t Near man » noon ension ’ owas [man koe on nd he inleky nes 10 4 ort in | + than o pad. p ‘also x in the Bn ck in scarf rand ything nails uts on nd un- ut the ss her de, Ie Ccon- ly col- front, | into hen I or a board, papers half a r if 1 a belt form. digest rap it J on a EN ect it X nist in f per- might warm le. 1t e; it's y, and » break- every- ar I'm dso I hours ndker- roning! a coal it's a \ ~~ er. A Las it. 1 1 she’s when in has f he'd ~~ in the not in- orking to lead lI-tem? e dam- » place drone, armer he im- ildren. ming of the ed for in the ve and them- sort of or the worth erwise escrip- le ited in wveling to vil- years selieep- d, care tion of e mak- satis- to add for the teach- schools 1 Gov- h them nd the d iron- A (s, @ low as 8. of the aid on ze that on be- dian, a eligion money. t with est al- ). But it. It coffers Murad A n their ust be g busi- would spread / ‘ correct food and drink. - tients to use it.” —————————— DEATH SEEMED NEAR. Wow a Chieage Woman Feund Welp ‘When Hope Was Fast Fadlug Away, Mrs, B, 1, Gould, 914 W, Lake St, Chicago, Ill, says: “Doan's Kidney Pills are all that saved me from death of Bright's dis euse, 1 am sure 1 had eye trouble, backache, catches when lying abed or when bending “over, was languid and often dizzy and had sick headaches and bearing-down pains. The kid- ney secretions were too copious and frequent, and very bad in appearance. It was in 1903 that Doan's Kidney Pills helped me so quickly and cured me of these troubles, and I've been well ever since.” Foster-Milburn Co, For sale oy all druggists. cents per bos. Buffalo, N. Y. Price, O00 Feeding Eggs to Calves. J. 8. Dowdy, of this region, feeds most of the hen eggs laid on his premises to his” calves. He says that he will never sell hen fruit for less than 16 cents a dozen as long as he had any calves to swallow them. Mr. Dowdy claims that it pays very handsomely to feed raw eggs to young cattle, He says that the calves grow fat and tall on raw eggs, and that they relish them to an astonish- ing degree. He says that egg-fed veal Is exceedingly toothsome and nutri tious.~—Kansas City Journal. The Erie Railroad has arranged for the immediate expenditure of $225,000 for the installation of the most modern and efli- cient railway signal that has yet been put on the market. It is known as the Hall Electric Semaphore Normal Clear System, and is operated by stationary storage bat- teries. The line between Bergen, N. J., end Middletown, a distance of 68 miles, is to be equipped at once. For the first 32 miles the signals will be put two-thirds of a mile apart; for the rest of the distance, about one and one-third miles apart. It will require five power plants for charging the batteries, which will be located at Rutherford Junction, Ridgewood Junction, Suffern, Oxford and Middletown. The line to be protected has two and four tracks at different places and is the most congested part of the Erie system. Hitherto a man- ual block, which is a tower with signals operated by a towerman, has been used as a block protection, but it has been deemed best to install an automatic system for further protection and to accelerate the movement of trains. The new system will be extended over the entire line in the fu- ture. Leng Submarine Tunnels. Much attention has been attracted to the opening of the new subway tunne! under Boston Harbor, but the longest tunnel under water is in Eng. land, where there is a tunnel under the River Sever four miles 624 yards long, of which two and one-half miles are actually under water. The pro- pesed tunnel under the English chan- nel will be 23 miles in length, and the latest project is the construction of a tunnel to connect France with Eng- land, which wouid be 33 miles in length and would lie at a depth of 600 feet below the bottom of the channel. The longest submarine tun-| nel actually in course of construction is that connecting the islands of Sicily with the Italian mainland, which will be eight and one-half miles long.— New York Herald. Incomplete Education Professor William James, of Har- vard vaiversity, in a recent address said: “There is not a public abuse on the whole eastern coast which does not receive the enthusiastic ap- praval of some Harvard graduate.” And he added: “Fifty years ago the schools were supposed to free us from crime and unhappiness, but we do not indluge in such sanguine hopes to any such extent to-day. Though education frees us from the more brutal forms of crime, it is true that education itself has ‘put even meaner forms of crime in oun way. The intellect is a servant of our passions and sometimes educa- tion only makes ‘the person more adroit in carrying out these impuls- es.” HONEST PHYSICIAN, Works With Himself First, It is a mistake to assume that phy- sicians are always skeptical as to the curative properties of anything else than drugs. | Indeed, the best doctors are those who seek to heal with as little use of drugs as possible, and by the use of A physician writes from Calif. to tell how he made a well man of himself with nature's: remedy: “Before I came from Europe, where I was born,” he says, “it was my cus- tom to take coffee with milk (cafe au lait) with my morning meal, a small cup (cafe noir) after my dinner and two or three additional small cups at my club during the evening, “In time nervous symptoms devel- oped, with pains in the cardiac region, and accompanied -y great depression of spirits, despondency—in brief, ‘the blues?” I at first tried medicines, but got no relief, and at last realized that all my troubles were caused by coffee, ] I thereupon quit its use forthwith, sub- stituting English Breakfast Tea. “The tea seemed to help me at first, but in timo the old distressing symp- toms returned, and I quit it also, and tried te use milk for my table bever- age. This I was compelled, however, to abandon speedily, for whi'e it re lieved the nervousne.s somewhat it brought on constipation. Then by a happy inspiration I was led to try the Postum Food Coffee. This was some months ago, and I still use it. I am no longer nervous, nor do i suffer from the pains about the heart, while my ‘blues’ have left me and life is bright to me once more. I know that leaving off coffee and using Postum healed me, and I make it a rule to advise my pa- Name given by Pos- tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich, ribs pains An old man named Kuss was buried in Egregy, Hungary, with his fortune of $17,500 in his cotlin, His relatives heard of it and exhumed the body and divided the money, 1856 a petition enforcement by law against In the summer of which demanded the the city officials of the smoking on the public streets was posted for -signatures in the Mer chants’ Exchange, Boston, Frank Krause pricked an elephant's trunk with a penknife in a menagerie at Hamburg, and the elephant caught him with his trunk and hurled him against a wall, inflicting injuries from which he died in a few hours, An egg with a perfect yolk and con- taining another ‘bout the size of a linnet's which also had a good shell and was perfect, has been laid by a hen belonging to a Swindon trades- man named Morse.—London Chronicle, oro « ney Germany is ahead in novelties of a charitable nature. In the town of Haschmann prizes are offered yearly for the men who vill marry the ugliest and most crippled women, and for the women over forty years who have been jilted at least twice. RR. George R. McKenna, of Westerly, I., has a $1 bill of the series of i8 On the face it be: the medallion por- trait of Washington and a scene at the landing of Columbus. The back is the same as any “greenback.” The note has the ladylike signature of John Al- lison, registrar, and the bold hand of G. KE, Spinner, treasurer. Mrs, Anna Winter, has wardrobe designer for the Barnum Bailey circus for the last thiriy-tl years, is probably the only elepha dressmaker in the United States. designs the trappings for all the ele- phants, camels and horses, and over- sees the work of thirty seamstiresses, who make them. She fits each anima with the garment designed for it. been & ee who She THE STORY OF AN INVENTION is How Sir Henry Bessemer Saved Country Millions by His Stawnp. In a recently pul phy of Sir Henry Bessemer is toid hov in 1833, when he was a youth of twen- ty, he learned that the I ment was losing about & through the use of forged star set about finding a remedy. months he discovered how Government stamps with the greatest pase, This was a risky bit of knowl- cdge for a struggling young man who wanted money wherewith to get mar- ried to the girl of his choice. Dut young Bessemer, having invented forthwith the perforated stamp that is now known everywhere, went gayly to the Government officials with the forg- eries in his pocket to ask if they were genuine. When Sir Charles passed them as genuine, Bessemer re- marked that he knew they were forg- eries—*simply because I forged them myself.” Then he suggested a remedy. 1t was accepted. Bessemer was of- fered the post of superintendent of stamps—for plant and staff must be reorganized—at $3000 to $4000 a year. Young Bessemer went away happily to. tell his good luck to the girl of his choice. He explained to her the situa- tion, how old stamps had been picked off documents and used again, and how he had invented an elaborate plan to remedy this. “But surely,” said the young lady, “if all the stamps had a they could not at a lished autobic ) a year He nps. In nine to forge yosloy resiey date put on them the future time be used without detec- tion.” This rather startled young Bes- Juthe devised a simple method of marking the date. The British Gov- ernment was delighted. The device was accepted. And as no change of machinery or staff was needed, Besse mer was informed that no superintend- ent of stamps would be appointed. Thus he had deprived himself of a job. Forty-five years later, after he had invented the “Bessemer process” of preparing iron and had made a great fortune, Bessemer wrote to Lord Bea- consfield, then Prime Minister, point- ing out that he had saved the country millions without the reward of a penny. He no longer wanted money, but the Government acknowledged the debt and paid it with a knighthood.—Chi- cago News. semer, Breton Folklore. A collections of Breton popular su- perstitions—those harmless after re- flections of a remote pre-Christian an- tiquity—has just been published, and very amusing some of these beliefs are, Thus, a matron curious to “count her chickens before they were hatched,” puts a hair through her wedding ring, which she plunges in a glass of water, and as often as it knocks against the side £0 many are the number of her future olive branches. A betrothed maiden who faces the music of hear- ing her own banns published will never have toothache. If unbetrothed and fancy free she vaguely wonders as to her future husband’s calling, she need but let the white of an egg into a glass of water. It will certain. ly take forms indicative of his trade. A ceremonial rather more complica- ted, with a mirror under the pillow, to be looked into at midnight, will even display his form and figure. And at the wedding service, according to the bride's or the bridgroom’s taper burning brightest, so will he or she CARING FOR THE WOUNDED, The Japanese Military Hospital at Hires. shima, On the shores of the Inland Sea of Japan, but a few hours’ sail from the Strait of Shimonoseki, lies the beauti- ful city of Hiroshima, With an ample harbor, easily defended, with health. ful surroundings, and with a resident population of more than one hundred thousand Japanese, it has been one of the busiest places in the island empire during the war with Russia, Being only three or four days’ journey by transport from Dalmy and Port Ar- thur, it has been the great military base of the country, where armies were gathered, drilled and embarked. And most important of all, says the Century Magazine, it has been the site of the immense military hospital in which the Japanese have cared for their wounded soldiers, Past wars have taught, and the Jap- anese have learned the lesson, that surgical cleanliness cannot be obtained on the battlefield. Operations per- formed there cannot be safeguarded against blood poisoning, and even the slightest wounds may become infect- ed. So on the scene of war they have not attempted to do more, for the vast majority of cases, than apply the “first aid” bandages. They have shipped the sufferers across the sea promptly to Hiroshima, to receive the best care medical aid can devise. On land that had been vacant before the war, eight divisions, each consist. ing of many light, one-story pavilions, were erected. Each pavilion contains from sixty to seventy beds, and the whole hospital could care for seven- teen thousand men at one time. They came from the transports in sampans, and entered the gates just as they had left the field, dirty, bloody, some limping, some with arms in slings, some with but the tatters of their uni- forms left, and some borne in litters. Distributed to the various wards, they came at once under command of Surgeon-General Sato, a distinguished Japanese, who has served in five wars, but who has never been near a bat- tlefield. So great is the care taken of the injured at Hiroshima that their re- coveries had been pronounced marvel- ous by visitors from abroad. Train- loads left the city every day conva- lescent, and many, after a short stay at the local hospital of their respective army corps or at some health resort, were able to return quickly to the front. Several American {rained nurses, who volunteered their services in aid of the Japanese wounded, were assigned to this big hospital, and were made much of, both by their patients and by the authorities. “The wounded here must specially endeaveor to recover quickly,” the Crown Prince told the patients, “since they have the good fortune to be nursed by the ladies who have come from so great a distance.” — Youth's An Automobile Fire Department. The municipal authorities of Vienna have determined to abandon the use of horses to draw their fire apparatus and to equip their service entirely on an automobile basis. The Vienna fire department is considered the Dest equipped of Continental Europe, and within ten years it has replaced all obsolete apparatus with the most mod- ern and useful devices. The first step taken was the ordering of fifty-three motor chemical engines and wagons to replace those previously drawn by horses, and which are most useful for dealing with small fires. When this has been accomplished, the horse- drawn steam fire engines and the ex- tension ladders will be changed or replaced in some way not as yet deter- mined. It is claimed that increased efficiency will follow the innovation, while there will be a saving of some $15,500 per annum in the cost of m taining the stations for which the fif- ty-three sets of apparatus have been ordered, The outlay will be about $177,000.—Harper's Weekly. Character in Curtaine. Did you know you can tell a good deal about character from window cur- tains? A woman who has been run- ning around hunting a housemaid says she knew as soon as she saw the front of a house whether the person within who had advertised for a place would answer the purpose or not. There were houses with dirty curtains of cheap lace, looped back with soiled and tangled strings; houses with filthy window panes and no curtains at al; houses where the curtains made a feeble effort to keep up with the tawdry style and houses where the glass was clear and the curtains poor but spotless, And in all cases the in- mates bore out the first impression. “The woman I finally got,” she said, “came from a house where the shades were green and pulled exactly even distances across the spotless window panes. And I knew before I went in how orderely the room would be, and how clean and neat a person she would be herself.”—Pittsburg Dispatch. The One Requisite. Having diligently perused all the automobile advertisements and studied the catalogues of 794 manufacturers, the young man proudly announced his intention in life. “I will become a writer of short stories,” he said; “the introduction of a forty-horse power machine, together with the easy mention of its various devices, will insure me an overwhelm- ing success. As for the story itself, that is a matter of small import.” Taking his pen in hand, he proceeded to reap the harvest.—Puck. The omnibus companies of London are contemplating the issue of an order prohibiting their drivers frem convers- outlive the other.—London Globe, There's a reason. / Le ing with passengers. POPULAR SCIENCE \/ @ The Russian Government has sent to the California University College of of European Russia, “black earth” tion, In the Trinity River, Southeastern found, although apparently none of sel the shells of which are sometimes five inches in length, One of the most important engineer Ing problems w ng for solution to- day, says Railway and Locomotive En- gineering, a practical method of using crude petroleum as the explosive in internal combustion engines, is at- ans Inventors are now turning their tention to the smaller details of the tomobile. ents is applied to a wire frame ar- tures, Many of the officers of steamships running to Boston, Mass, are afflicted with a new eye dis of a better name, some of them call the “fog eye.” It is an inflammation caused by peering into the fog, and, while painful, it soon passes away. The British the suggestion that phone ords be made and preserved of aphic rec- the actors, ete., and the performances of instrumentalists, now that the inde- structible nickel record can be made. These will be stored in and not used until the next generation, STRANGE PEOPLE; A Newly Discovered Race Similar to the Cliff Dwellers. Is there to be found in the wild fast- nesses near Maguarichie, Chihuahua, in the Sierra Madre a remnant of the ancient cliff dwellers who have re- mains of their houses high up on the cliff from Colorado through Arizona and New Mexico far southward into Mexico? Has such a remnant been found, or is the story on a par with such tales of that of the band of “striped horses” in a “beautiful valley” in the Sierra Madre and that of a rem- nant of Apaches in a deep inaccessible gorge called “The Hole” in the same range in that State? The last two mentioned stories have been exploded, but during the last two weeks there have come in stories from Maguar- ichie, a small mining camp three days’ ride frem Minaca, that a peculiar wild tribe that build their houses high up in the cliffs had been found near there. The story comes from Bon Good, an honest miner of that camp, in no wise versed in anthropology. The story as given is that Mr. Good has seen the people and their dwell- ings. The people are said to be small and swarthy and entirely different from the Tarahumaris Indians and Mexicans of that section. Their mode of life is extremely primitive and they are very timid, aveiding contact with other people. unless their houses or property are dis. turbed, and then they will fight. Their arms are bows and arrows. When a stranger shows up among them they floe to their dwellings or the brush They cultivate small patches of beans and corn in the canons and valleys near their homes. Their language is entirely distinet from any other and their vocabulary to a Roman Catholic priest, been among them. This priest says recognize him as a priest. He says enough when alone to bless them. The Mexicans seem fo know practice ally nothing about these strange and take no interest in them. Maguarichic many skeletons are found in the caves in the mountain sides, apparently indicating thay they may fards and later.—Mexican Herald. The Wrong Flavor. A traveling man who sells flavoring extracts registered at one of the large hotels and told the clerk that he wanted a bath, The city water was got that. He assigned the guest to a room with a private bath attached. Fifteen minutes after he was called to the house telephone. It was the new arrival who wanted him. “Hey,” called the traveling man, “you’ve given me the wrong flavor.” “What do you mean?’ asked the puzzled clerk. “I've got a chocolate bath here,” was the reply. “I wanted vanilla.”— Kansas City Times. A Delphic Utterance. as the utterances of the ancient oracles was the speech made by a Swiss moun- taineer who accompanied the Stutfield and Collie exploring expedition through the Canadian Rockies. They found it necessary to ford Bear Creek, and Hans did not enjoy it, al- though he faced it with exemplary fortitude. Once safely across, he turned and surveyed the stream gravely. “Several times you cross it,” he said, enigmatically, “but yet once is the last time.” have been much more numerous up to the time of the advent of the Span-! As capable of varied interpretation Agriculture specimens of the famous | which Is showing signs of deterioras | Texas, where many pearls have been very high value, lives a species of mus- | One of the most recent pat- | ranged to sweep the rubber tires. This, | it is claimed, will avoid many punc- | ase which, for want | Museum has approved voices of prominent singers, orators. | the museum | They will molest no one | is small, probably 200 words, according | Father Mariano Guerrero, who is said to have | they have at some time learned some: | thing of the Roman Catholic faith, and | they will allow him to approach near | people i Around | exceedingly muddy, but the clerk for- | | { tell you all about it. Tumors Conquer a —————— Without Operations Unqualified Success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in Cases of Mrs. Fox and Miss Adams. | One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is | the conquering of woman's dread enemy, Tumor, So-called ‘wandering pains” may come from its early stages, or the pres- ence of danger may be made manifest | by excessive menstruation accompanied | by unusual pain extending from the | ovaries down the groin and thighs. If you have mysterious pains, if there | are indications of inflammation ulcera- tion or displacement, don’t wait for time to confirm your fears and go through the horrors of a hospital opera- tion; secure Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound right away and begin its use and write Mrs. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass., for advice. Read these strong letters from grate- ful women who have been cured: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — (First Letter.) “In looking over your book I see that your medicine cures Tumor of the Uterus. Ihave been to a doctor and he tells me I have a tu- mor. I will be more than grateful if you can help me, as Ido so dread an operation.” | —Fannie D. Fox, 7 Chestnut St., Bradford, Pa. Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — (Second Letter.) “I take the liberty to congratulate you on | the success I have had with your wonderful | £ medicine. “ Eighteen months ago my monthlies stopped. Shortly after I felt so badlyl sub- | mitted to a thorough examination by a phy- sician, and was told that I had a tumor on the uterus and would have to undergo an operation. “1 soon after read one of your advertise- ments and decided to give Lydia E, Pink ham’ s Vegetable Compound a trial. After taking five bottles as directed, the tumor is entirely gone. I have again been examined Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veietable Compound; a Woman's Remedy fer W | by the physician and he says I have no sign§ | of a tumor now. It has also brought my | monthlies around once more; and I ang | entirely well, I shall never be without a bote { tle of Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in the house.”—Fannie D. Fox, Bradford, Pas | | Another Case of Tumor Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetae ble Compound. | Dear Mrs. Pinkham :— “ About three years ago I had intense pain in my stomach, with cramps and raging | headaches. The doctor prescribed for me, | but finding that I did not get any better he | examined me and, to my surprise, declared | I had a tumor in the uterus. | “Ifelt surethat it meant my death warrant, | and was very disheartened. I spent hundreds of dollars in doctoring, but the tumor kepk | growing, till the doctor said that nothing but | an operation would save me. Fortunately k | corresponded with my aunt in the New Eng | and States, who advised me to try Lydia KE. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound before sub~ mitting to an operation, and I at once started taking a regular treatment, finding to my great relief that my general health began to | improve, and after three months I noticed that the tumor had reduced in size. I kept | on taking the Compound, and in ten men | it had entirely disappeared without an oper- | ation, and using no medicine but Lydia E. ’inkham'’s Vegetable Compound, and words ail to express how grateful I am for the good | it has done me.’ s Luella Adams, Colon | nade Hotel, Seattle, Wash. Such urquestionable testi { proves the value of Lydia IZ. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and should give confidence and hope to every sick voman. > Mrs. Pinkham invitdg women to write to her at for advice. all ailing vnn, Mass., 3 Qils. Woenderfu! Grase Vine. The celebrated grape vine conservatory at Hampton Court, Eng- land, planted in 1769, had a stem 1: inches in girth and a principal branch 114 feet in length, and the whole vine | | occupying more than 160 square vards; and in one year it produced 2. { 200 bunches of fruit weighing on an average a pound—in all, about a ton of fruit. Old Manuscript Found. While pursuing his studies of the history of astronomy and astrology at the Imperial library, in Vienna, the | Norwegian professor, Dr. Axel Bjern- ho, has discovered a most valuable | manuscript in the handwriting of the first north pole explorer, known as Claudius Claussen. FITSpermanently cured, Nofitsornervouse ness after first day’s use of Dr, Kline’s Great NerveRestorer, $2trial bottleand treatise frea Dr.R. H. KLINE, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila, Pa, The deepest gold mine in the world is at Bendigo, in Australia. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothinz Syrup for Children teething,soften the gums reduces inflamma tion,allays pain,cureswind colic, 25¢.a bottle, Japan is pushing the construction of railways in Korea rapidly | Piso’s Cure cannot ba too hizhly spoken! gea cough cure,—J, W. O’Bricy, 322 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn,, jan. 6,190) Canada last year paid $8,930 to im- migratiop agents for sending immi- | grants to the agricultural districts. DISFIGURED BY ECZEMA Wonderful Change in a Night—In a Month Face Was Clear as Ever—Another Cure by Cuticura. “l had eczema on the face for five months, during which time 1 was in the care of physicians, My face was so dis- figured 1 could not go out, and it was going Cuticura. The first night after 1 washed my face with Cuti v Soap and used Cu- ticura Ointment and Resolvent 1 changed wonderfully. go out, and in a month the treatment had removed all scales and scabs, and my face was as clear as ever. (Signed) 1. J. Soth, 817 Stagg Street, Brooklyn, N, ¥.” There are 100 palmists in Coney Islaud alone, from the gypsy girl, who affects an Eastern costume, to the gray-haired professional, whose very 1c il WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR $195 To introduce. Buy direct and save the dif- | ference. Easy terms. Write us and we'll | \ ” yoks inspire ‘confidence. HOFEFMANN'S MUSIC HOUSE, 637 Smithfield Street, Pittsburg, Pa. AUTOGRAPH of RT W LETTERS |: leer erm emer. On age at 62, Civil War. On disability PENSIONS, ior dois war, We have records of service. Laws and advice free. A, W. McCORMIUK & SONS, 518 Walnut Sireet, ¢ incinnati, Ghio. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Byrup, Tastes Good. U . In time. Sold by druggists. (el oN ERIN P. N. U. 38, 1005. If cdlicted with weak From that day 1 was able to | | the world under one roof making men’s {ine in the | eyes, uso Thompson's Eye Water THE R. PAXTON CON PANY p+ BEST BY TEST “l have tried all kinds of waterproof clothing and have fever found anything at any price to compare with your Fish Brand for protection frem all kinds of weather.” (The name and address of the writer of this unsolicited letter may be had upon application) Highest Award World's Fair, 1904, A.J. TOWER CO. TheSisnofiheFish Boston, U.S. A. p TOWER CANADIAN CO., LIMITED Toronto, Canada fisy Td > 1 Makers of Warranted Wet Weather Cluthing W.L. DoucLAS $3528 3 °SHOESH W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. TTRASE pst I July 8, 1876. Nr W.L.DOUGLAS MAKES AND SELLS MORE MEN'S $3.50 SHOES THAR ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. $10 00 REWARD to anyone who can y disprove this statement, W. L.Dougias $3.50 shoes have by their ex- from bad to worse. A friend recommended | cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearin; qualities, achieved the largest sale of any §3.. shoe in the world. They are just as good as those that cost $5.00 to $7.90 — the only difierence is the if 1 could take you into my factory at Brocicton, Mass., the largest im shoes, and show you the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douclas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes producad in the world. if I could show you the difference between {lia shoes made in my factory and those of other makes, vou would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hol their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of ater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 oe on the market to-day. WW. LL. Douglas S¥rong Made Shoes for Men, 32.50, $2.00. Rays’ School & Dress Shoes, $2.50, $2, $1.75, $1.50 CAUTION.—In upon having W, L.Doug« fas shoes, Take no substitute, None genuine without his 10 and price ped on bottom, WANTED, A shoe dealerinevery town where W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. ~ Full line cf samples sent free for inspection upon request. Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy. ‘Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. W.L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. sina Er — troubled with ills peculiar to *- their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc- cessful, Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation and lo soreness, curcs leucorrheea and nasal catarrh, Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for uf TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 60 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. BosTON, Mase. ®