Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, December 05, 1900, Image 3

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    "If you send me anything
*just as good as Ayer'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 Chemists, Lcwc'.l, Mas*.
Ayer'a Saraaparilla 1 Aycr'a Hair Vigor
Ayer's Piils Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Ayer's Ague Cure j Ayer's Comatone
The Chicago school board h;..> -.ucd
the five elevated railroad compan.cs for
Beat For the Bowels,
No matter what alls you, headache to a
•ancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right. Cascaiikts help
nature, cure ytu without a gripe or pulu,
produce easy natural inoveutents, cost you
Just 10 cents to start getting your health
back. Cascahets Cuudy Cathartic, the
genuine, put up In metal boxes, every tab
let bus O.C.G. stamped on it. lievrare of
Imitations.
Out of 40,000 vessels entering Chinese
ports every year 20,000 are British.
Frcy's Verm If 11 go
Saves t.lio lives of children. &>c. Druggists
and country stores, or by utuil. E. &S. Fbl Y.
Baltimoue, MD.
Russia's Advance on China.
For nearly 30 years the boundary be
tween China and Russia remained as
agreed upon in the 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. Kiriti and Tsitsihar, the
residence of the Mandarin Governor.
The navigation of 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
er importance and the ambassador of
the czar wielded more influence at court
than the representatives of any other
tertainments.—lnternational Monthly.
J.ivcrpool 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. It carae
upon you so quietly in the beginning,
that you were not alarmed, and when
sleep deserted you night after night
until your eyes fairly burned in the
darkness, then you tossed in nervoui
agony praying for sleep.
Mas. A. Habtley.
You ought to have known that
when you ceased to be regular in your
aourses, and you grew irritable with
out cause, that there was serious
trouble somewhere.
You ought to know that indigestion,
exhaustion, womb displacements,
fainting, dizziness, headache, and
backache send the nerves wild with
affright, and you cannot sleep.
Mrs. Hartley, of 221 W. Congress St.,
Chicago. 111., whose portrait w<s pub
lish, suffered all these agonies, and
was entirely cured by Lvdia 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 the un
failing efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham'i
Vegetable Compound.
Dr. Bull's Cough
Cures a cough or cold at once. d*
Conquers croup, bronchitis. 4y |ll fg
grippe anil consumption. 25c. J
FA S M i *3 Con^n'W
■ MII'O 11. NTEVI2NH & CO., Katsb. IWH
Dir. t, 817 —Mtn Street, YVAHHINUTON, l>. C.
oflicAyi; IHOcako, OflTttbmd uad JJelrutt.
ART OF HAWAIIAN COOKS
ROAST THEIR FOWL TWO DAYS (N
THE EARTH.
How the Knnttka Method* of Automatic
Cooking May lie Adapted for tlio I'rcjf
urat ion of All Sorts of Food in Camps
—Tlie Norwegian leather Itox.
In the "Cruise of the Cachalot" a
story is told of an interesting method
of cooking among the Hawaiian Island
ers. A hole was dug iu the ground,
this was filled with fuel, and when it
burned down to live coals earth was
thrown over the coal and tramped
down. Meanwhile a fowl or animal,
having been dressed, was wrapped in a
large palm leaf and laid on the earth
over the coals. The hole was then
tilled up and banked over. Meanwhile
Mrs. Hawaii went about her business,
invited her guests, and after two days
opened the hole and brought out the
food, clean and, the writer says, of
the finest flavor they had ever known.
This is not strange. The simple island
er's was really the most scientific meth
od of preparing food. The heat was
stored in the walls of the hole and iu
the coals. With this source of stored
heat the food was slowly, automatically
and perfectly cooked. The Indian, who
leaves the feathers on his fowl, smeavs
it with clay and buries it In the coals
several hours, secures the same result,
food automatically cooked preserving
all the juices and flavors. Any gray
beard who hasn't forgotten that he was
once a boy and used to hook corn and
roast it in husks will swear that there
never was such corn. He is right.
It is very easy to adapt the Hawaiian
method of automatic cooking for the
preparation of all sorts of foods in
ei ni]). Procure a large vessel with a
close fitting lid. In the lid lit a tube
about a quarter to a half an inch in
diu'neter to permit the escape of the
steam and prevent the lifting of the
lid. Dig a hole in the ground two feet
deep and large enough to leave be
tween the vessel and the walls a space
ol' eight inches. Fill the hole of fuel
and let it burn down to bright coal.
Cover it lightly witii earth and set
your can in the centre of the live
coals. Sprinkle about an inch of earth
or sand in the bottom of the can. Place
the different articles to be cooked in
vessels, preferably with loose fitting
lids, and set them in the can. You can
cook, if you choose, in glass fruit jars;
food looks so clean and appetizing
cooked in glass. Fit your lid, with its
tube, on the large can. Fill up the
hole and cover up the can with at
least eight inches of earth. Let it alone
four or five hours, or all day, or all
night. When you are ready remove
the dirt, lift out your can, brush off the
lid, look within and lo! a dinner a la
| Hawaii perfectly prepared.
Another simple form of automatic
camp cooking is an adaptation of the
Norwegian feather box, which Is made
with two boxes of such sizes that when
the smaller is placed inside the larger
it will leave n six-inch space on bottom,
top and sides. The space between the
boxes is filled with feathers. A stone
Jar is placed in the Inside box. Two
gallons of boiling water is poured Into
that jar. A nicely dressed goose is put
into the water, and the box covered
With a feather-capped lid. This is left
alone for a night, and the morning
finds the goose thoroughly and dcli-
Clusky cooked, withtwogallonsof gravy
or soup stock. To adapt the Norwegian
method to practical cninp cooking take
a box two feet and a half long, 18 to
it inches wide and about 18 inches
llgli; or take the lower half of a bar
rel. Cover the box with 15 or 2b thick
nesses of newspaper. Set within a ves
sel holding three or four gallons of
water. Fill this vessel with boiling
Water. Boil the food to be cooked for
two or three minutes in salted water,
then put It into email vessels and set
the vessels in the larger vessel in the
box. Cover the box with a paper
covered lid and throw over the lid a
piece of carpet to prevent the escape
of heat where the lid fits onto the box.
In this way all the green vegetables,
fowls, meats and eggs can In- cooked.
If you want to be forehanded you
might do this: Before you start out on
your trip make a trunk box and line
it with the newspapers, asbestos paper,
or with about two Inches of mineral
wool, which is the best known noncon
ductor of Back this with cooking
utensils and food. When yon reach
the camp unpack, boil the water, and
In an hour's time you can be cooking
in your trunk and at the same time
fishing, stargazing or visiting with your
best girl.
The automatic principle of the Hawai
ian and Norwegian cooking can be
combined with tlie general idea of the
barbecue methods as follows: Dig a
trench three feet long. 18 Inches deep
and 18 inches wide. Fill it with wood
and let it burn to live coals. Here is
your chance for toasting or broiling.
Get a yard square or less of one-fourth
to one-half inch furnace screen wire
netting. Place two pieces of strap
iron or gas pipe or poles across the
trench, hay wire netting over it and
lay on fish, fowl, bread or steak or po
tatoes. Broiling toasting, roasting
over, now is your chance for some au
tomatic cooking. Smooth the coals
town till level over the bottom of the
tench. Cover these live coals with
ishes or sand, rut in your bread,
meats, fish, cereals, ungrouml coffee
or what you will. Cover the trench
tightly with two layers of boards, or
•mo layer and a heavy coat or blanket.
The heat stored in the coals and in the
walls will cook for you while you
tdeep. The ripened product will be
waiting for you in the morning.
The ideal method of automatic camp
cooking is withinatrencboven. 16there
is a hillside with clay, cut a trench two
and one-halt feet long, two feet wide
and walls 20 Inches deep. Across this
trench lay three pieces of old iron rods
or gas pipes. I,ay over these a piece
of heavy sheet iron, 28 inches wide
and three feet four inches long, with
eight inches turned up at the front
Cover this top with a foot of earth or
sand. Fill the trench with fuel. The
door will be your flue. When the fire
has burned down to bright coals you
have a rare opportunity to learn what
fish tastes like prepared just light.
The rarest, most delicate way to broil
fish is to toast or plank it before the
live coals. Epicures will journey a
hundred miles for a planked shad din
ner. Get a board, hickory if possible,
two feet long. 15 inches wide and two
inches thick. Oak will do, but is not
so good as hickory. Split your fish,
nail with bright nails back against the
board, then lean the board before the
open front. Have the coals drawn for
ward. The fish oils will run out, and
you will have a crisp, clean piece of
toasted fish, luclous, digestible. In the
same way, with a board or a wire
toaster hung against the hoard, you
can have broiled steaks, chops, etc.
A pan at tho bottom will catch the
juices of the meats.
Now draw the coals out or cover
tliem with earth, sand or ashes. You
have your stored heat now ready to
produce those chemical reactions that
we call cooking. What is more and to
the point is the fact that stored heat
will bring about those necessary
chemical changes in a more perfect
manner than is possible with an uncon
trojable direct heat, no matter how ex
pensive a range you might have. You
can bake pies, cookies and puddings to
perfection. Beans, roasts, oatmeal,
light bread loaves, corn pones, etc., are
stored away, preferably in stone ves
sels with covers. Take two boards and
put one against the front of the stove,
the other six inches from the front;
fill in between with earth, go to bed and
dream of "heaven and home-made
bread." In the morning the rich, nutty
bread is there, and heaven, too if you
will, is not far away. Or if it is even
ing and you are back, tired from limit
ing or casting, what more heavenly
than to find your oven full of foods,
soups and drinks, hot and wholesome,
waiting for you, automatically cooked.
—Chicago Times-Herald.
THE WATCHMAN AND HIS CAT.
Fellna Attachment of Unnaual Uharactoi
in a New York liuilUing.
Sitting oil the steps of a house under
construction on the upper west side was
a watchman on duty. Almost at his
feet, lying on the stone base of the iron
fence that started at the steps, was a
cat stretched out there comfortably
hut with head erect, and scanning
whatever came withiu view—the
watchman's cat.
It is not very remarkable to see cats
around buildings that are going up.
Tramp cats find a sheltering place in
such structures if they are permitted
to remain, as not infrequently they are,
and they feed on the crumbs that fall
from tlie workman's table; and it may
easily be that the men employed on
tlie building give the eat something
more substantial than that, in the form
of fragments of food. Sometimes a cat
that thus takes quarters in a building
under way is enabled to stay there af
ter the building is finished and occu
pied. Perhaps, for example, it may
catch the fancy of, or make friends
with the engineer, and so find in the
engine room of tlie building a comfort
able, pleasant and fixed home; taking
upon itself as its share of the duties
of the situation the keeping of the
place clear of rats, and staying there,
it may he, until it dies, or until the
tramp fever once more starts it out
into tlie world.
But this cat that was sitting there
so comfortably and serenely, and yet
so alertly, oil the stone base of tho
fence at the watchman's feet was not
a stray cat that happened along there
and stopped. It was the watchman's
own cat, which lie had brought from
home, to keep him company; and it
did that very decidedly. Wherever the
watchman went, day or night, there
tlie eat followed like a dog. If tlie
watchman went around the corner,
for instance from the front to the side
of the building, in tlie street, the cat
went along behind him there; and in
side tlie building, wherever he went up
stairs or down, the cat followed him
just the same; everywhere from top
to bottom. There were no rats in
the building and so the cat's attention
was not diverted in that manner.
When he moved it followed him about;
and when he settled dowu it settled
near by.
It was night when tlie watchman
and his cat were seen on this occasion,
111 the light shod by the street lamp on
tlie corner; the watchman sitting on the
steps of the building watching, and the
eat, to all appearances watching, too.—
New York Sun.
A Gentlaman'a Distress.
At one time the English public heard '
a great deal about the hidden poverty j
of men and women in rich places. It '
is likely to again become a topic of
public discussion? For instance, tlie
following advertisement appeared in
the London Standard:
"WILL any Lady or Gentleman who !
has a house in London and have more
rooms than they require kindly LET
a Gentleman (by birth) have a BED- i
ROOM ? Advertiser is 27 years old, J
good family, and would willingly take :
entire charge of a house (experienced
in tills capacity); highest references.—l
Cadogau."
Romance ot Tail Buildings.
i Of course all these men in the tall
buildings, whether possessed of creat
ive genius or of intelligence enough only
to run one of the elevators, are alike
Philistines to those persons who find
nothing romantic or interesting in our
i modern, much maligned skyscrapers,
, which have also been called "monu
ments of modern materialism," and ev
; en worse names, no doubt, because they
are unprecedcnt 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
streets are fascinating enough for what
they arc to-day, even if they had no
£>ast to make them all the more cliarm
; tng; and these erect, jubilant young
buildings, whether beautiful or not,
I scent quite interesting—from their
bright tops, where, far above the tur
i moil and confusion, Mrs. Janitor sits
j sewing in the sun while the children
: play hide-and-seek behind water-butts
and air-shafts (there is no danger of
j falling off, it is a relief to know, because
I the roof is walled in like a garden)
i down to the dark bottom where are the
1 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 cer-
I tain lawyers in the offices overhead.
Deep down, 30 or 40 feet under the
! crowded sidewalk, the stokers shovel
! 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
: tiers of floors overhead are the inetr
with the minds that make these high,
buildings necessary and make downtown
1 what it is. with their dreams and
schemes, their courage and imagination,
1 their trust and distrust in the knowledge
| and ignorance of other human beings,
1 which are means by which they bring
■ about great successes and great fail
ures, and have all the fun of playing a
game, with the peace of conscience and
self-satisfaction which come from hard
work and manly sweat.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are fast to sun
light, washing uud rubbing. Sold by all
druggists.
Alabama has a fine old capitol, set
on a hill and rich in historical associa
tions, but it has no governor's mansion
j and is beginning to think it needs one.
"100 per cent, yearly dividends from a
gold mine is not uncommon."—New York
Herald. Fifty gold mines that liavo paid
$<20,000,000 in dividends followed the same
plan as wo work upon. Hend for our pros
[ pectus. Golden Tree Mining and Milling
j Co., 32 Broadway, New York.
I Some 2,000,000 pounds of camphor
I are consumed in the United States year
ly.
' STATE or Onio, CITY op TOLEDO,
LUCAS COUNTY, \ M '
! FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the !
senior partner of the lirm of F. J. 'HKNEY TV .
j Co.,doing businossiutheCitYofToledo.County
: and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay j
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLL/its for each
and overycaso of CATARRH that cannot be
! cured by the uso of HALL'S CATARRH < URE.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
j Sworn to before me ami subscribed in my
—-) presence, this Otli day of December,
SEAL > A. D. 1880. A. W. GLEABON,
—. —) Nntam Public. 1
Hall's Catarrh ('ure is taken internally, and j
: acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces '•
I of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. it EN BY IFC Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family I'illsure the best.
A burglar stole S6OO from a resident
of St. Paul, Minn. The next day he re-!
j turned that sum and $250 to boot.
I am §urePlso*s Cure for Consumption saved
my life threo years aco. —Mas. THOS. HOB
BINS, Maple St.. Norwich. N. Y.. Feb. 17. 1900.
| Taxon: "Do you have an alarm clock
iat your house?" Paxon: "We don't
have to have; we've got twins."
To CUM a Colli In One I>ay.
Take LAXATIVE UROMO QUININE TABLETS. All
druggists refund tho money If it fulls to cure.
B. W. GROVE'S signature Is on each 26a.
The present season is reported to
1 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 eatinghouses of the city,
in which you dived down a few steps, j
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. Thev
have dived and tunneled, and have con- j
structed a restaurant of three floors un
derground which apparently consist-;
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 I
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 otic 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-
Kinley received 142.500 more votes than
all his competitors collectively.
McKinley's plurality in I<BQ6 295,072;
McKinley's apparent plurality in 1900.
293,583.
Just one populist vote was cast in Sa
vannah, Ga., at the recent State election.
vT/ii. hfiufo .vl-ci"^..'C 'SUs, l Sfrfrfft^KLC^T•^ZtLST^TU" ~~
|j jTT\ DON ' T WIN YOUR STOMACH WITH MEDICINE. |
1 fo Himyadl Jfe@s I
IS A NATURAL LAXATIVE MINERAL WATER. I*
Endorsed nnd used by the most prominent physicians tl
Ef\wrsvuSL/ f V in tbft w °rld ftH the best and safest remedy for ois- F
EgA \\.Mlfr2=vK. \ ordered stomach, biliousness, liver troubles, gout and r
rheumatism. rJ
b Cures Constipation! '
Takeonc-hnlf glassful on arising in the morning and I ]
IH|||r you will feel (he remarkable effects in half an hour. I 1
BfeM s ASKI LOOK{•
m " Hunyadl J&nos." | Centre Panel. |*i
| Sole Exporter, Firm of Andreas saxlehner, 130 Fulton St., N.Y. j*i
ST. VITUS' DANCE
Three great and complete cures effected by Dr. Greene's
Rervura Blood and Nerve Remedy,
Mrs. J. A. Fcrre, who resides near 90S Main Street, Hartford,
Conn., says:
♦. i ly , da . U .L hter ** u, r U J beoatn t. ver >' 111 with st - vitus danc e over a year ago. She became so bad
that she lost the use of her right arm and side, and we thought at one time she would lose her
S?e ? w tongue was almost naralyzed. She was so bad she could not feed herself, and at
night she would get so nervous I had 10 sit and hold her. I tried several doctors, but thev did not
do her any good. I dul not find anything that would help her until I tried Dr. Greene's Nervura
blood aud nerve remedy. She is uow, by the use of this mediciue, eutiiely cued."
C. H. Bailey, Esq., of VVaterbury, Vt., writes;
"I am more than K lad to write about my little daughter. Until a short time ago she had al
ways been a very delicate child aud subject to sick spells lasting weeks at s time. She was very
nervous aud our family doctor said we would never raise her, sl.e was so delicate and feeble.
We tried many remedies without the least good. We felt much anxiety about her, especially as
no doctors could benefit her, and had great fear for her future I. earning of the wonders being
done by 1/r Greene's Nervura blood aud nerve remedy, 1 determined to give it to her. She soon
1 commenced to improve under its use, mid rapidly gained in every respect. She cats and sleeps
well, and her nerves are strong The medicine has done wonders for her and it is the best we
: ever knew. I recommend Dr. Greene's Nervura, blood and nerve remedy, to everybody."
Mrs. J. Learmonth, of 776 Broadway, South Boston, Mass., says:
"At ten years of age tny 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 woo].l tw drawn spasmodically far to one side, the hands uud arms were rest,
less and constantly twitching, ller liinbs also were weak; her ankles bent under her so that it
j was almost impossible to walk. She was so nervous that she would scream almost like a maniac
and then have fits of crying. After two months' treatment without a cure. I concluded to try
\ u reene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. Three bottles entirely cured ber. bhc is now
thirteen year, old, aud baa beta weil ever since, and to-day is u picture o'f health."
Remain; ol an Ancient Galley.
I The remains of an ancient galley have
been found six feet below the surface at
I Tottenham Marshes, during the excava
tions for the new reservoirs of the East
London Water Company. The vessel
is 50 feet long, and has a beam of 26
feet. Its timbers are of oak and elm,
and, from the form of the rivets used, it
is supposed to have belonged to the
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
Museum.
There arc 120 firms in Germany en
gaged 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. Tlie first plant of this kind
for lighting small towns in Germany
was erected at Hassfurt, a town of 2,500
inhabitants.
There is only one sudden death
among women to eight among men.
J j
1 I
| Beware oi Them g
X There are two afflictions which §
V perhaps give the most pain X
X •ua trouble, viz; V
Sciatica
5 and X
Lumbago
X Both disable and cripple, X
X but y
1 St. Jacobs 01! |
X is their best cure. x
00<H>0<W001>11<K>00<100<HJD<10
Indian widows in Sitka go into
mourning by painting the upper part ol
i their faces black down to their mouths.
A dyspeptic Is never on good terms with
himself. Something I- always wrong. Gel
it right Ly chewing Beeman'e Pepsin Gum.
To prevent obstruction to traffic in
: | the main streets of Boston in the day
| time, all the repairs are ipade at night.
There is no other ink "just us good" as
Carters Ink. there i only one ink that is
best of ail ami tuat is Carter's Ink. Use it.
Including Formosa, the mikado rules
over 46,000.000 subjects.
Tho Best Prescription for Chills
and Fever Is a bottle of Gltovtt's TASTBLBSS
CllltL ToniO. It Is simply iron niul quinine la
a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Fries SOo.
One hundred thousand tons of apples
are raised 011 British soil yearly.
Fits permanently cured. No (its or nervous,
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat
Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatiss
tree. Dr.U.li.ki.i.\K.Ltd.l)3l Arch St.l'hila.Pv
The number of persons cremated in
1 Germany from i8~<) to 1899 was 3,110.
M rs. Winslou's Soothing Fvr up for children
toothing, softens the gums, reduces iutlam mo
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 3.1 c a bottle.
About 7,000 of the inhabitants of Nor
way die every year of consumption.
Bar id". 'f UNION MAE
The re.il worth of W. J*T~
Is. * :;.<)<> ;• ml Jr.l_
s3>so bltooM couipureil I? m
with other makes is jlfli
84.00 to 8 .00. py >^v
Our.B-1 filli PACJX pM
cnimot lie equalled at qj —✓
any price. Overl.OOt),- F
000 satisfied wearers.
*§ WE
it FAST P $3 or'tTSO'.hoas will
Jx EYELET I ; O^vP° outwear
"lVeare tho larfjost makers of men's 8.7
find ©Jt.fSO SIKH'S in the world. We make
and sell more *;> ;! „,i 83.50 shoes f lian an
other two mnnnfu'nrers In tho U. S.
Tho reputation of W. L.
pC<JT OOURIIUI t-1.00 and f.1.50 shoos for nCOT
LJLwI Style, comfort. And wear is known nfcol
evory where throughout the world.
viQ RH ■*y Ii tveto nivo bettor satisfm
VpWiuU tioa thun other niakos hccuuse Cbu.Ull
iMiflf I h- nl.ay, |,„„ ViU
SKOE. y-i'AA/vy.y, nv: SHOE.
thm they can get olsowht re.
TWE s H1..11 W 1.. linn; itto f1 a in] SM.SO
inwjjre r.",') ;! ,n>i ■ -in r nmke is because |;v
ARB TUB II ~.. keep
■? *. W3 ® 0 "'-' "• r ®*i'ltiMivo su!e in each town.
I iilic mi liitisiifiilo! Insist on hnviiiK W. I Jt
rioujfis.s shoos wit); ii.trio and rnec stumped on bottom.
JI your uei.ler will not jjet tiiein for von. stnd direct to
factory. e„e|oßi„R price and s.v i-itr* for corrm K e.
Btate kind <ll nther. em\ tin.l width, plain or nip toe.
! foes will reach vm fi.iywh.ro. a , ir free.
WsJLs. X • Hiektwu, MIMIC
D^CPSYS,?!SS:::!
cisea Book of v .monialn an/ 10 du vg' tinutmoti|
X'rce. Dr. H. U. G&K£t< h So.td, Box a. Atlanta, Go,
T. X. U. 4R, 1 irOO.