Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, January 30, 1901, Image 3

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    The great trouble in trying
to sell what are called patent
medicines is that so many claims
have been made for them that
people don't or won't believe
what honest makers say.
We have been telling our
story sixty years. Did we ever
deceive you once? If we make
any statement that isn't so, we
will stand the loss. Go to the
druggist and get your money
back.
Here's an example. Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral is a good cure
for a cough that comes from a
cold. Your cough, if you have
one, may not come from a cold;
your doctor will tell you about
that.
It is a straight medicine with
sixty years of cures back of it.
There isn't a ghost of the ordi
nary patent thing about it.
J. C. AYER COMPANY,
Practical Chemists, Lowell, Maia.
Ayer'B Sarsaparilla Ayer's Hair Vigor
Ayer's Pills Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Ayer's Ague Cure Ayer's Comatone
The Brevity of Ballarat.
It was in Ballarat that Mark Twain
found the* local language so puzzling
at first, the good people of the place
deeming life too short to dawdle in
their talk.
The mayor called on the American
humorist and laconically said, "K'm."
Then when Mark Twain gave him a
cigar he simply said, "Q."
Subsequent inquiry revealed that these
terms were Ballaratcse for "welcome"
and "thank you."—London Chronicle.
A Scottish congregation presented
their minister with a sum of money, and
sent him off to the continent for a holi
day. A gentleman just hack from the
continent met a prominent member of
the church, and said to him: "Oh, by
the-bye, I met your minister in Germany.
He is looking very well. lie didn't look
as if he needed a rest." "No," said the
church member, "it wasna him; it was
the congregation that was necdin' a
rest."
ASSO STRONGNB
With glowing health all things are possible, small annoyances fade into
nothingness and real troubles are battled with successfully. Women who are
blessed with perfect health are a constant joy
to themselves and all around them. The beauty
which health alono can make permanent is a > " ' . "• " '
crown which raises a woman above other raffiy
women. Such beauty is always accompanied
by a sweet disposition, for snappishncss is a
suro sign of ill-health and leaves its mark '
quickly on tho features. j
It seems to be the fashion for women to jffakf/
ignore health and sacrifice it to the little
every-day trials, or offer it up ou the altar
of devotion to daily tasks. Then again -.,1*^* w'' i
the nervous organization of women is con
stantly attacked by woman's natural cx
perienccs, so that it is practically impossi- Mu Klv/'*
ble for her to retain tho beauty which \/({ (\j
nature gavo her, unless she has discrhni- T
nation advice and right support. lEH°'> J9%7
DPm Gr®on& 9 ®
for tho Btocrf and Norvesm
Trials and troubles are easily overcome by 0 * : :
tho women whose strength is the genuine ° ' !
strength of perfect health. Dr. Greene's Ner- i y\jff
vura blood and nerve remedy, bridges the ° 0 jfc*
chasm that separates the sickly woman from O VCv|j|
happiness. It fills her veins with blood that is to?;'- -M . y ft'vl o °
pure and clean. P wlOyo ° \ £
MRS. WM. E. BOSSE, of 85 Farrington St., Q &
Flushing, L. 1., says: ° TKt"3B
41 In regard to myself, I have suffered for years X>>o > ° 0 AiJj R
with disease, having been troubled with great ner- CJ a *
▼ousnoss, female complaints, indigestion, and Q 1 o 0 0 \ c£s
great weakness and prostration. I did not tKd rV>
nave strength to do much of any thing. Know
ing tho great value of health and strength &Jr J^K
I consulted doctors and took many modi- yjT r^\
Clnes, but they all failed to euro me, ° b So^V^
and I grew worse rather than better. O'• -*'' J jf-'-R/ xywKll
I happened to seo in the papers how < ele^7
much good Dr. Greene's Ner vura, Px l\l / /\<Ci /wy\V Yu
blood and nerve remedy, was doing in
restoring to health everybody who took it, •* s sgr ;>
and I thought I would try a bottle. I used
it and to ray surprise I began to gain strength every day. lam so thankfnl that I tried it I
It i 9 certainly tne moit excellent tonic and strength giver. I recommend it very highly
and wish that other people who aro troubled in any way would take warning and use it."
TO PRESERVE WOMANLY BEAUTY
At all the stages of a woman's life Dr. Greene's Ncrvura blood and nerve
remed}', is shown to be efficient to ward oil tho results of nervousness, or over
work, or impure blood. From early girlhood to advanced years, this world
renowned medicine builds up the forces destroyed by disease, grief, or over
exertion, and the effects of this great medicine are quickly felt and permanently
retained. Let women guard well their health, and consult Dr. Greene freely.
Nothing they can possibly do will so surely keep them strong and well, or re
pair tho exhaustion from acute illness, nothing will work so continually to the
preservation of beauty as the great health-giving Nervura. Dr. Greene's office
is at 35 West 14th Street, New York City, where he may be consulted either by
personal call or by letter Women may write in perfect confidence, and get
Dr. Greene's advice free.
Farmers of Dubuque county. la., arc
banding together to protect what little
game is left in that section. Owners of
7.0u0 acres have formed a compact with
this end in view, and others are joining
daily, all determined not to permit
further violation cf the game laws.
Bnco package of Tdtnatj Fadeless Dyr
colors indro goods than any other dye and
colors them better too. Sold Ly all druggists
The revenues of the street car com
panies of Buenos Ayres in the month of
April in this year amounted to $1,111,•
681.63.
*IOO Reward. *IOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure known to tho
iutilcnl fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional -reat
ment. Hall's Catarrh 1 ure is taken internally,
acting directly on the blood and raucous sur
faces of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the discaso, and giving the pa
tient strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature in doing its work. Tho
proprietors have so much laith in its curative
powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list
of testimonials. Address
F. J. Chbnht A Co., Toledo, a
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are tho best.
Snails, by means of an acid which
they exude, contrive to bore holes in
solid limestone.
Best For tho Bowels,
No matter what Alls you, headache to •
tancer, you wilt never get well until your
bowels are put right. CAUL-ABETS help
nature, euro you without a gripe or pain,
produce easy natural movements, cost you
just 10 cents to start getting your health
baok. Oascarbts Candy Cathartic, the
genuine, put up In raetul boxes, every tab
let bus C.C.O. stumped on it. Beware of
Imitations.
The abandoned farms in Rhode Isl
and number 349, according to the State's
official catalogue.
To Cure a Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative llrouo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund tho money if it fnlls in euro.
E. W. Ukovm's signature Is on each box. 125 c.
The report of the Registrar General
shows crime in Ireland steadily on the
decline.
I do not bellove Plso's Cure for Consumption
has an equal for coughs and colds.— .John F.
Boyek, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900.
owner, who has been running it 33
years. A bachelor boarder remained at
the hotel 25 years.
Fits permanently enred. No fits or nervous
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Groat
Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatise
lico. Dr.ii.li.KLi2tg.Ltd.U3l Arch tti.Philo.Po.
The British succession duties brought
a revenue of nearly £70,000,000 in the
last fiscal year.
Tho Rest Prescription for Chills
and Fever Is a bottle of GKOVR'S TASTELESS
CHILL TONIO. It Is Simply iron and quiulue in
a tacit)less form. No cure—no pay. Pilce fiOo.
Last year Germany imported 214,139
metric ton of potatoes and 1,370,850 of
wheat.
The stomach baa to work hard, grinding
the food wo crowd Into it. Make Its work
easy by chewing Booinun's Pepsin Gum.
Great Britain imported £317,190
worth of natural ice last year.
A LIOHTHOUSE DOC.
•Bailor** Takes a (irel. Interest In Nantl
enl Matters.
Sailor is tlie name of a wise dog
that is assistant lighthouse keeper on
Wood Island, oft" Biddleford Pool. Me. j
His master is Thomas 11. Orcutt, keep
er of the Wood Island lighthouse, says
the New York Journal.
Having passed most of his nine
years of life on rocky Wood Island,
where the wares beat ceaselessly on
the granite shore, and the passing ves
sels up and down the coast is the
chief thing to break Ihe monotony of
life. Sailor naturally hikes a great in
terest in nautical matters.
Early ill life, when but a two-months
old puppy, he was brought to the is
land from a farm in Westbrook, Me.
He was not a sailor then, for his
family were farmers, being Scotch
collies and sheep dogs. But Sniloi
was not long in learning the ways of
the sea. He took a deep interest in
whatever his master did and followed
him around tlie light station where
ever he went. He noticed among
other things that his master often
pulled a rope that made a bell ring.
The bell was a great heavy one, used
to warn vessels in a fog and to salute
them in fair wentlier. It stood out
side tho lighthouse, a few feet above
a wooden platform, and tlie rope at
tached to its tongue came down so
near the platform that Sailor could
easily reach it.
One day sailor thought he would
have a try at ringing the bell. He
seized tho rope in his mouth and
pulled. The bell rang clear and loud.
Sailor was delighted. He wagged his
bushy tail vigorously and pulled again, j
Sailor after a time noticed that the j
ringing of the bell marked the pass- j
ing of a vessel or steamer. His note of j
this fact resulted in his trying his ex
periment. When he saw the next ves
sel coming lie anticipated ids master ;
in ringing the boll. His master then !
dubbed Sailor "assistant light keeper," }
a title he has borne ever since. As
the years have passed Sailor has kept
on ringing salutes to passing vessels |
and steamers. Indeed, he feels hurt if j
not permitted to give the customary j
salute to passing craft, while skippers !
whose course takes them often past ■
Wood Island are accustomed to see
Sailor tugging vigorously at the great
bell tongue.
They reply with a will on their ship's
bell or born and in ease of steamers \
a hearty triple blast is sent back to I
the canine watcher of Wood Island. I
who gives a new meaning to the good
old sea term of "dog watch." Sailor!
is his master's constant companion
and delights in being made his mes
senger, especially at dinner time, when
he will come bounding from the I
kitchen to announce that the meal is
ready. He will also carry letters, pa
pers or small articles in his month, j
He understands all that is said to him,
and, although a sailor dog by adop- j
tion, his breeding comes to the fore
when some one says "tlie sheep are
In the field."
An Agrcenblo Form of Doath.
Professor Helm, who is an Austrian
mountain climber, has been collecting
some statistics of a rather morbid yet I
keenly Interesting kind. He now gives
them to tlie world in a foreign review, j
and those who "gather samphire dead- ]
ly trade" (to quote Shakespeare's pun-!
gent reference) may feel assured that J
a chance misstep will land them in
eternity with no pang of pain. He
who falls from any great height, we
can learn, has no suffering, 110 terror,
110 thrills of despair. On the con
trnry, lie hears wonderful melodies,
and feels himself borne toward some j
heavenly bourne. A well-known Al-1
pine climber, named Sigrist, who sur-;
vived a dreadful fall, wrote thus to
Professor lleim: "When I fell from \
n great height on the liarpfstock, Can- j
ton Glarus, I retained full conscious- j
ness. I felt no fear, but had the sen-!
sation of floating downward, ague, j
ably and safely. I was able 'to think
calmly about my own position, and
hastily reckoned up the means left 1
for my family to live 011 after my j
death. I did not loose my breath, as j
Is commonly supposed to be the case
In al! falls of this kind. When I |
struck ground I became unconscious 1
without tlie least sensation of pain.
I cannot imagine a more agreeable ]
form of death." Professor lleim him- J
self once fell 800 feet, and underwent I
similar psychic results. It was he. I
however, who heard tlie wonderful!
music. In the brief time of
his descent lie found himself
filled with a realization of ex
quisite peace and rest. On re-1
gaining consciousness, two hours inter, j
he recollected nothing of any concus- !
sivo shock. All physical distress was j
reserved for the dawdling and he
crippled hours of ids recovery.—Col-!
lier's Weekly.
Parrot* n* Sentinel*.
A certain distinguished officer on
The Northwest frontier, having ap
parently rend of tho employment of
dogs in the German nrmy, collected a
bobbery pack which made night hide
ous with their harking. To him en
ters one morning the brigadier gen
oral, who Inquires as to the meaning
of this new departure. "There have
been thieves about, of late," was the
reply, "and these dogs are very use
ful. No one can come near by my
tent at night without their giving an
alarm." The general was equal to
the occasion: "Ah! well, mon. If you
just gPt half a dozen parrots and teaeli
them to cry out 'Halt! Who goes
there?' you will lie completely
equippit."—Allahabad Pioneer.
BATTLES IN PLANT LIFE, ]
Some Cnriona Traits Which Follow Close
ly Human Instinct!.
A struggle for existence, and conse- I
quent survival of the fittest, has been ;
going on through countless ages of j
seriutiou among the plants just as |
among the animals and men; and in ;
this struggle a keep war lias been pro- !
ceeding among the different sections i
of them—a real mar, in which the ob- j
jeet of one side hbs been to damage !
the other, either by elbowing it out of
its territory, shelling it as in the case
of the thistle when the wind blows
its down into a field of meadow grass,
or by engaging with it in gladiatorial
combat. The first instinct of plants
is clean-jumping and land-grabbing,
and neither Russia, Great Britain nor
any other nation is keener on annex
ing land which offers opportunities
than these plants.
Now, it is an extraordinary thing
that leaves and weapons should lie so
strikingly suggestive of each other;
but note tlie names which botanists
give to the former, and the meaning
of these names. For instance, there
is "clarate," signifying club-shaped;
"gladlate," sword-shaped; "dolabri
form," axe-sliaped; "lanceolate," lance
shaped; "sagrittatte," arrow-shaped,
and "clypiate," buckler-shaped.
Professor Max Muller once referred
to the Australian boomerang, the in
vention of tlie natives, as the most re
markable weapon in history; yet the
plant warriors have had their boom
erangs for ages, for the leaves from
the eucalyptus, or Australian gum
tree, which are sickle-like, with sharp
edges behave, when projected for
ward by the hand or by a gust of wind,
in precisely the same way, de
scribing an arc of a large circle, and
then falling to within two feet of the
point of projection.
Moreover, other varieties of a do
mestic and peace loving nation are
favored with means of defence to
such onslaughts as these. There is the
case of grass, as an example, agos of
experiences of the little ways of the
enemy having taught tho leaves to
assume a flat, blade-like form, which
is well adopted for compact growth
and for presenting a united resistance
to the foe.
Moreover, the botanical world has
its navy. The seeds of the double
cocoanut of the Seychelles go abroad
in boat-shaped capsules, and go on
maritime expeditions in search of new
Islands which they may war with—
lierbally—and capture. It is declared
even that the war vessels of the world,
from the savages' canoes to the iron
clads of the Powers, have been
modelled originally 011 certain leaf
structures.
Mankind has not got a monopoly
of torpedo boats. The vegetable war
riors had such things, or something
remarkably like them, long before us.
These are the leaves of what is known
as the "pepper-tree," which is very
plentiful in California. If you pluck
one of these leaves fresh from the
tree and place it quickly In a basin
of water with a perfectly still sur
face, you will find the leaf propelled
forward in quick, spasmodic jerks by
the sap.
llow the vegetable world is in some
fortified to resist the incur
sions of animals and men we all know,
and there is at least one case where
some of their most formidable war
riors have been drifted Into our own
military service and used as barriers
for tlie production of forts. This is
one of the Islands at the west en
trance to Ilong Kong harbor, where
there are two large forts surrounded
with a tliickly-planted mass of yuc
cas and Spanish bayonets, the latter
being a very spiny species of prickly
pear. These form a perfect protec
tion.
Owing to their very succulent nature, !
these plants are Impervious to fire, i
and in case an attacking enemy should j
go for them with such weapons as
scythe and cutlass, the riflemen 011
the ramparts would have plenty of
time to stop the little game.
What with one thing and another,
the armies of botany are in a great
state of efficiency, and campaigns as :
important to them as this in the
Transvaal is to us are matters of the
commonest occurrence.—Answers.
Orifjln of dhntto.
Ghetto, the name of the Jewish j
quarters in oriental and European I
cities, according to Theodore Elizc, the
German Shakespeare scholar, is de
rived from the historical fact that the
Jewish traders in the republic of Ven
ice, who, by a law enacted in the
fourteenth century, were only allowed j
to reside in the little town of Mestre, I
received In 1510 permission again to I
settle in Venice upon two isles where
the government's foundries (ghettos)
were situated. The "ghetto" of Rome
was probably not known by that name
before 1550, when it was established
by Tope Paul IV. Similar separate
Jewish quarters later on existed in
Prague, Frankfort-on-tlie-Main, May
mice and other cities under the same
designation.
Still n InNn^r.
In Germany, the question of gentle
women earning their own living is
still in its infancy. A girl of the up
per classes rarely leaves her home for
that purpose, unless forced to stringent
measures by absolute poverty; where
as in England girls strike out inde
pendently, sometimes merely on ac- j
count of smypnthctie surroundings.
However, the groat question has be
gun to seethe in Germany, and the !
signs of approaching changes in the I
world of women are to he found in I
German contemporary lit rnture. j
Owing to the fact that I;
<Av ftl"''h- - N Bomeskepticalpcoplehavo I i
A -<■: <& •It? A ttoa ttoa to time quee- E
tionedthecenuineßsofthe I 1
Sfl lillWrF 1 I/'iffl toitimonial letters wears II
H MgLs&jdpr onoiitantly pubSlhing, w I
" lir-hji Ware' obtaining $
liS j/bB *' le wr > tel " B ' special per- p
rmnfS.K Kf-\ ll, > 3B > on - —Lydia E. tj
]
[How shall a mother who is weak and sick with some '
female trouble bear healthy children ?
How anxious women ought to be to givo their children
the blessing of a good constitution !
Many women long for a child to bless their home, but be
causo of some debility or displacement of the female organs,
they are barren.
Preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound more suc
cessfully than by^any other medicine, because it gives tone
and strength to the parts, curing all displacements and in
flammation.
Actual sterility in women is very rare. If any woman i
thinks she is sterile, let her write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn,
Mass., whose advice is given free to ail expectant r would
be mothers.
s Mrs. A. D. Jarret, Belmont, Ohio, writes:
" Hear Mrs. Pineeaii : —I most write and tell you what your Hcg9-
table Compound has done for me. Before tailing your medicine I was unable
to oarry babe to maturity, hawing lost two—one at sir months and ono at
seven. The doctor Baid next time I would die. but thanks to Lydia L.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, 1 did not die. but am the proud
mother of a six months old girl baby. She weighs nineteen pounds and
ha 3 never Been a sick day in her life. She is the delight of our home."
Mrs. Whitney's Gratitude,
i "Dear Mr. Ptnsham : —From the time I was sixteen years old 1 'III
was twenty-three I was troubled with weakness of the kidneys end terrible
paing when my monthly periods came on. I made up my mind to try your
V-". "-VO3 Vrgetablo Compound, and was eoou relieved.
The doctor said I never would be able to go my
Brrff ■* full tim * anJ liav ® a iivia S child, ae I was con-
HlSa Etitutionnlly weak. 1 had lost a babv at seven
g® months and half. The next time I continued
kS'S to take your Compound : and I said then, if I
SpfMt .r 1 s-~\r went oa J r full time and my Imby lived to bo
£s% fj ® *® fc- three months old, I should send a letter to vou.
pfeijV jSa V M bcb T ' 3 aow seven months old. and Is hb
S 'if _Y, vk healthy and hearty as any one could wish. X
§<*%. F annot ex P l 'c. s ® my gratitute to you. I was bo
cHSKSx.e I.hfi A that I aid not dare to go cwav from homo
/T/AAj t° ata y an 7 length of time. Praise God for
I \.r 'i '" 1\ S? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Corn-
MRS.L.Z.WHITNE.Y6> a BASY pound: and may others who are Buffering
; .i f ■ do us ] did and find relief. "Wishing you suc-
F?™, future as in the past, and mnv many homes be brightened as
mine lias been. —Mrs. L. Z. Whitney, 4 Flint St., Somerville, Mass."
The medicine that cures tho ills of women is
lysßia E* Pinktoasn's
W®g®fsati3ffe Gom^Qsand^
Young wife —"I knew you would like
the slippers. Harry, if for no other rea
son, because I made them." Husband—
"You don't mean this is all your work?
Why, what a talented little wife I have,
to be sure." Young wife—"Yes, all
my work. Of course, I bought the up
pers, and Mary sewed them together,
and I got a man to sole them; but I
put the bows on and did them up in
the box. And do you know, Harry, I'm
proud of myself. I didn't think I could
ever do such things."
Vegetables are usually sold in piles in
Buenos Avrcs. so that you have to!
measure quantity as well as quality by \
the eye; and butchers sell their meat
by the chunk rather than by weight. ;
Mrs.tVtnslow'sPooihtnßPvr.in forohlMron I
teething, softens thetfuuis, reduces inflammr~
tioii. allays jmin. cures wind oolic.;0c obuttle. j
Until the middle of the last century {
Great Britain imported two-thirds of
the iron she used. The use of coal for j
smelting was then only beginning.
M%> U A % j
z o
t AND O
t ESEEANS I
j
J There is one flavor in pork and J
♦ beans that all people like. It was £ j
♦ devised in the rural homes of New ♦
5 England. It has made Boston the J
O synonym of beans. J j
J In our kitchen we get exactly ?
♦ that flavor. Our beans are cooked +
♦ by aft expert. We put them up in ♦
J key-opening cans. Your grocer f I
♦ will supply you. J
5 Plenty of other canned beans, but J ,
that flavor comes only in Libby's. S
♦ USSY, MCNEILL & LIBIIY £
♦ Chicago
Send a postal lor our booklet, "How to
♦ Make Good Things to Eat." A I
Dr.Bu S I's Sft&arinis 1
fy g c* troub.es. reopie praise
Cough Syrup
Refuse substitutes. Get Dr. liuii's Coujch Syrup!
V. TT <t , 'on
DROPS'
" of MstimomaU and 1 0 tin v* tre&tini.t
■ W. A. A, CRSEM'B SUMS, BOX B, AtlaaU, <l*.
. !My neighbor's child was^tvon
S . up, thn family concluded it
f \ woiildbcuselcHatoniakefurthei
I \ efforts to save it, but on being
ft v I persuaded, they administered
.IF A FREY'S VERMIFUGE,
I fS* ~ \ and over luO worms were ex
%A (LA ] polled. The child recovered.—
X.V L*XA /CAI.KB HITCHCOCK,Near Zanos
/ ville, Ohio. 25 ceul* at Drug.
'[ Yr country storosor 1 >y until.
g- - A perfect tonic for children. .
I ; 1-1. A MCK\ , Hull iumre, did.
SOara't; 1
I obacco Suddenly!
. It injures nevvous system to do so. Dip ft Pt|fft
' is t lie only cure that ltcnllv Cures OAUU-UuilU
I and notifies you when to stop. Said with u Rtinr.
nntcr llint three boxen will cure any caie,
RAPH Plinn >" vegetable and harm lees. It hua
DAU J-UU.il/ ,-ured thousands, it will cure vou.
At all dnuririats or by mail prepaid, SI.(1(1 n box*
i 5i boxes, s■<2.s(l. booklet free. Writ'. EL'itEiiA
OUMIUAIi CO., La Croaae, Wis.
The real worth of W.
, L. Douglas 03.(10 HIHI
I U.'l.fiO hboeH ftomiinrcd v*•
j with other makci is f'igjt. jr3
I 84.00 to $5.00. £7 YN
OurS4C.iltEdßcl.ine P.J)A p)J
! cannot lo equalled at
any price. Over 1,000.- TralL f
000 satisfied wearers, JT&iSk 1
frASTCOLO^V" 0 P s3 r . O rs":so l ' 8 b1
Jki EYELEtq V\v^>x wll J Positively outwear
L \\\VK two pairs of ordinary
%■ / 3 cr S3.SS
11. " y - BR "CKTo s si. ,lU
we are the larcest makers of men's R'l
and 1*350 shoes Tn thn world. 11 o make
and sell more S3 and 83.5(1 shoes than any
otlior two manufacturers in the (j. y,
_ ____ reputation of W. L.
RrQT V 0 }I**** 1 **** 13.G0 and .;o .hoca for nrnT
DLO I style, comfort, and Wear is known fjFS| ,
An i-a S^ r 'T[' ,er6 dtmtichout the world. *" W 1
$3.50 St' .I,;" iT/. S3OO
c '. ,e h* ahn-i been VW,WI#
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ran git elsewhere.
thein fweVwin 11 }'V v,ir dpnlpr keep
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k Y" ,1,,,,0! UiaUt cn having \\\ L
I>ol,glut shoes with name and nnee atamned rn
If your dealer will n-t pot tliun for vou. a< nd d - .-t7n
factory, enclosing iiriee aiu "V ;ir i.r I? " to
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gl Host Tnstiw Good. Ijoo
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