The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, December 22, 1905, Image 9

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~ ¥HE R. PAXTON COMPANY
Sacred Keys.
Bvery person's feeling have a front
door and a side door by which they
yo be entered. The front door is
on the street. Some keep it always
open, some keep it latched, some
docked, some bolted with a chain that
will let you peep in but not get in
and some nail it up, so that nothing
can pass its threshold. This front
door leads Into a passage which
opens into an anteroom and this in-
to the interior apartments. The side
door open at once into the secret
chamber. There is almost always
one key to the side door. This is
carried for years hidden in a
mother's bosom. Father's, brothers,
sisters and friends often, but by nbd
means so universally, have duplicates
of it. The wedding ring conveys a
Alas, if none is given
with it! Be very careful to whom
you trust one of these keys of the
side door.—0. W. Holmes.
" With a view to getting cheap wheat
from Argentina Japan will establish
A line of steamships to South Amerl-
ta. 4
JOYS OF MATERNITY
A WOMAN'S BEST HOPES REALIZED
Mre. Potts Tells How Women Should
\ Prepare for Motherhood
“ The darkest days of husband and
wife are when they come to look for-
ward to childless and lonely old age.
Many a wife has found herself inca-
pable of motherhood owing to a dis-
+ placement of the womb or lack of
.+atrength in the generative organs.
Mrs. Anna Potts
Frequent backache and distressing
pains, accompanied by offensive dis-
charges and generally by irregular
and scanty menstruation indicate a dis-
lacement or nerve degeneration of
he womb and surrounding organs.
The question that troubles women
§8 how can a woman who has some fe-
male trouble bear healthy children?
Mrs. Anna Potts, of 510 Park Avenue,
Hot Springs, Ark., writes:
My Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —
*“ During the early part of my married lifel
was delicate in health ; both my husband and
were very anxicus for a child to bless our
ome, but I had two miscarriages, and could
not carry a child to maturity. A neighbor
who had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound advised me to try it. 1
did so and soon felt that I was growing
stronger, my headaches and backaches left
me, I had no more bearing-down pains, and
felt like a new women. Within a year I
became the mother of a strong, healthy
child, the joy of our home. Lydia E. Pink-
bam's Vegetahle Compound is certainly a
splendid remedy, and I wish every woman
wbo wants to become a mother would try it.”
Actual sterility in woman is very
rare. If any woman thinks she is ster-
‘fle. let her try Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound and write to Mrs.
Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Her advice is
free to expectant or would-be mothers.
Drill for Water
Goal
Ga
Prospect for Minerals
Brill Test and Blast Holes
Many kinds and many
8izea of improved
Drilling Machines
For Horse, Steam or
Gasoline Power
Results Guaranteed
LOOMIS MACHINE CO.
TIFFIN, OHIO
A FEW |
CUTTING
REM A RHS\ {x
The purpose of a saw is to ent.
It should cut easily, cut cleanly,
and cut with every movement.
1 prefer an Atkins Saw, Its blade
is “Silver Steel”, recognized the
world over as the finest cruicible
steel ever made in ancient or modern
times, It is hard. closegrained and
tough, Itholdsa sharp cutting edge
longer than any other Saw. Its
blade tapers perfectly from thick to
thin, from handle to tip. Thus it
makes leeway for itself. runs easily
and does not buckle. Its temper is
rfect. When bent by a crooked
hrust, it springs into shape without kinking.
The AtkinsSaw cuts-—and does it Degtofany,
We make all types and sizes cf saws, but only
“one grade—the best.
Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor
Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware
dealers. Catalogue on rer uest,
E. C. ATHINS @& CO. Inc.
Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World,
Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis, Indiana.
BRANCHES: New York, Chicago, Minneapolis,
Portland, (Oregon), Seattle, Ran Francisco,
Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada).
Accept no Substitute—Insist on the Atkins Brand
SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWHE!
1112s }
PEST Tg%
FOR WOMEN
.
troubled with ills peculiar to “~Jhwm (7
their sex, used as a douche is marveloutly suc-
cessful, Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
etops discharges, heals inflammation and local
soreness, cures leucorrhcea 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 if
TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box.
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free.
BOSTON, Mass.
PATENTS
P. N. U. 49, 1905.
4S p. book free. Highest refs,
Lovg experience, Fitzger ld
&Co.Dept. 54, Washington,DC
Zz
~v PISO'S CURE FOR
Ho. Si IE nL
ro
[5
oO
[Stay-at-Home
This Seeming Paradox is
Its
TOUR OF THE
ASA
5 A.
RRA
RIK AVE you dreamed of trav-
ellng? Have you longed
to know what it would
mean to stand in the
DIGIOIR places where the world's
history has beem made, to see for
yourself the grandeur and beauty, the
stupendous energy and the endlessly
varied life not only in our own land
but aiso in the.distant countries of the
world?
The progress of sclentific invention
now makes it possible for hundreds
of thousands to realize this dream for
themselves and for their children.
Travel of the truest kind Is within
your reach, and yet without using
either ship or railway or any of the
ordinary bodily conveyances.
This statement is so extraordinary
in its claims that probably no reader
of these lines will believe it at first,
Indeed no one could have been more
sceptical about it than the writer was
until he visited the New York estab-
lishment of Underwood & Underwood,
the business organization which is re-
sponsible for this truly remarkable de-
velopment of a great scientific jnven-
tion—as wonderful in its way as the
telephone.
The first few minutes of my visit
were devoted to some Interesting opti-
cal experiments.
I was handed a neutral tinted card
on which steroscopic photographs of
one scene were mounted in the manner
with which many people are familiar,
two prints on one card, side by side.
They looked like duplicate prints from
a single well-made negative,
In the photographs I saw represent-
ed a field with a cluster of houses
beyond, and breaking surf on a distant
sea beach; it was down in Martinique.
A couple of men stood talking in the
field close by, and I could see some of
the village houses in the space be-
tween their standing figures.
1 was asked to examine this also
through the stereoscope. It seemed
to me hardly necessary, after the in-
‘spection 1 had already given the twin
photographs; however, I put the card
in the rack and placed my head
against the hood of the instrument.
Here 1 was astonished again. I was
no longer looking at a photograph—I
was seeing out into actual space, into
an actual place, and, moreover, this
place was startlingly different from
what I had supposed when I looked
at the flat photograph without any
instrument! Instead of looking from
(the side of a field, I found I was on a
‘high bluff, dropping abruptly perhaps
five hundred feet just beyond the two
men. The houses that I had supposed
to stand at the farther side of the
field showed up as they really were,
at least half a mile distant over at the
other side of a ravine. I couldn't be-
lleve my eyes at first. Then I asked:
“What causes this effect of being
right there with open space all
around?’
“In the few minutes we have, there
would not be time to explain fully,”
was the answer, “but the possibility of
these effects of reality depends first
of all on the principle of two-eye see-
ing as distinguished from one-eye see-
ing. You must begin with this prin-
ciple if you are to understand this
travel system. Most people never stop
to think why they have two eyes. If
the question occurs to them at all,
they probably fancy the second eye
is merely a piece of reserve equip-
ment—nature’s provision against help-
lessness in case of accident to one
organ of vision.”
Then my informant went on to ex-
plain that a person with normal eye-
sight sees very differently from a per-
son with only one eye. To demonstrate
that statement, I was asked to make
two or three personal experiments.
First I held my right arm out straight
in front of me, on a level with the
shoulder, the hand open, the palm to-
wards the left. Holding it in that po-
sition I looked at the hand with my
right eye alone, keeping the left eye
shut. I found I could see the edge
of my hand and a part of the back of
the hand. Next, keeping arm and
hand in the same position, I closed
the right eye and used only the left
eye. That time I saw the edge of my
hand and a bit.of the palm, but I
could not see around on the back of
the hand as before. Last of all, I used
both eyes together. Somewhat to my
own surprise, I noticed that I could
then see the edge of the hand, part of
the palm, and also part of the back
of the hand. Indeed, I found I actu-
ally saw part way around the hand.
The representative of the stere-
ographers then explained that a bi-
nocular or stereoscopic camera differs
from an ordinary camera as a two-
eyed man differs from a cripple with
only one eye. It has two lenses set
side by side as far apart as a person's
two eyes. One lens takes in exactly
what would be seen by the right eye
of a person standing in the camera's
place. The other lens takes in what
would be seen by the observer's left
eye. Prints made from the two nega-
tives are, of course, almost alike and
yet never precisely alike, Their mount-
ing on the stereograph carg is a pro-
Kap.
: in time. b
ix
cers requiring exact, experflyo
Traveling =
Now a Delightful Reality,
Because of a Scientific Ad-
vancement as Wonderful in
Way as the Telephone
WORLD .......
ce..... IN YOUR EASY CHAIR
By ARTHUR BONSAL.
AAA WAAR A PP 0 NA
or Ll : we .
~~
ship. When the stercograph is set in
place in the stereoscope, the right eye
sees what it would see on the spot and
the left eyec sees what it would see on
the spot. The result is analagous
to that of looking with both
eyes at your outstretched hand.
You see part way around the
near objects, and that makes them
stand out real and solid just as they do
in your ordinary, everyday experiences
of seeing things in your accustomed
surroundings. It gives to your eyes
perfect depth, perfect solidity, perfect
space,
“Thus you see,” my informant con-
tinued, “the two small prints 3x3
inches in size and about six inches in
front of the eyes in the stereoscope
serve esactly as two windows through
which we look and beyond which we
see the object or place standing out as
large as the original object or place
would appear to the eyes of one stand-
ing where the camera stood. Remark-
able as these statements may seem,
when thoughtfully considered, still
they sare absolutely true, based on
scientific facts which may be found
explained in any reliable treatise on
binocuiar vision.”
I sat back and wondered, It seemed
hard to realize that, in the slereoscope,
I could see in their natural size parts
of countries, cities and towns all over
the carth.
“But,” he went on, “we now come to
a far more remarkable fact. Psycho-
logists are saying that if we look at
these life-size scenes in the right way,
namely, if while looking we have
some means of knowing definitely
where on the earth's surface we are
standing, in just what direction and
over what territory we are looking,
and if we take time to think of our sur-
roundings there, then we can gain a
distinct sense or experience of location
in that place, or what they call genu-
ine experiences of travel. Of course,
you would not be likely to believe this
at once, but reserve your judgment for
a few minutes.
“I'o furnish the knowledge to make
this possible a new map system has
been devised and pateuted—an entirely
new system.” .
"Then he proceeded to shew me a
most ingenious map system of which
I had never before heard. Like many
another bright idea it is essentially so
simple one wonders why it had not
been devised before. He showed me
several of the patent maps. All were
in the first place excellent, clear maps
of the ordinary sort, but a clever de
vice of conspicuous red lines showed
just where a person was to stand, in
whatever vicinity it might be, in what
direction he was to face and just how
much territory in a town, a house in-
terior or a stretch of open country he
was to include in his outlook from that
particular point,
“But what are educators saying about
this?” I asked. *‘Much,” was the re-
ply. “Here is what a professor of
psychology in New York University,
Professor Lough, says:
‘ ‘The essential thing for us is not
that we have the actual physica: place
or object before us, as a tourist does,
rather than a picture, but that we have
some at least of the same facts of con.
sciousness, ideas and emotions, in the
presence of the picture, that the tourist
gains in the presence of the scene.
This is entirely possible in the stereo
scope.’
“But,” he added, “we do not claim
that even these experiences can be got-
ten unless the stereographs are used
with certain “helps and in the right
spirit. (Speaking in a general way
this means we must treat the place
scen in the stereoscope as we would
treat the place itself in actual travel).
“To supply this need books are being
prepared by people of wide travel and
broad culture to accompany the stereo-
graphed scenes of a city or country.”
Then I was shown guide books by
such men as Jesse Lyman Hurlbut, D.
D., on Palestine; Dr. D. J. Ellison and
Professor James C. Egber., Jr., of Co-
lumbia University, on Italy; Professor
James H. Breasted, of Chicago Univer-
sity, on Egypt; Professor James Rical-
ton, the veteran traveler, on China;
George Kennan, the famous journalist
and lecturer, on Martinique. In these
books the authors or guides make
their comments on the different places
seen through the stereoscope in the
same natural order that they would
treat them during an actual journey.
They point out the objects of interest
in each place and give some of the his-
tory connected with it. Each strives
to answer the very questions a new-
comer would be likely to ask when on
the ground. There are many ingenious
and scientifically helpful methods
worked out by these writers that I
must leave unnoticed here.
“You see,” concluded my informant,
“this is no sleight of hand scheme or
magical performance. This travel
system is worked out in accordance
with well established though not gen-
erally known laws of the mind. If
the right methods are observed it is
now being recognized that genuine ex-
periences of travel may be gained in
one’s hd
THE EGYPTIAN FAMINE,
An Important Monument Found Core
roborating the Diblical Account.
Among the most important of the
finds around the great city of Thebes
or Luxor, in Egypt, is a great rock on
the Island of Sehel below the first
cataract, This, has the hieroglyphics
in a falrly good state of preservation,
and they set forth that in the reign of
King Zoser the Nile falled to rise for
seven consecutive years, and that in
consequence a terrible famine prevails
ed in the land in which fanumerable
people perished of hunger. This
famine was finally broken and a great
inundation followed the prayer of the
King to the God of the Cataract,
whose name was Khnum,
New Use for Glass.
The use of glass for the dressing of
wounds as put in practice by Dr. Ay-
mard of Paris, is so seasible and
simple a proposition that the wond-
er is it was not invented ages ago.
This glass may be curved in any
fashion to suit the shape of the
wounded part, and, when applied,
gives the physician onportunity to see
the condition of the hurt without re-
moval, as is necessary with a band-
age of cloth and lint. Dr. Aymard as-
serts, moreover, that the wound heals
more rapidly under glass than when
dressed with lint, as he has proved by
many experiments, If this be true,
and there is no reason for doubt, it
will soon be a matter of general prac-
tice and will revolutionize tne
ment of wounds—Baltimore American.
=NO DRUGCS—A NEW METHOD.
A Box of Wafers Free—Iave You Acute
Indigestion, Stomach Trouble, Ir-
regular Heart, Dizzy Spells,
Short Breath, Gas on
the Stomach?
Ritter Taste—Bad Breath—Impaired Ap-
petite—A feeling of fullness, weight and
pain over the stomach and heart, some-
times nausea and vomiting, also fever and
sick headache?
Excessive eating and drinking—abuse of
spirits—anxiety and depression—mental ef-
fort—mental worry and physical fatigue—
bad air—insufficient food—sedentary habits
—abgence of teeth—bolting of food.
If you suffer from this slow death and
miserable existena@e, let us send you a sam-
vie box of Muil’s Anti-Belch Wafers abso-
utely free. No drugs. Drugs injure the
stomach.
It stops belching and cures a diseased
stomach hy absorbin
undigested food and by imparting activity
to the lining of the stomach, enabling it
to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric
juices, which promotes digestion and cures
the disease.
SPECIAL OFFER.—The regular price of
Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box, but
to introduce it to thousands of sufferers
we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt of
75c. and this advertisement, or we will
send you a sample free for this coupon.
THis OrFER MAY NOT APPEAR AGAIN,
1295 FREE COUPON 128
Send this coupon with your name
and address and name of a druggist
who does not sell it for a free sample
box of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers to
Mvurr’s Grare Toxic Co., 328 Third
Ave., Rock Island, Ill.
Give Full Address and Wrile Plainly.
St
Sold by all druggists, 5c. per box, or
sent by mail,
Relieving the Brain.
The persistent use of the musclar |
‘stem is well calculated to relive the
and nervous system of their ten-
sion. It is also true that manual work
its results are good. All this becomes
clearer when we realize how vainly
we may seek relief from nervous fa-
tigue in physical rest or even in re-
creations of the ordinary sort. The
quiet room or the quiet hillside, so
suggestive of rest and -peace—these
are too often important in the pre-
sence of carking care. One reason for
this failure is that the brain and the
body are commonly not tired in what
is called nervous exhaustion, but are
only irritated, while the sense of fa-
tigue, which is so misleading, is
merely the result of that irritation
and may be termed a physic fatigue.
Under these circumstances it is easy
to understand that it is change, not
sorely needed.—Good Housekeeping.
A Modern Touch.
are admittedly planned with a view
to providing the maximum of com-
fort for guests whose purses permit |
of their patronizing such establish-
ments. . One Southern hotelkeeper,
however, goes them one better and |
incidentally shows a mighty keen ap- |
preciation of feminine needs in this
age, for in addition to the regular
information concerning bells and at-|
tendance on each room door appears
this notice: |
“Ladies desiring assistance with |
blouses, buttoning in the back, ring|
five times.—Brooklyn Eagle.
Judge's Kind Admonition.
On one occasion Judge Dewey, of |
Boston, had before him a couple of |
girls charged with stealing ribbons |
from wreaths on graves. As the evi-
dence of their guilt was not satisfac-
tory, he ordered their discharge, ac-
companying it with this admonition:
long as you can.” |
“Girls, keep out of the cemeteries as |
William Ross, a farmer at Chaplin, |
Conn., who has had the reputation of |
being a woman-hater for more than |
half a century, refusing to have a |
woman under his roof, has relented at |
treac- |
STOPS BELCHING BY ABSORPTION |
What causes it? Any one or all of these: |
the foul odors from | i
|
|
pleases and satisfies the mind when |
necessarily physical rest, which is so |
Northern hotels of the Hirsictass |
Makes Use of
His Family
CAVITOL
Peruna is known from the Atlantic to
the Pacific. Letters of congratulation and
commendation testifying to the merits of
Peruna as a catarrh remedy are pouring in
from every State in the Union. Dr. Hart
man is receiving hundreds of such letters
daily. All classes write these letters, from
the highest to the lowest.
The outdoor laborer, the indoor artisan,
the clerk, the editor, the statesman, the
preacher—all agree that Peruna is the
catarrh remedy of the age. The stage and
rostrum, recognizing catarrh as their great.
est enemy, are especially enthusiastic in
their praise and testimony.
Any man who wishes perfect health must
|
|
| be entirely free from catarrh. Catarrh is
| well-nigh universal. Peruna is the best
! safeguard known,
BUILDING,
OF OREGO
Pe-ru-na in
For Colds.
SALEM, OREGON,
A Letter From the Ex-Governor of
Oregon.
The ex-Governor ot Oregon is an ardend
admirer of Peruna. He keeps it contine
ually in the house. In a letter to Dre
Hartman, he says: :
STATE oF OREGON,
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT.
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.¢
Dear Sirs-<1 have had occasion
use your Peruna medicine in my
Jamily for colds, and it proved to be
an excellent remedy. 1 have not had
occasion fo use it for other allmentas.
Yours very truly, W. M. Lord.
It will be noticed that the Governo®
says he has not had occasion to use Peruna
for other ailments. The reason for this isy
most other ailments begin with a cold.
| Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna Almanac ior 1906.
excellence
IS GUARANTEED TO CURE
GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE 2ND NEURALG
I won'teell Antl-Gripine to a dealer who won't Guarantee X¢,
Call for your MONEY
F. W. Diemer, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Meo.
WINCHESTER
RIFLE AND PISTOL CARTRIDGES
Winchester Rifie and Pistol Cartridges of all
calibers are loaded by machinery which sizes
the shells, supplies the exact quantity of
powder, and seats the bullets properly.
using first-class materials and this up-to-date
system of loading, the reputation of Win-
chester Cartridges for accuracy, reliability and
is maintained.
THEY SHOOT WHERE YOU HOLD
By
Ask for them.
in
BACK IF IT DOESN'T CURE.
Value of Cheerfulness.
are some salesmen whose
into the presence vf pros-
pective customers is like the advent
(of spring after a hard winter. They
| bring a burst of sunshiny weather.
| The tired and ill-humored customer
| who has been sitting on the mourner’s
{ bench all day, nursing his troubles,
| loosens his hold on his grouch in the
| presence of that insistent optimism.
| It is as if someone had opened a win-
| dow in a stuff house; he feels the in-
| vigorating cffect of ozone.—Success.
There
Irish Buy Homes.
The inhabitants of the village of
Castlemartyr, in County Cork, have
| bought the fee simple interest in their
| dwellings and premises from the Earl
| of Shannon on favorable terms. The
1
| population of Castlemartyr is about !
| 600.
IN CONSTANT AGONY.
West Virginian’s Awfal Distress
Through Kidney roubles.
W. I. Jackson, merchant, of Park-
ersburg, W. Va., says: “Driving about
in bad -—-eathér
| A
me, ad I
suffered twenty
years with sharn,
cramping pains mn
the hack and urinary
disorders. I often
had to get up a dozen
times at night te uri-
nate, Retention set
| in, and I wus obliged
[ to use the catheter.
I IT took to my bed, and the doctors fail-
| ing to help, began using Doan’'s Kid-
ney Pills. The urine soon came free-
ly again, and the pain gradually dis-
| appeared. I have been cured eight
years, and though over 70, am as ac-
tive as a boy.”
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
| Foster-Milbucn Co., Buffalo N. Y.
bles on
Seed Farms.
There are at the present time more
than 600 seed farms in the United
States—farms, that is to say, devoted
to the production of vegetable, field
crop and flower seeds to be sold to
farmers and gardners. Some of these
plantations are very extensive, com-
prising as much as 1,000 acres.
ULCERS FOR THIRTY YEARS
Seemed Incurable-=Cuticars
Ends Misery,
Another of those remarkable cures by
Cuticura, after doctors and all else had
failed, is testified to by Mr. M. C. Moss, of
“For over thirty years 1 suffered from
painful ulcers and an eruption from my
knees to feet, and could find neither doe-
tors nor medicine to help me until I used
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, which
cured me in six months. They helped me
the very first time I used them, and I am
glad to write this so that others suffering
as I did may be saved from misery.”
|
Gainesville, Texas, in the following letter:
brought kidney trou- |
|
WEBSTER’S
INTERNATIONA
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Gazetteer, and new Biographical Diction-
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U. 8. Commissioner of Education. Grand
Prize,World’s Fair, St. Louis. Get the Best.
Webster's Collegiate Dictionary. Largest of onrabridg-
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140iliustrations,
Writs for ** Dictionary Wrinkles "Free,
WG & C. MERRIAM CO., Springfield, Maes.
W.L.DoucLAS
$3204 3 22°SHOES
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line
‘cannot be equalled atany price.
3. - li
W.L. DOUGLAS MAKESAND SELLS
MORE MEN'S Ji.89 SHOES THAN
ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER.
$10 000 REWARD to anyone who can
y disprove this statement.
W, L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by thelr ow.
cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearin,
qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.
shoe in the world. The are Just as good ap
those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 — the only
difference is the price. If 1 could take you into
my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in
the world under one roof making men’s fine
shoes, and show Jou the care with which every
pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize
why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the be
shoes produced in the world.
If 1 could show you the difference between th.
shoes made in my factory and those of other
| makes, you would understand why Douglas
| $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hol
| Painfal Eruptions From Kees to Feet | their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are o
| shoe on the market to-day.
D
greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50
. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoes for
Men, $2.50, $2. a Boys’ I
Dress Shoes, $2.50, $2, $1.75, $1.
AUTION.—Insist upon having W.LDouge
las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. A shoe dealer insvary town wher
W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. ~ Full line
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.
PN . .
The Life Saver of Children
With Croup, Coughs, Colds and Pneumonia is Hox-
Rie 1p Cure, “It prevents Diphtheria and Mem -
Mailed
No opium. No nausea. a0 3
HOXSIE, Buttaioy N, Y,.
Sey
last, and, at the age of 73, has taken | Active steps ar i te 7 | “iy
’ A 43, £ steps are being taken by | NEW DISCOVERY:
a wife. She was a widow. He is| Austria-Hungary to extend its ship- | RO PS quick reliof and pinky
worth $100,000. | building industry. | Sater, deny tor book of testimonizia and 10 Days
J 3 . Dr. M. H. GREEN'S SONS, Atlanta, Ga. /
is the short, su
OOOO OPPOITHTOSDDOCO®OSD®
easy cure for
THE EXTERNAL USE OF
re,
St. Jacobs Oil
Rheumatism and Neuralgia
It penetrates to the ior torture, and relief promptly follows. Price, 256. and §0c.
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