The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, April 13, 1906, Image 7

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

    time,
Sun,
dialect .
We
proof-
al,
plies?”
ead in
18iness
ot her
© or sO
quired
0 stay
“and
ing all
tment
edger.
social
t some
to un-
ritadel-
awn to
arrived
sound”
o make
we did
to go
‘I gave
I was
ate it
reddie,
Ve was
ras the
mes.
Ss very
ave?”
ing to
whose
rry for
dooty,
‘Phawt
w flats,
~“How,
named
and I
difind
id Mr.
g here
arvem,
nd our
1st the
st and
—Phila-
aid the
aurant.
ty min-
ty min-
the Hi-
ez had
at's all
10W {=
1 Mrs.
yrought
Taven't
5 morn-
of lobs-
rlor.”—
all the
) bring
Well,
dy hurt
o with
arriage
in the
fection-
1g, and
ked ab-
1!" she
e time
GREAT SCOTT,
Fhe Biggest Man of Addison County, Vt,
Tells an Interesting Story,
BE. C. Scott, meat dealer, Vergennes,
Vt, Past Commander of Ethan Allen
Post, G. A. R, says: “A severe attack
of typhoid left me
with weak Kidneys.
Every night 1 had to
get up frequently to
pass the urine, which
was ropy, dark and
very painful to vold.
1 had no appetite, but
drank water contin.
ually without being
able to quench my thirst, Terrible
headaches and dizzy spells oppressed
me and my back was lame, sore and
gtif. A month's treatment with
Doan's Kidney Pills rid me of this
trouble, and now I am strong and
healthy and weigh 230 pounds. I
give the credit to Doan’s Kidney Pills.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N, Y.
The ideal Woman.
1 have watched the ideal woman in
many places, at home and in society,
with the result that I have come to
the conclusion that she is the one of
our sex whom men most persistently
avoid. They are quite civil to her
when she is thrown in their way;
they will even admire openly her de-
meanor or the way she keeps house
or nurses her invalid mother, but they
do not seek her out, and they do not
marry her.—A Spinster in The Truth
About Men. :
BABY'S TORTURING HUMOR.
Ears Looked as If They Would Drop Off
Face Mass of Sores—Cured by Cuti-
} cura in Two Weeks For 75c¢.
“I feel it my duty to parents of other
poor suffering babies to tell you what
Cuticura has done for my little daughter.
She broke out all over her body with a
humor, and we used everything recom-
mended, but without results. I called in
three doctors. They all claimed they
could help her, but she continued to grow
worse. Her body was a mass of sores,
and her little face was being eaten away;
her ears looked as if they would drop off.
Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura Soap
and Ointment, and before I had used half
of the cake of Soap and box of Ointment
the sores had all healed, and my little
one’s face and body were as clear as a
new-born babe’s. I would not be without
it again if it cost five dollars, instead of
seventy-five cents. Mrs. George J. Steese,
201 Coburn St., Akron, Ohio.”
Mormons Exploring Mexico.
The Mormon parties, numbering
more than 100 in number, have been
almost literally “in the woods” of
the southern portions of the republic
for from a week to nearly a month.
They came from all portions of the
Northwest, a party of two from the
neighborhood of Salt Lake City,
a party from Central Idaho, two part-
ies from points in Oregon and several
small parties from other points. Many
of those who make up the personnel
of the number now exploring Mexico
are not of the very wealthy class. In
fact, the greatest number are from
the farming classes, who have made
a success where they have been and
are now looking for ‘new worlds to
conquer.”
From the reports of those who have
returned it is very probable that
thousands of acres of land will be
bought by’ these people for settlers.
And nearly all of this will be in the
wild country, away from the present
cultivated dis s.—Mexican Herald.
Anatomy of Caterpillar.
The thoughtless person who care-
lessly crushes the life out of a cater-
pillar would probably be much amaz-
ed if told that he had crushed an or-
ganization that was made up of parts
as numerous and quite as interesting
and instructive as those of the ele-
phant. And a careful study the anat-
omy of this minute and much despised
animal has disclcsed so many singu-
lar and interesting parts as to war-
rant a quarto volume on the subject.
Four thousand and forty muscles have
been discovered in the caterpillar,
and not only discovered but accurate-
ly described. Al of which goes to
show that, though trite, 'tis true that
to the Creator the smallest insect is
as important as the largest verte-
brate.—New York Herald.
FOOD HELPS
In Management of a RB. R,
Speaking of food a railroad man
Bays:
“My work puts we out in all kinds of
weather, subject to irregular hours for
meals and compelled to eat all kinds of
food.
“For 7 years I was constantly trou-
bled with indigestion, caused by eating
heavy, fatty, starchy, greasy, poorly
cooked food, such as are most accessi-
bie to men in my business. Generally
each meal or lunch was followed by
distressing pains and burning sensa-
tions in my stomach, which destroyed
my sleep and almost unfitted me for
work. My brain was so muddy and
foggy that it was hard for me to dis-
charge my duties properly.
“his lasted till about a year ago,
when my attention was called to
Grape-Nuts food by a newspaper ad.
and I concluded to try it. Since then
I have used Grape-Nuts at nearly ev-
ery meal and sometimes between
meals. We railroad men have little
chance to prepare our food in our ca-
booses and I find Grape-Nuts, mighty
handy for it is ready cooked.
“ro make a long story short, Grape-
Nuts has made a new man of me. I
have no more burning distress in my
stomach, nor any other symptom of in-
digestion. I can digest anything so
Jong as I eat Grape-Nuts, and my brain
works as clearly and accurately as an
engineer's watch, and my old nervous
troubles have disappeared entirely.”
Name given by I’ostum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich.
SEARCHING FOR HEROES,
Fallure of a Scheme to Award the Doers
of Noteworthy Deeds,
So far the hunt for heroes eligible
to receive the benefits of a great fund
established by a wealthy American has
proved very disappointing, Instead of
being put te It to make income meet
sutgo, the trustees find it impossible
to scare up enough true blue, simon
pure, dyed in the wool heroes to make
an appreciable hole in their funds,
Many promising leads are followed,
many newspaper heroes and heroines
are chased to earth, but few indeed
are those who meet the standard es-
tablished by the regulations of the
fund, One or two a year out of the
great population in which the hunters
seek those whom they may glorify!
The majority of applicants turn out
unworthy.
This result of the effort to
tematize and concentrate the hero glo-
rifying business is not surprising.
When the fund was established two
years ago it was recognized that it
would attract many impostors, and
that the men and women whom its
donor was anxious to reward would be
the last to push themselves to the
front. The medal craving, self-adver-
tising “hero” is likely to show a shady
record when his deeds are fully ex-
plained. The man or woman who ac-
complishes a really heroic act is not
of the stuff that rewards from
trustees of funds, or seeks recompense
or recognition from any public or semi-
public source. Rather, the persons
sought for by the agents of this Pitts-
burg institution ave of the that
shrink from publicity. depre » their
own deeds and want them forgotiein.
The fact that no new awards were
made at the second annual meeting of
the Hero Fund Commission does not
mean that no heroic leads have heen
performed recently in the territory it
covers. Like mean acts. heroic
persist in about the sual proportion.
regardless of funds, meduls, uts of
money or the like. Nor shouid it be
argued that the hero fund has failed
entirely of its purpose. It provides
pleasant jobs at fair pay fo a number
of persons in various capacities, and
thus does good.—New York Sun.
sys
asks
acis
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Citizenship simply means service.
The supercilious are simply super
silly.
The immovable hearts move the
world.
If you cannot serve your employer,
fire him.
The empty faith is usuaily made of
sounding brass.
No victory is so well worth fighting
for as the victory over self.
He is blessed with fortune who has
learned to bear misfortune,
A man who is honest {or policy will
be dishonest for promotion.
The losses of truth are more profita-
ble than the gains of trickery.
Women Careless in Shoes.
“The number of women who wear
handsome dresses, expensive stockings
and ugly shoes is astonishing,” vol-
unteered an observant man who had
been noticing what was worthy of no
tice near the Flatiron building. “Most
of them seem to think they are fixed
if they get a handsome suit and hat
No man who considers himself well
dressed would dream of going out with
unblacked shoes, but some of the
daintiest looking women otherwise will
be shabby or careless as to shoes.”
His companion observed closely for
several moments. It was only too
true. Women with stunning hats, mar-
celled bair and velvet suits had evi
dently spent it all before they thought
of shoes, or else they didn’t care. Shoes
of dull and unpolished kid, with heels
that nedeed building up, appeared un-
der a velvet snit in strange contrast
with the other finery. iea and even
clumsy ifskin shoes we
silken ‘ts, and the broad toe and
heavy sole were often seen alighting
from a carriage
“It is just another of those exasper-
ating contradictions and inconsistencies
to be found in the New York woman's
dress,” said the man who had studied
the subject, “and that is what makes
the Parisian still the daintiest of dress-
ers—becanuse she attends first to the
details of her {toilette and has them
complete and perfect.”—New Yoik
Press.
'e worn with
Black Hair Close to Red,
The color of the hair, says the Grand
Magazine, is usually transmitted from
parents to child. This is especially
true when both parents have the same
complexion. Instances, however, are
not unknown where children have hair
black as ebony, while the hair of both
parents is a burning red. Instead of
disproving the theory that a child
takes after its parents so far as the
color of the hair is concerned, this fact,
it has now been ascertained, is all in
favor of the doctrine. Red hair, in
fact, is by its structure and composi.
tion much nearer to black hair than
to blond.
Very often, if the hair of a very dark
complexioned person be examined at-
tentively, a few quite red hairs will be
detected in the mass. On the other
hand, it would be time wasted
to seek for black hair in the
locks of a fair person. Similarly
it is not infrequent to notice children
whose hair, red at birth, becomes as
they grow older quite dark. Wien, too,
after some serious illness, the prod
tion of the coloring pigment of the !
falls off, black hair becomes not blond,
but red. I air hair, which to a casual
eye appears to have much more af-
finity to red hair than to black, is, on
the contrary, quite distinct.
Experts calculate that Irish bogs are
capable of turning out 30,000.000 tans
There's a reason. Read the little
book, “Ihe Load to Wellville,” in pkgs.
Alrship travel seems to be already
popular, WW. de Fonvielle estimates
that seven or eight hundred balloon
voyages are now made annually, and
states that the members of the French
Aero Club alone made more than two
hundred last year. The forms and
colors of the clouds, the brightness, and
the new views of the carth give a won-
derful charm to sky automobiling.
Julius Rosenberg considers ultro-vio-
let rays remedial agents of the greatest
value, especially for the relief of pain,
says the Baltimore Sun, He employs
a thirty-five-ampere are, with mirror
reflectors, and attaches importance to
the use of iron-carbide electrodes. Ie
concludes that the ultra-violet rays ob-
tained in this way are a specific rem-
edy in acute muscular pain, such as
lumbago.
—
Professor W. E. Ayrton points out
that the common expression “buying
electricity” and “consuming electric
current” are misleading. No electricity
is used up in lighting buildings, driv-
ing machinery, and propelling ears and
trains, “Just as much electricity flows
away per minute, through the return
conductor, from your electrically light-
ed house as flows to it through the
coming conductor.
The pomelo, sometimes called the
Chinese breadfruit, a citrus-fruit which
may be described as a cross between
the orange and the grapefruit, combin-
ing the good points of both, is the
subject of an interesting report by Mr.
Anderson, the United States Consul at
Haungchow. Mr. Anderson regards it
as the finest fruit grown in the Far
East. He believes that it might be in-
troduced with profit into the Southern
United States.
The gigantic animals of the so-called
age of reptiles, whose remains are es-
pecially abundant in some of the lands
bordering the Rocky Mountains, ap-
peal so powerfully to the imagination
that an exaggerated notion of their
size and weight is frequently enter-
tained. It has more than once been
pointed out that, as far as paleontology
shows, the earth never contained more
buiky creatures than the whales of
to-day.
The construction of an ordinary tel
egraph line between Lima, on the Pa-
cific side of the Andes in Peru, and
Iquitos, near the Amazon, being all
but impossible, btcause of the density
of the forests and the :
ignorant natives, tle 3
is to be empleo]
cation by wir
between Lima
and this line will b
Iquitos, a distance o
with three inte
imosity of the
eless method
y communi-
phy exists
Bermudez,
extended to
ut GOO miles,
ediate stations.
senger on
Is at one
pass on the
he had left
ed the same
ud was wel
tor. When that
rr the tickets, the
s forgetfulness,
. was obdurate;
Colonel Sanders
one of the Monta: ail
time. He had the annual
road, but on this eccasior
it at heme. He ha“
route many times bef
known to the condu
official came around f{
Colonel told him of
he must have ticket or money. The
Colonel, rather than have a scene,
finally pulled out a five dollar bill,
which “vas ample to cover the expenses
of his trip. It was a very ragged af-
fair--all torn and pasted.
“That's a fine lot
me,” grow led the c«
Colonel Sanders
thoroughly nettied.
“Well, he cried in a voice that could
be heard all over the car, “if you don’t
like it, turn it in to t pany.”
The laugh that went up was at the
expense of the conductor. — Pittsburg
Dispatch.
bili to give
Wild Beasts of India.
Year by year records are published
of the destruction of human and cat-
tle life by the wild beast and snakes
of British India. last year 24,576
human beings and 96,226 cattle were
killed, and of the people, 21,827 deaths
were atiributed to snakes, while of
the cattle, &6,000 were killed by wild
beasts, panthers being charged with
40,000 and tigers with 30,000 of this
total; snakes accounted for 16,000.
And this is but a trifling percentage of
the actual annual mortality, as it ex-
cludes the feudatory States, with their
700,000 square miles and 60,000,000 in-
habitants, where no records are obtain:
able. Nor do the fatalities grow ma-
terially less, notwithstanding the ef-
forts of sportsmen and rewards by
Government, because the developmen?
of railways and roads, as the jungle is
reclaimed for agriculture, means con-
tinuous invasion of the snake and tiger-
infested territory.—Caspar Whitney, in
“The Trail of the Tiger,” in Outing,
Cheering Him Up.
“Ye-es,” Mr. Billings reluct-
antly, in reply to his friend's remark
that Mrs, Joyce was “an awfolly
sweet little woman.” “Sg cheerful! Al-
said,
ways sunny; always looking on the
bright side!” Billings’ friend contin-
ued, enthusiastically
“There's such a
that ‘bright side’ bu
ings. “The other night I was up there |
and Joyce—you know how absent |
minded he is?—put the lighted end of |
his cigar in his mo He jumped |
three feet, and was ttle noisy for
a minute. Right in the midst of it]
all Mrs. Joyce smiled Dblandly, and |
|
1
|
£ as overdoing |
ness,” said Bill- |
said:
“ ‘How fortunate you were, dear, to
of fuel a year for a tbouviend years.
»
74
discover it at once! ”
|
Hancock Made Millions.
M. T. Hancock who was ‘ecently
killed In an automobile accident in
California, made his millions from a
simple invention—the ark plow, He
thought out his idea while driving
mules on his father's plantation In
Georgia, 26 years ago. He perfected
the invention 10 years later, taking
out first patent in 1901 is device
18 now used in all parts of the world
FITS parmanantiy cured, No fite or nervous.
ness after flest day's nse of De. Kline's Gea
Nerve Restorer, #2 triaihotteandtrontisafvon
Dr. R. H, Krnixg, Ltd, 931 Aven st, Palla, la
Men's Necks Longer,
It is the British Med!
cal Journal that men's necks ave lo:
er than they
assorted hy
used to he,
DON'T MISS THIS,
A Cure For Stomach TronhlsaA New
Method, hy Absorntion=No Drags.
Are vam
(ag, Sar
pretinn, Pye
Weight in
1t means « diseased Stomach
afflicted with Short Breath
Eructations Heart Pains, Indi
ensia, Burnine Paine and I,
Pi of Sto nach. Acid Stomach,
Abdomen, Dizzinece, ("a
Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach Tor
ture?
f.et ue send von a hax a. Mall's Anti
Beleh Waicers free to convince vor that it
cures
1 t knoen, Ite
Notning else like
and very plencant
Harmless. No dru 5 ht
ean’. be enred otherwise cy enve M \
Reience. Drugs won't do—filiey eat up th
Stomach and make von wong
We know Mull's Anti-Beleh Wafers
enre
and we want vou to know it, henee this
offer, This offe r may not ay pear agam,
Jrsm— i hn arrest
|
3316 GOOD FOR 2c. 144 |
|
Send this coupon with your name |
and address and vour druggist’s name |
and 10c. in stamps or silver, and wel
| will supply you a sample free if yon
| have mever used Muil's Anti-Beleh |
| Wafers, and will also send vou a cer-
| tificate good for 23c¢. toward the pur-
| chase of more Belch Wafers. You will
| find them invaluable for stomach trou-
le; cures by absorption. Address
! MuLrL's Grave Tonic Co. 328 3d
Ave., Rock Island, Iil.
| Give Full Address and Write Plainlu.
er Lox, or by mail
Stamps accepted.
All druggists. 50c
wpon receipt of pri
Wireless Test.
The British Admi
test wireless tele
is about to
’ on an unpre-
cedented scule communication be-
tween the battleships and fleets in
the forthcoming m uvers. Ian these
maneuvers one fleet will start from
the co
st of Spain and the other from
the Wes and seek to
keep in constant with one an-
other.
STATE oF Ono, Cr1y or Torepo, |
Lucas Cousty, {
FRANK J, CHENEY maka: oath that he ia
senior partner of the firm of +. J. CaeNEY &
Co., doing business i i
County and State
firm will pay the sam of ox
LARS for each and every caso
that cannot be curel hy the us:
CATARRH CURE. FRANK
Sworn to before ma and sabser
1 tn ty of Toledo,
an l that said
TUNDRED DOL-
Of CATARRH
of Hanu's
(A=) Prosencs, this oth day
© SEAL. f ber, A.D., 1885. A. W.GLEAS
——— Notary Pu!
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internall
acts directly on the blor 1 and me 1S sur.
faces of the system. Non | for timonials,
; & Co, Toledo, O.
oustipations
Ccoking With Cold.
Ephraim Cutte i
Dr.
of a new pi
advocate
58 0f coo
rich he say II produce as
heat. The
i ion,
s the
ciory
frozen potato i
and under the
starch grains si
with the
results
n, cked
Greek Cotton Mills Busy.
The increase in the amount of v
cotton imported from the dd
States, Egypt, and India sli it
the Greek cotton quills ar
their output.
TRXITIZZXZTIXXTXIXZXON
£
Lumbago and Sciatica
* Nothing reaches the trouble
as quickly as
1. Jacobs
Known the world over as
LW)
XXXXXXIXXZ R200 20202200006040000000000004
The Master Cure
for Painsana Aches
Price, 25¢c. end 50c.
IXIXIITXXX
‘When you buy
WET
WEATHER
CLOTHING _,.z
you want 1s
complete
protection
and long
service: %
These and many 2
other good points
are combined in
TOWERS
FISH BRAND
OILED CLOTHING
You cant afford /
to buy any otier /
//
’
<
AJ TOWER CO BOLTON USA.
TOWER CANADIAN €O Lo
I~
Distended |
by intense |
and |
fissured, h changed into |
the same relations as by heat. Simi-
lar results have been obtained with
cranberries, onions and squashes.
sr —
MIDDLE LIFE
' A Time When Women Are Susceptible to Many
Dread Diseases-—Intelligent Women Prepare
for it. Two Relate their Experiences.
The “change of life" is
the most critical period
of a woman's existence,
und the anxiety felt by
women as it draws near
is not without reason,
Every woman who
neglects the care of her
liealth at this time in-
vites disease and pain.
When lier system is in
a deranged condition,
or she is predisposed to
npoplexy, or congestion
of any organ, the ten-
dency is at this period
likly to become active
~and with a host of ner-
vous irritations make
life a burden. At this
time, also, cancers and
tumors are more liable
to form and begin their
destructive work.
Such warning symp-
toms as sense of suffo-
cation, hot flashes, head-
aclies, backaches, dread
pending evil, timid-
ounds in the ears,
pitation of the heart,
parks before the eyes,
irregularities, const
tion, variable appet
inquietude
ziness, are
ptly heeded by in-
gent women who are
approaching the period
in life when woman's great change
may be expected,
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound was prepared to meet the needs
of womans system at this trying
period of her life. It invigorates and
strengthens the female organism and
builds up the weakened nervous system.
For special advice regarding this im-
portant period women are invited to
write to Mrs Pinkham at Lynn, Mass,
and it will be furnished absolutely frec
of charge. The present Mrs. Pinkham
isthe daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pink-
ham. her assistant before her decease,
and for twenty-five years since her
advice has been freely given to sick
women.
Read what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Com-
peund did for Mrs. Hyland and Mrs. | vice.”--
Hinkle :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —
¥ rs AEG Hyland 5
080008E0E800MeeDIIS00MECI0 soos”
«1 wrote you for advice and commenced
treatment with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound as you directed, and J am
happy to say that all those distressing symp-
toms left me and I have passed safely through
the change of life, a well woman. am
recommending your medicine to all my
friends."—Mrs. Annie E. G. Hyland, Chester
town, Md.
Another Woman's Case
“ During change of life words cannot ex-
ress what I suffered. My physician said I
ad a cancerous condition of the femals
organs. One day I read some of the testi-
monials of women who had been cured b
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoun
and I decided to try it and to write you for
advice. Your medicine made me a
woman, and all my bad symptoms soon
disappeated. : J
+ 1 advise every woman at this period of life
to take your medicine and write you for ad~
Mrs. Lizzie Hinkle, Salem, Ind.
What Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable
Compound did for Mrs. Hyland and
Mrs. Hinkle it will do for other women
“1 had been sufTering with displacement of | at this time of life.
the organs for years and was passing through
the change of life.
spells, sick headaches, and was very nervous.
My abdomen was badly
swollen: my stomach was sore: I had dizzy
It has conquered pain, restored
health, and prolonged life in cases that
utterly baffled physicians.
Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail.
IS GUARANTELD TO CURE
ho bY
JLB, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA,
io 10a dealer who won't Guarantee It,
' BACK IF IT DOESNT CURE.
UN
¥. WW. Diemer, 3. D., Manufacturer, Springfield, He.
The Ant Eater.
{ The bird iime trap, by which small
{ birds are caught, is an imitation of
| the tongue of the ant-eater, which is
| covered with a sticky slime, by which
ants and other small insects are cap-
tured.
King Consults Editors.
Frederick VIII, the new King of
Denmark, is said to be in the habit of
inviting editors of leading political
| organs to attend at the castle to dis-
{cuss the different political issues of
the day.
FS
“From the cradie to the baby chair”
HAVE YOU A BABY?
If so, you cught fo have a
{PHOENIX
| WALKING CHAIR
(PLIINTED)
“AN IDEAL ECLF~INGTRUCTOR.Y
our PIIOLIIX Valking Chair
hild securely, pre-
venting those painful falls and
! bumps which aroso frequent when
{ baby learns to wali.
BETTER TIAN A NURSE.
The chair is provided with a re-
movable, sanitary cloth seat, which
supports the weizht of the child
and prevents bow-lega and spinal
troubles; it also has a table attach-
ment which enables baby to find
amusement in its toys, cte., with.
out any attention,
“Ag Indispensable as a cradle.”
It is 80 constructed that it pre.
vouts sciled clothes, sickness from
drafts and floor germs, and is
recommended by physicians and
endorsed by bothmotherand baby.
_Combines pleasure and utility.
No baby should be without one.
Call at your furniture dealer
and ask to see one.
mrmary
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
® PHOENIX CHAIR CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
nly be had of your furniture dea
REE
8 Cano ier.
Rs .
od A
D rR gives quick relief and enres
worst eases. Book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment
¥ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga,
2a
c for 5c worth of leading 1406 novelties fn Chole
est Garden Seeds. 8's worth of Universal Pree
ful Coupune free with ever
BOLGTA NOR SEEDS TORS HALT
TIMORE,
NEW DISCOVERY; |
|
M | Prospect for Minerals H
| Dili Testand Blasthiores, weal
W. L. DoucLAS
SLES SHOES
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled atany price.
Eo if [ I ESTABYSHED
[>< ne Ee] | July ¢ (878
CRETE
<3 Seo ll
CapiTAL $2,500,001
L. DOUGLAS MAKES & SELLS MORE
MEN'S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER
MANUFACTURER 18 THE WORLD.
$10 G0 REWARD to anyone who can
1 disprove this statement.
If! could take you into my three large factories
at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite
care with which every pair of shoes is made, you
would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes *
cost more to make, why they bold their shape,
fit better, wear longer, and are of greater
intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe.
W. L. Douglas Sirond Made Shoes for
a,
rr te
Men, $2.50, $2. Boys’ School,
Dress Shoes, $2.50, $2,517.75, 81,
—Insist upon having W.L.Doug-
las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuins
|
MN
P|
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
Fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Maes.
That Delightful Aid to Health
Pain
Whitens the teeth— purifies
mouth and breath — cures nasal
) catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes,
f and by direct application cures
® all inflamed, ulcerated and
® catarrhal co ns caused by
j feminine ills.
Paxtine possesses extraordinary
cleansing, healing and germi-
cidal qualities unlike anything
else. Atall druggists. socents
LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE FREE
The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass
rill for Water
dati
We ec
DRILLING MACHINES
For Horse, Steam or
€Cascline Power.
Latest
Traction Machine,
LOOMIS WACHINE CO,
TIFFIN, Clin
P. N. U. 18, 1906.
48 1. LO Rk free. Highest refs.
Long experience, Fitegeral
&Co.Dept. bi, Washington, Du