma.
DON'T WORRY ABOUT VOUR. PEETI
Bend no tnatf for pu.
ZmBBLN (it plutera) of COftftO
'M W 111 xV.SaJ RemovM oorni, oaIIoqi,
1 II I I wru. RaUevaMheptla
r V- f buDlon. Bullda o
11 i.Ul HiMul tlT-slH.Uri Peteeandeomforl
eotnhlriM. Cure guaranteed or money back. At drag
and aboe atorea, or by mall poatpald.
Sample rAt- (4 planter), tT raall ty.lOe.
BEST sl I'l'LY CO.. Sola Ufre.,lept. , J.llat, XU.
f m TTfllTO P- booS t'- Hllheat rafa,
Mil I H N I Lnnitaxperlanoa. Plteaerald
a-v Bill w ih
I Oo.Oavt.f4.WaabloftuB,B.O
for 25 years in raising
titvia SI i'aeC'l rl Iw VlftA
Hill uv,i.JJHi kij
much money to learn
Detect and Cure Disease,
'it W
To Shot Ornltrt: I n"wh. ?M
w. i DonslM' Job- Jg7 afi 1
Mtm IIoiim li Hie most tyi Tl 1
coinlilpt- in lliisrotlntry EJ nj 1
CIJF8E