The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, August 05, 1908, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A TERRIBLE CONDITION.
Tortured by Sharp Twinges, Shooting
Tains and Dizziness.
Hiram Center, 618 South Oak
street, Lake City, Minn., says: "I was
bo bad with kidney
trouble that I could
not straighten up af
ter stooping without
im. JF "rougu
bad dizzy spells, was
nervous and my eye
sight affected. The
. kidney secretions
were irregular and
too freauent. I was
In a terrible condition, but Doan'a
Kidney Pills have cured me and I
have enjoyed perfect health since."
Bold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
- How Toothless Saws Work.
An explanation of the manner In
which a soft steel disk revolving at a
high velocity cuts hard steel has rec
ently been sought with the aid of mi
croscopic inspection. The result cor
roborates the view hitherto held that
the material acted upon Is heated at
the place of contact to the fusing and
brushed away.
The high temperature appears to
be confined very narrowly to the
point of contact, so that a thin gash
Is cut. The temperature of the re
volving disk does not rise so high,
because of the large surface area of
the disk. The part of the disk in
contact Is continually changing, while
the frictional energy is concentrated
on a very 6mall area of the material
subjected to Its action. Youth's Com
panion. 31
Mrs. Winslow'g Soothing Syrup for Children,
teething, softens thogums, reduceatnflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 26c a bottle
WHEN MEN WORE SHAWL3
President Lincoln's Partiality to His
Big Scotch Plaid.
On very rare occasions you now
see some old lady wearing a shawl,
but generally speaking this once uni
versal garment has become obsolete.
Those children that are, say, 40
years old or more can probably re
member when even men wore shawls,
Instead of overcoats. For about 10
years they were considered Just the
thing. This was the decade begin
ning with about 1860. President Lin.
coin was very partial .to his big
Scotch shawl, which according to the
vogue, he wore, not folded diagonally
in feminine fashion, but folded
lengthwise, says The Pathfinder. This
folded shawl was passed over the
shoulders and around In front, where
it was either held by the hands or
pinnedby a huge shawl pin. Thi3
case of the shawl is about the only
one where the men have appropriated
an article of wear from the women's
wardrobe though the instances
where the reverse has happened are
legion.
Even then, the shawl was originally
not a woman's garment exclusively,
for the Scotch Highlander has his
tartan plaid, and the men of northern
Italy still wear a cloak which is very
little more .than a shawl. There can
be no question that the shawl Is
mare useful and more picturesque
as an article of attire than the close
fitting coats both men and women
now wear. The shawl could, in case
of emergency, be used to protect two
persons, or to wrap a child in, or as
an extra bed covering; Its fashion did
not change every three months, and
It could be used and passed down
in the family until it was worn out.
Clock With Single Wheel.
A clock with but a single wheel
Is described-in Work. It was con
structed by a Los Angeles clock
maker', and Its single wheel is more
correctly described as a perforated
disc, which is kept under rotary ten
sion by two weights. In place of a
pendulum and gearing, SI U-inch
steel balls are used, which operate
consecutively. When the timepiece is
set, one of the metal balls Is caused
to descend, In zigzag fashion, on two
pivoted plates, one placed above the
other. After the ball has descended
to the lower plate, its course Is di
rected In such a way that it enters
one of the holes at the lower end of
the perforated disc, releasing the disc
and then proceeding in its rotary mo
tion the space of one hole. The 'lime
consumed by this disc is pierced with
60 holes for one hour's time. The
forward motion and stopping is effect
ed by the unlocking and locking of a
spring.
HEALTH AND INCOME.
Both Kept Up o Scientific Food.
Good sturdy health helps one a lot
to make money.
With the loss of health one's In
come Is liable to shrink, if not en
tirely dwindle away.
When a young lady has to make
her own living, good health is her
best asset.
"3Lam alone in the world," writes a
Chicago girl, "dependent on my own
efforts for my living. I am a clerk, and
about two years ago through close ap
plication to work and a boarding
house diet, I became a nervous In
valid, and got so bad off it was almost
impossible for me to stay in the office
a halt day at a time.
"A friend suggested to me the idea
of trying Grape-Nuti, which I did,
making this food a large part .of at
least two meals a day.
"To-day I am free from brain-tire,
dyspepsia and all the Ills of an over
worked and improperly nourished
brain and body. To Grape-Nuts I
owe the recovery of my health, and
the ability to retain my position and
Income." "There's a Reason."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to
Wellville," in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
Be appear from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
Interest.
r i
A
WW
NIGHT REFUGES IN PARIS.
Last Resource of tle Stranded American
R Charity of Which He Can Avail Hirnself
When Everything Else Fails Graft of Cer
tain American Beggars The Story of a
Man Who Got a Fresh Start. :-. :-:
If you have ever been In Paris and
have passed many idle hours in front
of the Cafe de la Palx you cannot
have failed to make the acquaintance
of the stranded American, writes
the Paris correspondent of the New
York Sun. He haunts the big hotels,
the restaurants and the boulevards,
ever on the alert for the unwary.
He has reduced the spotting of his
prey to a science." He recognizes a
possible victim In the bluff, genial
gentleman who loudly proclaims to
bystanders In the hotel lobby the fact
that no bartender in Paris can make
cocktails like those to be had on the
coast and that the show at the Moulin
Rogue is disheartening to those ac
customed to entertainments offered
by the Orpheum circuit, in short that
America is the only country to be con
sidered anyway. The stranded Amer
ican knows that it will be the fault
of his oratory only if. the Westerner
doesn't give soma substantial evi
dence of sympathy after listening to
his well planned tale of overdue re
mittances. If this benefactor were to return
the following year he would probably
encounter the Identical petitioner,
perhaps a trifle more shabbily
dressed, plying his trade along the
Avenue de l'Opera or the Champs
Elysees. And the Westerner would
then realize that this business of
fleecing the unsuspecting is an estab
lished occupation for many.
Long ago these men exhausted all
official and charitable resources.
Then finding that playing upon the
credulity of the public pays better
than any employment they could fill
they regularly Join the Society for the
Subjection of Easy Marks. They seem
to find their profession in the main
advantageous, although, seasons of
prosperity may be followed by times
of . woeful depression. And when
these adverse times come, what hap
pens? The stranded American gives up
his comfortable lodgings and moves
to some attic in Montmartre. Then if
hard luck continues he ceases to have
any addresB at all until the goddess of
fortune smiles on him once more.
During these off seasons he sleeps
on the uninviting benches of the
parks until he is asked to move on,
or he foregathers with the scum of
Parisian humanity along the quays.
An infinitesimal minority of these ex
iled waifs turn their steps toward the
"Aslles de nult," free night refuges
for the homeless and penniless of all
the lands, the last resort for the foot
sore and heart sore.
They who enter the severe portals,
topped with the protective three col
ored flag and "Liberty, Equality, Fra
ternity," must leave all vestige of
pride behind. Those grim institu
tions are no respecters of rank or
person. Pickpockets and cutthroats
sleep side by side with clerks, pro
fessional men and day laborers whose
only offense is that they have come
down in the world.
The American whom unkind cir
cumstances have led to one of these
homes finds that he must wait in a
bare hall, its only furniture benches
and a giant crucifix, until an officer
takes down the names and the one
time occupation of all present. He
will then receive a piece of coarse
bread and a mug of water.
Then all will be ushered into the
basement and told to prepare for the
compulsory shower bath. After they
have donned the nightshirts supplied
by the institution their own clothing
is sewed up in separate sacks and
put through a process of purification
by steam. Then in a dormitory fitted
up in monastic simplicity with iron
cots, each labelled with the name of
the donor, all forget the nightmares
of the day In the kindly oblivion of
sleep.
By 8 in the morning each guest of
a night the refuge's hospitality is
limited to three nights for each vis
itor has gone, and the dormitories
are subjected to the regenerative in
fluences of sunshine, fresh air, soap
and water.
"The Americans who have Blept
under our roof?" The Baron de
Livois, president of the aslles, re
peated the Sun correspondent's ques
tion. "Yes, certainly there have been
a few from time to time, though we
have more South Americans. Of the
68,000 who registered here this year,
forty-six were Americans, and I
should say that only ten or at the
most fifteen were citizens of the
United States.
"You will understand that the
American must have sunk pretty low,
must have exhausted the patience of
his fellow countrymen, before com
ing here. The tourist from across
the seas doesn't usually consider a
night's sojourn under our roofs as a
necessary part of h)s sightseeing pro
gram," be added with a smile.
- "The citizens of the republic who
honor us with a brief visit are gener
ally derelicts who have lingered so
long in Paris, ever descending the
social ladder, that they have reached
the state where distinctions of na
tionality mean very little to them.
I remember one or two cases which
don't quite come under this hopeless
category stories of men who weren't
nondescript wretches without ties of
home or country, but were merely
temporary victims of an unkind destiny.
"We Frenchmen are wont to stand
aghast at the adaptability of Amer
icans, amazed at their conquest of ob
stacles that, would seem overwhelm
ing to us. The train hand who be
comes a railroad president, the call
boy who eventually owns his own
theatre these taleB astound our
European conservatism.
"Well, one case In point which I
recollect Is a good example of your
transatlantic elasticity. A ball was
given for the benefit of one of our
refuges in one of the big hotels.
"During the evening a substantial
looking man, clean shaven an Amer
ican, I knew at first glance came up
to me and sajd he had once visited
our head refuge. I said that I had
probably not had the pleasure of
showing him around. He answered,
'No, hardly,' that he had not come to
Inspect the premises, but to beg a
night's lodging. Then he told me his
story.
"It appears that some years be
fore he was a buyer for an American
firm, coming to Paris twice every
twelve months. He took to drinking
heavily and once when over here he
made some big business blunder and
his firm discharged him.
"Instead of going home and seek
ing another position he stayed on,
wasting his time in cafes, going from
bad to worse. At last he took to
begging. After several successive bad
days when he had been turned out of
one wine shop after another, he fell
In with day laborer also out of n
Job. This laborer proposed that they
both spend the night at One of the
refuges.
"The next morning the American
awoke soberer than he had been for
many a week. No doubt his close
contact with the dregs of Paris had
made him feel how much of an out
cast he had become.
"In Uils repentant mood a man who
had formerly known him in the States
ran across him and consented to give
him work. Soon the ex-buyer re
turned to America and eventually se
cured a good position. After a lapse
of years he came to Paris again, and
hearing that there was to be a ball
for the benefit of the aslles he pur
chased a ticket they cost i and
thus amply cancelled his debt of hos
pitality. "Another time an American artist
stayed one night here. I think he
came more in search of impressions
than charity. Later he painted a
scene representing the men eating
their rations before retiring. I for
get his name, but he is now illustrat
ing for one of the French political
weeklies. The picture was exhibited
In the Salon and he sent us a framed
copy.
"That gift was acceptable enough.
But you should see some of the things
offered by well meaning but im
practicable benefactors and bene
factresses." The Baron led the way across the
sun flooded court of the principal
refuge, which accommodates nightly
300 homeless soldiers of fortune. The
court was lined with tubs of flower
ing plants, a wltnes to the French
man's infallible instinct for alleviat
ing the sordid by the artistic.
He unlocked the door to a huge
storeroom in the basement. There,
among other things, were a richly in
laid but dust covered chest of draw
ers, a shabby dress suit and a Psyche
glass, an exile from some Louis
Qulnze boudoir.
"Yes," the president smiled in an
swer to his visitor's amazement,. "the
course of charity doesn't always run
smooth. In that chest of drawers are
a clown's costume, a pair of gilt slip
pers and several discarded decollete
gowns.
"Still such gifts are fortunately
rare, and ordinarily we cannot com
plain of the public's lack of generos
ity. These Asiles and there are
four in Paris accommodating in all
1500 persons a night are maintained
by charity, although they enjoy the
protection of the State. We have re
ceived donations from all nationali
ties. Lady Wallace, widow of the
well known English art collector,
left us large sums, and an American
woman, Mrs. Maxwell Heddle, be
queathed more than 1,000,000 francs.
So you see America need not feel that
she is getting something for nothing
when her homeless citizens are our
guests for a night."
Mischief in Comic Pictures.
A small boy of my acquaintance be
came highly interested not long ago
in the adventures of a naughty youth,
presented in the comic supplement of
a well-known newspaper. The youth
in the newspaper shampooed his sis
ter's hair and anointed the poodle
with a mixture of ink, glue and the
family hair tonic, leaving the remain
der of the compound in the bottle
for the use of his father and mother.
The results as plctorially set forth
were so intensely amusing that the
small observer Immediately took steps
to repeat them in real life. Much mis
chief is suggested tn such ways as
this, and the suggestions come from
artists who have little sympathy with
children. "Child Lover," in the New
York Times.
Borne people would never get men
tioned at all if they were not talked
about behind their backs.
Hf Farm Topics. H
SHOEING THE MULE.
The mule's hoof, being smaller and
tougher than that of the average
horse, does not need shoeing unless
worked on hard roads a great deal.
K is better not to have them shod if
cm n fined to work on the farm, unless
used to haul heavy loads on frozen
ground.
BOYS FOR THE BEEF INDUSTRY.
Dairying is no easy task and re
quires considerable labor at best. A
great many boys on the farm have no
taste for the work. Such boys seldom
prove to be good dairy farmers. They
would probably find beef stock-raising
and fattening to be more' con
genial and under favorable conditions
as profitable. Weekly Witness.
TEST THE HERD.
Apropos of tuberculosis Hoard's
Dairyman advises:
Let every farmer tuberculin test his
herd, then thoroughly disinfect hla
stalls and yards, using lime white
wash plentifully; then never take an
animal Into the herd that has not
a clean bill of health. Then use a
farm separator and feed no skim
milk that does not come from that
farm.
. PROTECT THE BIRDS.
The president of the National Au
dubon Society makes the following
Important and significant statement:
"Eight hundred million dollars'
worth of agricultural and horticul
tural crops are destroyed by insects
every year, the destruction being di
rectly traceable to the rapid decrease
In the number of insectivorous birds.
It is time for the horticultural and
agricultural interests to wake up, now
that the truth is out, and ally them
selves with the game protective asso
ciations and other instrumentalities
with a view to putting a stop, if pos
sible, to the wholesale slaughter of
the best friends of the tillers of the
soli."
OAT BY-PRODUCTS.
There is a class of by-products
from the cereal mills of Iowa that
merit greater attention on the part
of our feeders. In this class are the
oat feeds, flours, middlings, shorts,
and possibly the bran, too, may be
used. These feeds are well up in
protein and have appreciable percent
ages of fat, which render them par
ticularly desirable as hog feeds, and
possibly their use may with profit be
extended to horses. This is specially
true of the flour, middlings and
shorts. The bran, however, has too
high a content of crude fiber to give
it a very great value as a flesh pro
ducer or to render It palatable to the
feeding animal. These are compara
tively new feeds, and their practical
worth has not been definitely estab
lished, but from their chemical com
position it seems evident that experi
mentation - with practical feeding
tests will fully demonstrate their
ranking well with similar wheat prod
ucts, if not outclassing them. Louis
G. Michael.
LIVE STOCK AND THE SOIL.
The Palouse valley, in Washington,
has long been noted for its wheat
productions. But there, as here, they
find that wheat grown constantly
without the rotation of crops, ex
hausts fertility, and are turning more
attention to live stock farming to
keep up-the soil. One of the Wash
ington agricultural college professors
says that with every ton of wheat
shipped from the farm $8 worth of
plant food leaves the farm, all of
which could be saved and returned to
the soil by feeding the products chief
ly to live stock. He believes that the
best returns from land idle in summer-fallow
could be secured from
peas, rape or alfalfa, which could be
fed to hogs at great profit, as well
as being of great value in returning
to the soil those properties which had
been taken out by the continued
growing of wheat. He said the im
poverishment of the soil took place
despite the intervening summer-fallow.
This Is Just as applicable here as
in the State of Washington, and our
farmers are coming more and more
to understand these things. Indiana
Farmer.
PURE BREEDS ARE BEST.
Even a mongrel flock deserves
good care and will pay for it, but no
one should be satisfied with such a
flock. The farmer is the last one to
realize the greater possibilities of
standard-bred stock. It does not
cost any more to keep pure-bred stock
than it does to keep mongrels or
scrubs, and the returns are much the
largest from the good stock.
Do not be deceived into believing
that practical qualities and fancy
points cannot be bred in the same
fowl. Indeed, there is absolutely no
excuse for keeping poor stock. The
well-to-do poultryman-farmer can af
ford the best and the one with less
money cannot afford to breed poor
stock, as there is more profit in the
pure breeds.
The best breed of fowls deponds
considerably upon who is behind it.
Some people do not seem to be able
to make a success with any breed,
while good poultrymen can make a
success with any breed in existence.
Remember that feed is more import
ant than breed in most cases. Com
bine breed and feed and good man
agement, and you have all the ele
ments that are necessary to make
poultry profitable. Epltomist.
The Thumb Marriage Service,
A young couple, natives of Ceylon,
appeared recently before a magistrate
In Ohio and asked to be married. All
the forms required by the state were
complied with, but before the law of
ficer could perform the ceremony a
witness who came with the couple
bound the thumbs of the contracting
parties together. They explained that
In their country the act of fastening
a man to a woman by the thumb was
a sufficient marriage ceremony. In
answer to comment which was made
as to the queer custom the young
man, who had been educated in Eng
land, said: "The thumb used to play
an important part with Europeans
also, and no oath, I read, was so bind
ing, once upon a time, as that which
was taken by pressing the thumb on
the sword blade. Your English word
pollicitation, which means to promise,
came from the word pollex, which
means thumb." The magistrate kiss
ed the bride without further argument.
FITS, St.Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr.U.R. Kline, Ld.,031 Arch St.,l,hila.,Pa.
Some of His Meat.
T. B. Curran, formerly a member
of parliament, said that a South Sea
islander, whom a travelef had
brought home with him as a Bervant,
In a local tavern was prasing up the
British constitution when one of his
hearers said to him: "What do you
know about it? You're not nn Eng
lishman. . You haven't a drop of
English blood In your veins." "Don't
you be so sure about that," ""replied
the black; "my grandfather helped
to eat Captain Cook." Reynold's
Newspaper.
CUTICURA CURED FOUR.
Southern Woman Suffered With Itch
Ing, Burning Hash Three Littlo
Babies Had Skin Troubles Calls
Cntlcnra Her Old Stand-by.
"My baby had a running sore on his
neck and nothing that I did for it took
effect until I used Cuticura. My face was
nearly full of tetter or some similar skin
disease. It would itch and burn so that I
could hardly stand it. Two cakes of Cuti
cura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment
cured me. Two years after it broke out on
my hands and wrist. Sometimes I would
go nearly crazy for it itched so badly. I
went back to my old stand-by, that had
never failed me one set of Cuticura Rem
edies did the work. One set also cured
my uncle's baby, whose head was a cake of
sores, and another baby who was in the
same fix. Mrs. Lillie Wilcher, 770 Elev
enth St., Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb. lO.-W.
Ever Its Portion.
The dingy one-story house in which
Franz Schubert was' born has Just
been bought by the municipal govern
ment of his native Vienna for $22,000,
and will be preserved as a shrine for
music-loving pilgrims. Schubert liv
ing would have been glad to receive
the one-thousandth part of that sum
for one of his Immortal songs. The
Irony of fate is ever the portion of
genius. Philadelphia Record.. ,
Ladles Can Wear Shoes
One size sm&ller after using Allen's Foot
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes
ee ..v. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, arhing
feet. Ingrowing nulls, corns and bunions. At
alldrciggistsannsliOJRtores, 25c. Don't ac
cept any substitute. Trial package Fhkk hy
moil. Address Alien 8. Olmsted, LoRoy.N.Y.
A Bargain.
A Paris shopkeeper wrote to one of
his customers as follows:
"I am able to offer you cloth like
the inclosed sample at nine francs
the meter. In case I do not hear
from you I shall conclude that you
wish to pay only eight -francs. In
order to lose no time, I . accept 'the
last-mentioned price." Democratic
Telegram.
Good Place for Poets.
India would seem to be a pleasant
land for minor poets, since the rajah
of Rampur recently sent out Invita
tions to nil the poets of India to a
gathering In his state. About 200
poets accepted.
Truth and
Quality
appeal to tho Well-Inlormcd in every
walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and creditable standing. Accor
ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna is tho only remedy of
known value, but one of many reasons
why it is the best of personal and family
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
sweetens and relieves tho internal organs
on which it acts without any debilitating
after effects and without having to increase
the quantity from time to time.
It acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as it is free from all objection
able substancea. To get its beneficial
effects always purchase the genuine
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug
gists. . . -
WIDOWS'"1"1" NEW LAW obtained
nnvcmva T JOHN W. MORRIS),
PENSIONS Waahlngmn. 0 0.
Don't
keep your feet in a
SKSEEMER ehoee. They do not crowd or pinch the feet They
are mado over natural foot-shape models. Look
A SURGICAT
OPERATION
If there is any one thing that a
woman dreads more than another it
is a surgical operation.
We can state without fear of a
contradiction that there are hun
dreds, yes, thousands, of operationa
performed upon women in our hos
pitals which are entirely unneces
sary and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E.PINKHAM'5
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
For proof of this statement read
the following letters.
Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman,
Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
" For eight years I suffered from the
most severe form of female troubles and
was told that an operation was my only
hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. I'inkham's
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made me a well woman."
Mrs. Arthur It. House, of Church
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes :
"I feel it is my duty to let people
know what Lydia E. Pmkham's Vege
table Compound has done for me. I
Buffered from female troubles, and last
March my physician decided that an
operation was necessary. ' My husband
objected, and urged me to try Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
and to-day I am well and strong."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, mada
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands ot
1. . 1. 1 I 1 1 1 !.L
vvoiiiuii wiiuuuve iieeii irouuieu wiia
'displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham Invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass. .
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from un
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, soap and tooth preparation
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin
fecting and deodor
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex
cellence and econ
omy. Invaluable
for in0amed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At
drug and toilet
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid.
Large Trial Sample
with "hcalth nd acnuTV" aooH scnt rate
THE PAXTQN TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
CHICKENS EARN MONEY I
I! Ton Know How to Bandit Them Property. 1
Whether you raise Chick
ens for fun or profit, you
wnnt to do it intelligently
and get the best results. The
way to do this is to profit by
the experience of others. We
oiler a book telling all you
need to know on the subject
a book written by a man
who made his living for 25
years in raising Poultry, and
in mat time neces
sarily had to ex
periment and spent
much money to
learn the best way
to conduct .the
business for the
small sum of 25
ostage stamps.
25c.
In
Stamps
cents in
It tells vou how to Detect
and Cure Disease, bow to
Feed for Eggs, and also for
Market, which Fowls to Save
for Breeding Purposes, and
indeed about everything yon
must know on the subject
to make a success.
Sent postpaid on receipt of
25 cents in stamps.
BOOS PUBLISHING BOUSE,
184 Leonard Street,
New Vork City.
P. M. O. SI, 190
DROPSY SSEHRa
HWM. M (rtNllaMiUlt M4 MDM'tfMtfJMl
tft H. H. tmXBVH fcOSH, Hat- ft, AtUata, !
FOR MEN
suffer from diseases of the feet but
natural, healthy condition by wearing;
for the label. If you do not find these shoea
readily, write us for directions how to secure
them. FRED. F. FIELD CO, Brockton. Mat.