Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, November 28, 1900, Image 3

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" If you send me anything
'just as good as Aycr's,' I shall
send it right back.
" I might afford to experi
ment with shoe polish, but I
can't and won't experiment
* with the medicine which means
sickness or health to me."
J. C. AYER COMPANY,
Practical Chcmisto, Lowell, Mass.
X Ayer'6 Sarsapariila I Aycr'a I lair Vigor
Ayer'c Pills J Ayer*a Cherry Pectoral
Aycr's Ague Cure J Aycr's Comatone
p|oß njjJcS
SIM
I The Chicago school board has sued
the five elevated railroad companies for
Best For the Boxvcls,
No matter what nils you, headache to %
eauoor, you wili never gut well until your
bowels nru put right. CABCAUISTS help
nature, euro you without n gripe or pain,
Iroduce easy natural movements, cost you
ust 10 cents to start getting your health
>aek. OABCAKKTH Candy Cathartic, the
genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tab
lot has C.O.C. stumped on it. Beware o 1
imitations.
Out of 40,000 vessels entering Chinese
ports every year 20.000 arc British.
Frcjr'e Vermifuge
Saves tho llvos of children. 'Sin. Druggists
and country stares, or by mail. 10. Si 8. I unv,
H AI/i'i.MOKK, AID.
Russia's Advance on china.
For nearly 30 years the boundary be
tween China and Russia remained as
agreed upon in tlie treaties of 1858 and
iB6O. But already the commercial and
► political activity of the Russians was
overstepping it. They had established
themselves in large numbers in the
cities of Chinese Manchuria —in Kiakh
ta, Mukden. Kirin and Tsitsiliar, the
residence of the Mandarin Governor.
The navigation <>f the Ossuri and the
Sungari rivers fell wholly into their
hands. The steamships of the Amur
Company put Russia in rapid commun
ication with Japan and San Francisco.
"Scientific Missions traversed China
in all directions. At Peking the Rus
san colony acquired a continually great
or importance and the ambassador of
the czar wielded more inlhiencc at court
than the representatives of any other
lertainmcnts.—lnternational Monthly.
Liverpool has the largest dockage in
Britain.
WOMEN MUST SLEEP.
Avoid Nervous Prostration.
If you are dangerously sick what is
the first, duty of your physician? He
\ quiets the nervous system, he deadens
the pain, and you sleep well.
Friends ask, "what is the cause?"
and the answer comes in pitying
tones, nervous prostration. Jt came
upon you so quietly in the beginning,
that you wore not alarmed, and when
sleep* deserted you night after night
until your eyes fairly burned in tho
darkness, then you tossed in nervous
agony praying for sleep.
Mas. A. HAKTLEY.
You ought to have known that
wlfttn you ceased to be regular in your
3oursos, and you grew irritable with
out cause, that there was serious
trouble somewhere.
Yon ought to know that indigestion,
exhaust i on. womb displacements,
fainting, dize.ines-s headache, and
backache send the nerves wild with
affright. and you cannot sleep.
Mrs. Hartley, of \V. Congress St.,
Chicago. 111., whose portrait pub
lish. suffered all these agonies, and
was entirely cured by Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound : her case
should be a warning to others, and
her cure carry conviction to the minds
| of every suffering woman of tho un
failing efficiency of T.vdiaE. Pinkhaw'a
Vegetable Compound.
Dr. By IPs Cough
Cures a cough or cold at once.
Conquers croup, bronchitis, g I I g_i
|i grippe and consumption. 35c. ./
I PATENTS Sir
A ■ 311LO B. STEVENS <3c CO., l£s*Vo. 18*4
L ▼ Dir. r, 817-Mth streot, WASHINGTON, 1). C.
, . Bruuuh offices: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit.
Attractive lied Covering*.
! The new showings in bed cover-1
| Ings never were more attractive or
I varied. The Anatolians are special?y
I pleasing this season, and from the
great ease with which they may be
; laundered recommended themselves to
! many. Pique or dimity trimmed with
; white bail fringe is a new idea in bed
| spreads that is very pretty and quite
la mode. Then the old reliable Mar
I seilles, with its weight and launder
i lug diflicu fides, but lasting qualities,
I is to be had in very new and novel
! designs, many different in effect from
; those ever offered before.
Water For Washing Woolen*.
| Many people sincerely believe that
; it is impossible to wash all-wool un
: dergarments without their shrinking.
I This is a popular error. With an
I abundance of soft water, keeping
; every water through which the flan
i nels pass at the same temperature,
| with pure white soap and careful dry
ing, there need he no shrinkage. To
; soften the hard water obtained from
the rivers and springs from which
; most cities get their water supply use
; a tablespoonful of household amnio*
| nin to a gallon of water. If the wa
| tor is exceptionally hard more amino
• nia will be required. Having ready
i the softened water, licat as hot as the
hand can bear comfortably and pour
I into two tubs. Make one with a strong
soapsuds, using a borax soap—never
{ a resinous brown soap.
Washing Colored Cultcoca.
Colored calicoes should be washed
in warm, not hot, water. Blues and
I greens are strengthened by the use
of vinegar in the rinsing or bluing
water, allowing one tablespoon of vin
| egar to a quart of water. With other
1 calicoes or cambrics salt may he used
; to set the color. Miss Parlos declares
! that the ideal way to treat delicate
! colors, dark sateens or mourning
i goods is not to use soap at all, but the
i following starch mixture, which
j cleanses and stiffens at the same timer
j For two dresses make one gallon of
I starch by mixing one cupful of Hour
with one pint of cold wa or. Stir un
! til all the lumps are dissolved and
I pour over it: three aud one-half quarts
of boiling water. Cook until clear and
| smooth, then strain through cheese
i cloth. Pour half the mixture in a
• tub containing four gallons of warm
. water. Wash one of the dresses in
j this, rubbing the fabric the same as
if soap were used. Itinsc in two cleat
waters#ind hang out to dry, when they
' will be found to be about as stiff as
; when new. Sprinkle only an hour or
so before ironing. Calicoes should all
be Ironed on the wrong side.—Wash
ington Star.
RECIPES: T
: Spongo Sandwiches—Mnko cottage
| cheese in the usual way, but after it
I has drained mince thoroughly in clear,
j cold water to remove the acid; put
iin n cheesecloth aud squeeze dry. To
J a cup of the dry, sweet curd add one
j fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, a dash
of paprika, if liked and half a cup of
| sweet cream. Spread thickly between
j thin slices of sponge cake,
i Cabbage Salad—Boil one-half cupful
j of vinegar, the yoke of four eggs, two
J tablespoon fills of sugar, one teaspoon
[ ful of mustard and a level tablespoon
fill of butter until the mixture is lira
i pid. Season with celery salt, and
When it is cold add one cupful of
cream that has been whipped. I'our
over the shredded or chopped cabbage
and garnish with stoned olives and
hard boiled eggs.
Cheese Souffle—Melt three tablespoon
fuls of butter; when bubbling blend
in three tablespoonfuls of flour; stir
i in gradually one-half pint of scalding
milk aud cook slowly for five minutes,
stirring constantly; add one cupful of
grated cheese, pepper and salt to
[ taste, and the beaten yolks of three
j eggs, then fold In lightly the beaten
! whites, turn into a buttered dish and
! hake in a hot oven for about twenty
' minutes. Serve immediately,
j liavioli of Spinach—Use ten table
j spoonfuls of seasoned, mashed and
whipped potntoes; add six (ahlespoon
| fuls of flour and half as much but
ter; mix well, then lay the mass upon
a floured board and roll out an inch
thick; cut in circles the size of a sau
cer aud moisten the edges with the
yolk of an egg; place a tablespoonful
| of cooked spinach on and fold turn
over style; brush the top with the
white of an egg and hake (ill a nice
brown, then arrange ground the fish
platter with a heaping teaspoonful of
whipped cream On each. Spinach ac
quires a mellowness of flavor by re
peatedly warming over.
Confection Cake—Cream two cups
of sugar wtth two-tliirds of butter,
add M cup of sweet milk, two and a
half cups of flour, two rounding
spoonfuls of baking powder, (he
whites of six eggs l,eaten very stiff
and haifa teaspoonful of flavoring ex
tract. Bake in four layers. Boil two
cups of sugar with half a cup of water
till like thick honey, pour gradually
on the stiffly beaten whites of two
eggs, heat till cold. In half of it put
candled cherries, figs aud raisins
chopped fine, with 11 few hickorynut
and almond meats, also chopped, and
flavor. Spread between the layers.
Use the other half of the icing to cover
the top of the cake. This is a deli
cious cuke.
CUTTING WITH RED HOT TOOLS. !
'.Economics Resulting From n New Hard
ening Process.
If a machine of any kind can be
made to do twice as much work as
before, or more than twice as much,
the capacity of the shop will be en- !
liirged # without adding to the struc- j
ture itself, or putting in any new ap- j
paratus. And that is what has '
recently been accomplished at the
works of the Bethlehem (Penn.) Steel j
Company. A large part of the instill- ;
la lion there consists of lathes. When .
a lathe is used to reduce the dimen
sions of a mass of steel (like a steam- \
ship shaft) very hard tools must be j
employed, and they can cut only to a
certain depth without overheating.
Overheating, it is needless to say, 1
usually ruins any steel tool.
But, as the result of a recent in- i
veution, it has been made possible to
work the lathes at Bethlehem as never
before. The cut has been deepened,
on the average, 30 per cent., the feed
(or sideways travel of the tool) has i
I been increased 24 per cent., and the |
cutting speed, or rotational speed of i
the object in the lathe, has been raised j
IS3 per cent. It is estimated that the
amount of material cut away, in turn
ing, averages 137.3 pounds an hour,
| where formerly it was only 31.18. j
i Here, is an apparent gain of 340 per !
[ cent, in the efficiency of the machines, j
j This wonderful change results from i
I the invention of a process of harden- !
| ing the steel of which the tools are
composed. P. W. Taylor and Maunscl
White originated it. The means em
i ployed in it are still a secret. But the
! effects are certainly very clear. Re
j ferring to this matter, Cassier's Maga
zine says:
The underlying value of the Tayior-
Wliite process is that it gives to the
steel the exceptional property of re
taining a high degree of hardness,
even when healed to a visible red
; heat, and it is thus possible with one j
1 of these tools to cut steel at a speed !
so great as to heat up the point of the i
| tool to redness and have it continue
i to cut for several minutes at this speed i
and still leave a comparatively smooth
| finish on the work. But cutting metal (
I in it lathe with a tool at red heat is
something which the sceptic must see
in order to believe. Opportunity for
this, however, luis been given, and is
daily available, at the Bethlehem
worlcs.
Copper)!reel mto Deadly*
Poison from the bite of a copperhead
is deadly. The smallest quantity of
the poison produces a local irritation.
In serious cases the whole mass of the
blood is infected in the course of a
few seconds or minutes, according to
the severity of the case. The poison
produces paralysis of the nerve cen
tres, and when it is once carried
through the system death ir; certain.
No antidote is known capable of
counteracting or neutralizing the
action of copperhead poison. Fayrer
has demonstrated that injections of
ammonia or liquid permanganate of
potassium are useless after the poison
has entered the system. In solution,
however, permanganate of potassium
destroys the deadly properties of the
poison.
Gunther. in his "Reptiles of British
India," has suggested mechanical
means for preventing the poison from
entering the stem. Circulation, if
possible, should he cut off, by binding
the injured extremity above the bite.
The wound should be enlarged by deep
incisions, or should be cut entirely
off. The poisoned blood should then,
so far as possible, be sucked from the
wound. The wound should be cauter
ized or rubbed either with ammonia
or permanganate cf potassium. Stimu
lants should be taken freely at. short
Intervals, in order to strengthen the
action of the heart.
To Acquire Japane.se.
Six thousand ideographs are enough
for even the most learned Japanese;
for persons of ordinary education, 3000
to 4000 suffice; but 3000 are perhaps as
ptany as the European student can
manage to assimilate. A knowledge
of the ideograph is, however, not
sufficient. Tlicy more often represent
vocables rather than words, and two
monosyllabic vocables are joined to
form the jukuji, or compounds, of the
usual written style and of common
speech, and very often the meaning of
the compound can scarcely be guessed
from the meaning of the components
Nor is this the only difficulty. Most
ideographs may be pronounced in two
ways at least; thus we have "mei" or
"myo," "sel" or "sai," "jin" or "nin,"
and so on, both being Japanese pro
nunciations of the original Chinese
sounds, as the ideographs were im
ported from Go (Chinese Wu) in
Southern, or Kan (Chinese Han) in
Northern China, respectively.—The
Athenaeum.
It Tried lie:- Faith.
They were sitting on the sandy
beach, and no word had been spokou
by either for a full minute.
"You doubt me!" he at length ex
claimed. "Have I not told you ever
and over again that I love you, and
you only; and did I ever tell you an
untruth, Katlicrine?"
"I would that 1 could have an ab
solute faith In you," she replied, sti
lling a sob; "but I heard you toll uncle
that you once caught a brook trout
that weighed three pounds and six
ounces." And the tears liowed down
her fair young face, while lie tapped
the sand with ids foot and solemnly
gazed o'er the wide blue sea.—London
Answers.
ltnsalau oil IVells.
The average depth of Russian petro
leum wells is a little over 1)00 feet.
The chief obstacle encountered is salt
water, similar to the water of the Cas
pian Ben. Which comes in through the
loose and sandy soil.
Bcmanco ol Tall Suildings.
I Or course all these men in the tall
i building.-, whether possessed of crcat- j
ive genius or of intelligence enough only i
jto run one of the elevators, arc alike !
i philistines to those persons who find j
| nothing romantic or interesting in our
modern, much maligned skyscrapers,
i which have also been called "monu
! mcnts of modern materialism," and cv
j cn worse names, no doubt, because they
i arc unpreccdent and unacadcmic, prob
ably, as much as because ugly and unre- j
! strained, says a writer in Scribner's.
| To many of us, however, shameless as
! it may be to confess it, these downtown
1 streets arc fascinating enough for what
j they are to-day, even if they had no
I past to make them all the more charm
; ing: and these erect, jubilant young
j buildings, whether beautiful or not,
■ seem quite interesting—from their
i bright tops, where, far above the tur
' moil anc! confusion, Mrs. Janitor sits
sewing in the sun while the children
! play hide-and-seek behind water-butts
j and air-shafts (there is no danger of
i falling off, it is a relief to know, because
J the roof is walled in like a garden)
j down to the dark bottom where are the
| safe deposit vaults, and the trusty old
: watchmen and the oblong boxes with
: great fortunes in them, alongside of wills
, that may cause family fights a few years
; later, and add to the affluence of ccr
| tain lawyers in the offices overhead.
! Deep down, 30 or 40 feet under the
j crowded sidewalk, the stokers shovel
j coal under the big boilers all day, and
' electricians do interesting tricks with
j switchboards, somewhat as in the hold
,of a modern battleship. In the many
1 tiers of floors overhead are the men
with the minds that make these high
buildings necessary and make downtown
j what it is. with their dreams and
schemes, their courage and imagination,
; their trust and distrust in the knowledge
| and ignorance of other human beings,
j which are means by which they bring
I about great successes and great fail
ures, and have all the fun of playing a
j game, with the peace of conscience and
self-satisiaction which come from hard
work and manly sweat.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYF.S are fast to sun
light, washing aud rubbing, fciold by all
; druggists.
; Alabama has a fine old capitol, set
; on a hill and rich in historical associa
i tions, but it has 110 governor's mansion
i and is beginning to think it needs one.
| "100 per cent, yearly dividends from a
1 gold mine is not uncommon." -New York
] Herald. Fifty gold mines that havo paid
i -ir20.000.000 in dividends followed the same
I plan as we work upon. Send for our pros
-1 pectus. Golden Tree Mining and Milling
| Co., 32 Broadway, New York.
I Some 2,000.000 pounds of camphor
i are consumed in the United States year
ly.
STATE OP OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, I
IJUOAS COUNTY. 1
FRANK J. CHUNKY makes onth that lie Isthe
nior partner of the firm of F. J. < h KNKY SC
' 'o., doing businessntliet 'iiyofToledo,County
and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay
j the sum of ONR IIUMIUIII) i>oi,i,/jts for each
! and every case of CATARRH that cannot be
cured by the use of HALT'S CATARRH I THE.
FRANK J. ( HENEY.
Sworn to before mo and subscribed in ray
;— ~) presence, this dth day of December.
1 \ BEAU> A. D. 133 l). A. \V. (ILKAKON,
I I r-") Nuiam Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, anrl
uctsdirectly on the blood and mucous surfaces
; of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. .1. * HENEY 6c co. t Toledo, O.
| Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills ure the best.
A burglar stole S6OO from a resident
of St. Paul, Minn. The next day he re
turned that sum and $250 to boot.
I am sure Fiao's Cure for Consumption saved
my life three ye.r neo.— Mus. Tuos RUB
BISH. Maple St.. Norwich. N. I'.. Feb. 17.1900,
Taxon: "Do you have an alarm clock
at your house?" Paxon: "We don't
have to have; we've got twins."
To Cure n Cold In On© Day.
Take LAXATIVE RROMO QUININE TABLETS. All
druggltß refund the in uiey If it falls in euro.
K. W. (1 MOVE'S siguaturo is on each box. Uso.
The present season is reported to
have been the finest for rose-growing in
England for many years.
Novel London Restaurant.
There is a famous site in London
where once stood the palace of Crom
well, Earl of Essex, and afterward the
hall of the Drapers' Company. Here
will be opened in a few days one of the
most remarkable and magnificent res
taurants in London, the Throgmorton.
It is the nineteenth century develop
ment of the old catinghouses of the citv,
in which you dived down a few steps,
into a musty apartment, where very
plain food, but good wine, was procur
able. At the Throgmorton the proprie
tors have dived to some purpose. They
have dived and tunneled, and have con
structed a restaurant of three floors un
derground which apparently consists
chiefly of long galleries all luxuriously
fitted and furnished.
The kitchens are a dream of culinary
resourcefulness. The cellars are such
that the wines can be kept at the exact
temperature good for their health, an 1
the grill-room is something to make
one look back with disdain to the old
days when the hungry city man used to
personally select his chop or steak at
Bannister's, the butcher, and hurry off
with it in paper to one of the places
where he might have it grilled for a
penny, with bread and condiments ex
tra.—Cardiff Western Mail.
In the last presidential election Mc-
Kinicy received 142.500 more votes than
all his competitors collectively.
Me Kin ley's plurality in 1896 205.072;
McKinlcy's apparent plurality in 1900,
293.55.T
Just or. • populist vuic was cast L Sa
vannah, Ga„ at the recent State election.
DON'T RUIN YOUR STOMACH WITH iMEDICINE.
Siinyadi J&nos
ijTSw IS A NATURAL LAXATIVE MINERAL WATER.
Endorsed and used by the most prominent physicians
V\~f V * n !^ie world as the best and snfest remedy lor uis-
ordered stomach, biliousness, liver troubles, gout and
y Cures Constipation!
IglßHfr Take one-half glassful on arising in t he morning and
rarafflflHlu you will feel the. remarkable effects in half an hour.
Hi v ASK- I LOOKS-.Ww
1 "llunyadi Jano."| IV Centre Panel.
\ Sole Exporter, Firm of Andreas Sax!chner, 130 Pulton St.,N.Y.
Three greet and cerapSsfe cures effasted by Sr. Grass's
fiervura Btaed and Klerve Remedy,
lui
fjHHI
llfr k
BAILEY
Mrs. J. A. Fcrre, who resides near 90S Alain Street, Hartford,
Conn., says:
"My daughter I.uln became very ill with St. Vitus dance over a year ago. She became so bad
thatshclobtthcu.se of'her right arm and side, and we thought at 011 c time she would lose her
speech. Her tongue was almost paralyzed. t>he was so bad she could not feed herself, and at
night she would get so nervous I had to sit and hold her. I tried several doctors, but thev did not
do her any good. I did not lind anything that would help her until I tried Dr. Greene's Nervura
blood and nerve remedy. She is now, by the use of this medicine, entirely cured."
C. li. Bailey, Esq., of Waterbury, Vt., writes;
"T am more than glad to write about my little daughter. Until a short time ago she had al
ways been a very delicate child and subject to sick spells lasting weeks at a time, she was very
nervous, and our family doctor said we would never raise her, she was so delicate and feeble.
We tried many remedies without the least good. We felt much anxiety about Ire: , especially as
no doctors could benefit her. and had great tear for her future beaming of the wonders being
done by Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, 1 determined to give it to her. She soon
commenced to improve under its use, and rapidly gained in every respect. She eats and sleeps
well, and her nerves are strong The medicine lias done wonder's for her and it is the best we
ever kticw. I recommend Dr. Grceue's Nervura, blood and nerve remedy, to everybody."
Mrs. J. Learmontli, of 776 Broadway, South Boston, Mass., says:
"At ten years of age rny daughter became affected with a nervous condition which soon de
veloped into St. Vitus' dance. It was pronounced by the attending physician to be a very severe
attack. The mouth would be drawn spasmodically far to one side, the hands aud arms were rest
less and constantly twitching. Her limbs also were weak; her ankles bent under her so that it
was almost impossible to walk. She was so nervous that she would scream almost like u maniac
aud then have fits of crying. After two months' treatment without a cure, I concluded to try
Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. Three bottles entirely cured her. bhe is now
thirteen years old, aud has been well ever since, and to-day is a picture of health."
Remains of an Anciont Galley.
The remains of an ancient galley have
been found six feet below the surface at
Tottenham Marshes, during the excava
tions for the new reservoirs of the Ease
London Water Company. The vessel
is 50 feet long, and nasa beam of 26
i feet. Its timbers are of oak and elm.
land, from the form of the rivets used, it
is supposed to have belonged to tile
Danes who were defeated in Lea Valley
by King Alfred in 804 A. D. An an
tique sword and some bones of animals
now extinct in England were also dug
up, and have been sent to the British
M "seitni.
There arc 120 firms in Germany cn
jgaged in the acetylene industry. Most
|of the burners are made at Nuremberg.
There are no fewer than twenty-six
small towns in Germany lighted by ace
tylene gas. The first plant of this kind
for lighting stnall towns in Germany
v as erected at Hassfurt. a town of 2.500
' inhabitants.
j There is only one sudden death
among women t< eight among men.
00-&O 0 0 OM 000 00
I Beware of Them |
X There are two afflictions whicl* V
X perhaps give the most paiu V
X trouble, viz: V
Sciatica
Lumbago
X Both disable and cripple,
I but §
| St. Jacobs Oil 5
X is their best cure.
§ |
U Q POOOOOOOOOOCt 0-b
I Indian widows in Sitka go into
mourning by painting the upper part of
[their faces black down to their mouths.
A dyspeptic ip never cii gord term* with
himself. Something ii always wrong. Get
it right Ly chewing Ketrnun'a Teppin Gum.
To prevent obstruction to traffic in
the main streets of Boston in the day
time, all the repairs arc made at night.
There is no other iuk "just ns good" n*
Carter's Ink. lm-re is only one ink that in
host of ail ami that is Carter's luk. Use it.
Including Formosa, the mikado rule -
over .j0.000.0c0 subjects.
The Best Prescription for Chills
and Fever is a bottle of GKOVB'S TASTBi.Esa
Ciin.L TONIC. It Is simply iron ami quinine In
a tasieless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c.
One hundred thousand tons 01' apples
arc raised on British soil yearly.
Fits pormniient.ly cured. No fit,* or nervous,
aess after llrst day's use or Dr. Kline's Groat
Norvo Restorer. $:. trial bottle ami treatise
free. Dr.Ii.II.KUNE.LUi.a3I Arch bt.Phi.u.l'a.
The nmnber of persons cremated in
Germany from 1870 to ißoy was .Mio.
Mrs Wlnslow'sßoothingPyr.i?) forrhihirm
leethin;*. sol tens the gums. reduces infinnim, -
tion. allays ialu. cures wind colie.lJfx, a butt le.
About 7.000 of the inhabitants of Nor
way die every year of consumption.
The real worth of W. I
L. Douglas !f>U.CO and wb
flkl.ftO lioes compared ... sjl
with other makes is
84.00 to I*7 V 7%
Ourßl<iilt KdgeTJr.o EJL|X Wj
cannot he equalled n( r-s
any priee. Over 1,000,- f
000 satisfied wearero. '
rm^^Soh® no Pi'X of W. I. Douglas
KFA-T COLON- $3 or 13.5 J shoes will
JPA CYELETS V^ VVI! J outwear
0 \\v two pairs of crcinary
KPSEF*^----A IV K &S CR 33.50
1 ;;; r - V
\Vo iirotLo largest mulcorn ' f men'..; B3
fii:d shoes in tl.o world. make
and Hftlmorc!*.') unit shoos than my
other tw." l r: ;c r •: ; .< . . ts.
BSSi j f I BEST
I i-vnrywl-i t 1 • v ..1,1 , ! .l
t/ .v - ;$3.00
rhovßureWl :h.m I'.", X'J'V** v
AKfi TH KB KM I'. 1 our dealer •!
thojn | we (jr.. •>:i- iVc'.v rxirhiMvo .. 1c i>i ... ; ;
& iili" sahMtliiite ~ 0.1 hnvm. 3..
I)oiicli •h.-'L-n with iiiinic n.l rr-.rc fttanqwl <•:.
II yt U> 1 1 r 1 |
Our abitcd will jn.i h v..n nivv. ii-ro.' Cttfult> .
: W. JL* Etroel* ton, MWH,'
b ROPirarssi
crises- Bouk of testiuioiilsU n<l tO <LU VH' tieAtiuei-t
Free. Dr. H. H. QftEEM U BOMS, Sux U, Atlanta. 08.
P. N. U. lt. 11)00.