The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 07, 1907, Image 7

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    MOTHERHOOD 1
if The first requisite of a pood K
mother is pood health, and the ex- '
perience of maternity should not be
approached without careful physical
preparation, as a woman who is in
pood physical condition transmits to
her children the blessinps of a pood
constitution.
\ Preparation for healthy mater
nity is accomplished by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vepetable Compound,
which is made from native roots and /
herbs, more successfully than by any fn
other medicine because it pives tone Jc
and strenpth to the entire feminine d]
orpanism. curinp displacements, ul
ceration and inflammation, and the
! result is less suffering and more children healthy at birth. For more
than thirty years |
Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound
; has been the standby of American mothers in preparing for childbirth.
NotewhatMrs.JamesChester,of427 W. 35th St., New York says in this
letter:—Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-“I wish every expectant mother knew about
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. A neighbor who had learned
of its great value at this trying period of a woman’s life urged me to try
it and I did so, and I cannot say enough in regard to the good it did me.
I recovered quickly and am in the best of health now.”
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is certainly a successful
remedy for the peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women. !
It has cured almost every form of Female Complaints, Dragging Sensa
tions, Weak Back, Falling and Displacements, Inflammation, Ulcera
tions and Organic Diseases of Women and is invaluable in preparing for
Childbirth and during the Change of Life.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free.
A Positive
CURE FOR
CATARRH
Ely’s Cream Balm
Is quickly absorbed.
Gives Relief at Once.
It cleanses, soothes,
heals and protects
the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh
and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly.
Kestores the Senses of Taste and Smell.
Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail|
(Trial size 10 cts. by mail.
Ely Brothers, 66 "Warren Street. New York.
. ras;ji
For v/inter irritations of the
skin, eczemas, rashes, frost
bites, chappings, chafings,
itchings, redness and rough
ness, especially of face and
hands, for lameness and
soreness incidental to winter
sports, for sanative, antisep
tic cleansing,for baby rashes,
itchings, and chafings, and
for all the purposes of the
toilet,bath,and nursery,Cuti
cura Soap, assisted by Cuti
cura Ointment, is priceless.
Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may
be used from the hour of birth.
Sold throughout the world. Depots: London, 27
Charterhouse Sq.: Paris, 5 Rue de la Pafx; Austra
lia II. Towns & Co.. Sydney; India, B. K Paul,
Calcutta: China. Hon* Kon* Dru* Co.; Japan.
Maruya, Ltd..TokJo: Russia, Ferreln, Moscow; South
Africa. Lennon, Ltd.. Cape Town, etc.; U. S. A..
Potter Dru* A Cbem. Corn., Sole Props.. Boaton.
our Post-free. Cuttcura Booklet. 48 pages.
rrtiftnirwmTiTMrTrrnrinrrriiHir Jii
TOILET ANTISEPTIC cleanses and
heals mucous membrane affections such
■ as nasal and pelvic catarrh, sore throat,
canker sores, inflamed eyes, and is a per
fect dentifrice and mouth wash.
Paxtine makes an economical medi
cinal wash of extraordinary cleansing
r.nd germicidal power, warm direct
applications of which are soothing,
healing and remarkably curative. At
druggists or by mail, 50c. Sample free.
The R. Paxton Company, Boston, Mass.
Atchison Globe Sights.
The only thing people always have
ready Is an excuse.
Almost anyone can be induced to lie if
you ask enough questions.
The better you behave the better you
get along. It's old but its true.
Money you find looks a good deal big
ger than an equal amount earned.
There is such a thing as being too orig
inal; people might call you crazy.
A thoroughly competent agent is one
who can sell mining stock to a miner.
In poetry “Thy sentinel am I,” means
a woman.
Too many men imagine they can’t have
a good time without getting Into trouble.
A husband’s conscience never bothers
him much until his wife begins to find
out.
When some men make a palpable mis
take, how quickly they invent a ridiculous
excuse!
We don’t believe we could fall in love
with a school teacher. School teachers
are too matter-of-fact to be good lovers.
The main street of a small town on a
half holiday can make the saddest funeral
procession iook like a gala affair when it
comes to cheerfulness.
It is a hard matter for a man who be
lieves as you do to carry his ideas to the
extreme where you will call him a fana
tic.
When a letter Jumps from the first to
the fourth page and then back to the sec
ond, It never says anything very im
portant.
Some people are so stubborn and so
contrary, that you can only convinces
them they are wrong by agreeing with
them.
Organ to Save Woodpile.
From the Boston Herald.
A number of years ago a village in the
eastern part of the town of Middleboro
was very much wrought up over the in
troduction of a musical instrument in
their church service. At the final meet
ing, when the matter was to be settled,
excitement ran high.
One man, whose reputation for honest
dealings was not always above suspicion,
made a fiery speech in opposition. A
neighbor whose back yard joined the
speaker’s could hardly wait for the close
of the remarks. Then jumping to his feet
without waiting to address the chairman,
he said:
“Gosh, sir, if I had known the gentleman
was so afraid of an organ I should have
had one hung on my woodpile years ago.’’
MAY BE COFFEE
That Cannes All the Trouble.
When the house Is afire, it’s like a
holly when disease begins to show, it's
no time to talk but time to act—delay
is dangerous—remove the cause of the
trouble at once.
“For a number of years,” says a Kan
sas lady, "I felt sure that coffee was
hurting me, and yet, I was so fond of
it, 1 could not give it up. I paltered
with my appetite and of course yielded
to the temptation to drink more. At
last 1 got so bad that I made up iny
mind I must either quit the use of cof
fee or die.
“Everything I ate distressed me, and
I suffered severely almost all the time
with palpitation of the heart. I fre
quently woke up in the night with the
feeling that 1 was almost gone,—my
heart seemed so smothered and weak in
its action that I feared it would stop
heating. My breatli grew short and the
least exertion set me to panting. 1
slept but little and suffered from rheu
matism.
"Two years ago I stopped using the
old kind of coffee and began to uss
Postum Food Coffee, and from the very
first I began to improve. It worked a
miracle 1 Now I can eat anything and
digest it without trouble. I sleep like a
baby, and my heart heats full, strong
and easily. My breathing has become
steady and normal, and my rheumatism
has left me. I feel like another |>er
son, and it is all due to quitting cof
fee and using Postum Food Coffee, lor
1 haven’t used any medicine and none
would have done any good as long as 1
kept drugging with coffee.” Name giv
en by Postum Gj„ Battle Creek, Mich.
"There’s a Reason.” Read the little
book, “The Road to WellviUe,” in pkga
All grocers.
DAIRY NOTES.
Professor Frazer makes soma very
strong statements about the quality of
cows kept by Illinois dairymen. He
says many a good cow is worth twenty
or more poor cows in the same herd in
pctual profits to the farmer. Illinois
dairymen are keeping thousands of
cows that barely pay their board, or at
best, return so small a profit that It
would take 250 to 400 to show *1,000
clear money per year. The worst thing
js. that nearly every dairy herd has
cows of this stamp.
Mr. J. A. Phillips, one of the most
successful dairymen In Wisconsin,
Bays, be careful in selecting the dairy
sire, for on his quality depends the Im
provement of your herd. Feed us far
as possible the feed grown on the farm,
tf you require bran or oil meal buy it
and mix it with your other feeds your
self. Keep all your money at home,
liaise your stock as well as you can,
and market as good a product as you
can.
Did you ever notice a good milch cow
stroll over the pastures as leisurely as
ff she had no thought of anything ex
cept turning her feed into milk? A cow
never hurries or becomes excited, un
less forced to it, and the quiet, slow
moving cow' is the one that does the
business at the milk pail. Take the
hint. Keep the cows quiet, don't dog
them or chase them, or swear at them.
February and March are hard
months on the milch cows. The winds
C-re piercing, and often snow or sleet
catches the cows out in the llelds.
Exposure of this kind always tells in
the flow of milk. The best way to
handle the cows is to let them out
say for two or three hours, during
the sunny part of the day.
Dairying now is too big a business to
be turned over to the women folks. One
or two cows won’t make a dairy. It
will make a start, but enough cows
should be kept to get up some interest.
We like to crowd things nowadays. So
with dairying. Go into it, as if it was
your whole business. Study and de
velop. Then it will pay.
Cement floors, steel stalls and like
Improvements are alright in the dairy,
if you have money to burn. What is
more essential, the cow barns or
sheds should be kept clean, the food
wholesome, and the cows kept sensi
bly. There are a whole lot of things
to learn, before "fancy" improvements
are necessary.
The quality of butter is not affected
by the time it takes to churn it. If
there is trouble, it comes from some
other cause—from adding fresh
ekimmed cream to well ripened cream,
or perhaps the trouble is with the cows
themselves. The cream of some cows
churns quicker and better than others.
Another good thing about the dairy
is that you can keep good hands the
year round, and afford to pay them
good wages. On grain farms, when
men are hired for only six or seven
months, it is almost impossible to get
good reliable men. No good man can
afford to loaf five or six months.
One of the best buttermakers in the
country says dairymen do not pay
enough attention to cleanliness. Every
thing should be kept as clean as clean
can be. Cream that is not kept in nice
condition right up to the time it is de
livered at the factory, cannot be made
into good butter.
Try to keep the temperature of the
cow stables uniform, and do not throw
doors and windows wide open, when
the cows are in their stalls. A dairy
man reports that a difference of 11 de
grees, in the temperature of his barns,
made a shrinkage of 3% per cent. In
the milk.
There is such a thing as a good and
poor ration. It is best to feed as much
as possible of our home grown stuff,
but one should know how best to com
bine these to give a well balanced ra
tion. In fact the year's profits will
depend largely upon how well the food
Is handled.
A Minnesota farmer says during the
year 1905 he sold his whole milk to the
creamery. Milking the same cows dur
ing 1906, he separated his milk at home,
using a hand machine, selling only the
cream. His receipts for 1906 were near
ly one-third more than the year pre
vious.
A successful calf raiser says do
two things and you will have no
trouble with your calves—be careful
about overfeeding and teach the calf
to eat whole oats as soon as possible.
That's good. Keep them in light, dry
quarters, and the job will be still
easier.
Many dairy farms are operated under
leases, or landlords furnish land and
cows, and division of profits Is made.
Put these leases in writing. Don't take
chances on a verbal agreement. Have
the lease signed In duplicate, so that
each party may have a copy.
Look out for the pails used for feed
ing the calves. Gems galore lurk in
them, and a trifle sometimes upsets the
calf. If these calves are not doing well,
examine the feed pails. Tin pails are
the best, and they should be washed
and scalded every day.
Don't allow the ''barn" flavor to get
into your milk. This can be avoided
by keeping the stable clean, and keep
ing the dirt out of the milk. No amount
of straining or separation will rid the
I milk of this flavor. The only thing
to do is to keep it out.
Sometimes accidents will happen In
the dairy. I have known of such a
| thing as a cow sticking her foot into a
i pall of tnllk. Don't try to strain out
1 dirt from the milk. If it gets in, bet
ter feed the milk to the pigs, wash out
the pail, and go ahead.
Dairy form is ull right, but the best
"form” is the one that fills the pall.
The cow that will show a profit of $100
a year over the cost of her feed is
worth a whole herd that just about
play even. The cow that performs is
the one we want.
FARM FACTS.
There Is no "best” breed of hogs. In
my Judgment, but there are "best” In
dividuals among every breed. Every
observing feeder has found out long
ago that one animal Is not oe good ae
another, and his profits are measured
by his Judgment In picking out the
reul good animals. Some feeders al
ways have nice, even bunches of fat
tening stock, and they seldom lose on
their operations. Others will pick up
most anything and try, by heavy feed
ing, to tubn them Into fat animals.
They are apt to lose out. There Is this
difference In animals, some will fatten
easily, some will make big, raw frames,
but never get fat. Every man who
raises his own feeding stock should
study these characteristics and select
breeding stock which will likely pro
duce the easy feeding, well proportioned
animal.
Farrowing time will soon be nlong
now, and a little forethought In getting
the sows accustomed to having some
one near them may save a nice litter
of pigs. One should know pretty near
the time when each sow will farrow.
She should be separated for at least
two weeks and put Into a quiet roomy
pen, or in a small field with a roomy
Individual house. When sows are kept
in adjacent pens, they are apt to be
nervous, and If this plan must be fol
lowed, handle the sows gently and get
them on good terms. A nervous, Ill
tempered sow never makes a good
mother.
Many farmers grow special crops for
seed purposes. There Is considerable
profit In the work, providing the details
are looked after. In the first place one
should establish a reputation for fair
dealing and honest representation of
his goods. One should send out nothing
for seed, but really first class stuff.
Many farmers sell their entire crops for
seed purposes, but they grow new
varieties, and guarantee the quality of
their seeds. It never pays to send out'
poor stuff and make excuses for the
poor quality.
A handy arrangement on all farms
may be made from three two by sixes
or poles about sixteen feet long rigged
like a well digger’s tripod and windlass,
or a pulley, or pair of them may be
used to do the hoisting. This may be
used for butchering and for many other
Jobs. A rops and pair of pulleys are
very convenient farm tools and those1
having them would not do without.
We cannot have all the handy things
we would like, some of us, but there Is
such a thing as doing with too few.
A recent experiment In Wisconsin Is
Interesting In showdng the value of dif
ferent grains fed to young sows. Six'
youn gsows were fed on equal pnrts of
wheat middlings and ground barley,
mixed with skim milk. They made a
total gain of 643 pounds in fifteen'
weeks. An equal number of sows fed
on wheat middlings, skim milk and'
corn meal gained 730 pounds. The'
amount of food consumed by each lot
was practically the same.
Did you take an Invoice of your stock
on hand at the first of the year? If
not do you think the merchant that1
would manage his business without
such a record would succeed? Then
why should the farmer? The man who
does not know what he has will not
likely know what he buys or sells and
the chances are that he will not know
whether he is ahead at the end of the
year. Start now to know your bus
iness.
Some swine raisers find It profitable
to sell their pigs when about six weeks
old. Feeders are willing to pay $3 to
$4 each for these thrifty pigs, and sows
which will raise six or eight good pigs
are surely good Investments. One big
advantage of this system Is the risk of
disease is practically nothing, for dis
ease seldom develops while pigs are
suckling.
Now is the time to test the seed corn
Most any of the methods of testing will
be all right, if seed is in fair condition.
But if a low percentage is obtained or
the germination is weak, better make
sure and test every ear to be used for'
seed. Corn that Is dry now, and will
test 9a per cent, or above, may safely
be planted, If properly cared for till
planting time.
Feeders are Selling high. One day
last week an Ohio farmer paid $4.75 per
hundred weight, for a load of 1,100
pound shorthorns. These will be sjiort
fed and sent back to market in March.
On account of prevailing high prices
many are coming into the feeder mar
ket the second time this season. Six
cent, cattle and 35 cent corn looks good.
A LaSalle county, Illinois, farmer
says he Is getting from sixty to seventy
bushels of corn, while his neighbors get
about forty bushels per acre. There
is no profit in growing forty bushels
per acre; that just about pays for
growing the crop. There is more profit
in growing one ucre of seventy bushels
than ten of forty bushels each.
Rotation of crops without some
thought as to the condition in which
each crop leaves the ground, and the
requirements of the crop which Is to
follow, is all guess work, and you are
just as liable to guess wrong as right.
Each crop should supplement the one
following, the entire rotation tending
to build up the soil.
One who knows says never allow the
calf to suck. The sooner you can teach
it that It must drink or starve, the
better it will be for both yourself and
calf. A hot headed man or boy has
no business teaching calves. The calf !
Is about the stubbornest thing you ever
tried to make look into a pail; don't
force it, coax it.
The sappy corn this season is making
lots of trouble In feed lots. Many cattle
feeders report more trouble this season
than ever before, and the unsound con
dition of corn is given as the cause.
Hog cholera is rampant in many coun
ties In northern Iowa, largely due, no
doubt, to excessive feeding of sour corn.
If you want to start the hens laying
feed some green cut bone. During the
summer season when hens do their best
work, they have the range, and can
pick up bugs and insects to their j
nearts' content. Do your best to pro- |
vide some food to take the place of the
bugs. |
King Edward’* Hat.
When Hall Caine was In Philadelphia
lome time ago he told the following story:
At a garden party near London where
royalty attended Mr. Caine was presented
:o the king. A photographer made a snap
ihot of the assembly. As Is well known,
it these open air functions the malo
Hirsts always remove their hals when In
:he presence of the king while his ma
lesty continues to wear hla headgear.
When the photographic plato was develop
?d It was found that beside the king only
ono other guest wore a hat. This was
the very young son of the novelist, who
was remonstrated with by hla father for
a grave breach of decorum.
"But,’’ asked the bov. “Isn’t his ma
jesty a polite man?-»»... *e be guilty
of a rude act?”
"He la a very polite man," he was told,
' and he would not bo guilty of a rude
act."
"Then," triumphantly replied thla young
republican, ”1 was as polite as he, for I
only followed hla example.”
Caution.
Imitations havo been placed upon the
market so closely resembling AMcock’s
Plasters In general appearance as to be
well calculated to deceive. It la, how
ever, in general appearance only that they
compare with Allrock’s, for they are not
only lacking in tbe best elements which
have made Allcock’s so efficient, but *r#
often harmful In their effects. Remember
that Allcock's are the original and only
genuine porous piasters—the best exter
nal remedy known—and when purchasing
plasters the only safe way is to always
insist upon having Allcock's.
Kept a Diary Sevan Yeare.
Henry Arthur Jones, the noted Eng
lish playwright, was giving the stu
dents of Yale an address on the drama.
"Your American vernacular in pic
turesque." he said, "and It should help
your playwrights to build strong, racy
plays. But neither vernacular or any
thing else Is of moment if perseverance
is lacking.
"No playwright can succeed who Is
like a man I know.
"I suld to this man one New Year's
day:
" ‘Do you keep a diary, Philip?’
“ ’Yes,’ he answered. ‘I’ve kept one
for the first two weeks In January for
the last seven years.’ ”
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.
Take LAXATIVE BItOMO Quinine Tablet"
Druggists refund money If It falls to cure
E. W.GROVE'S signature la on each box. 2Sr
Contagious.
From Success.
An Irish lad on the east side was ob
lged recently to seek treatment at a dis
pensary. On his return home from the
Irst treatment ho was met by this In
quiry from hla mother:
"An’ what did Ihe docthor man say was
tlio mattre wld your eye?"
"Ho suld there was some furrln sub
stance In It."
"Shure!" exclaimed the old woman, with
»n I-told-you-so air, "now, maybe, yo'll
«ape awuy from thlm Eyetallon boys!"
How to Trap Wild Animal*.
40-page trap book illustrated, picture 415 |
wild animals in natural colors, also liar- j
Dineter& calendar, also gun & trap catalog, j
also prices on raw furs. All sent post paid
for 10c stamps or silver. FREE to those who
*hinto, or buy of us. Address Fur Dept, !
N. Yf. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapolis, Minn.
Accomplished the Purpose.
From Smith’s Weekly.
"Popk'.ns is a clever fellow."
"What has he done now?"
"He’s put a spring-gun in his back yard,
•i burglar-alarm at every window, an elec
tric mat at each door, and bulldog In the
Kitchen. It cost money, but he accom
plished the purpose he aimed at."
"What was that?”
"He’s got the servant so badly fright
ened that she’s afraid to stay out late at
night."
Urs. Winslow’s poothixo strop for CJhllflre*
teething; softens the puma, reduces indtniauiuoa, *r
•eye pain, cures wind nolle, ft cent' a bottle
He Knew.
The Old Man—Gracious! If you beat
your poor horse that way you will
never reach heaven!
The Driver—If I don't beat him. I’ll
never reach town.
.. - ' . 3
A Most Valuable Agent. •
Tho glycerlno employed In Dr. PI ere***
medicines greatly enhances tho medicinal
properties which it extracts from natlv*
medicinal roots and holds In solution
much better than alcohol would. It ale*
possesses medicinal properties ol Its own
being a valuablo demulcent, nutritive
antiseptic and antiferment. It add*
greatly to theofllcacy of tho Black Cherry
bark, Bloodroot, Golden Seal root, Ston*
root and Queen’s root, contained Id
"Golden Medical Discovery ” In subduing
chronic, or lingering coughs, bronchia^
throat and lung affections, for all of which
these agents aro recommended by stand*
ard medical authorities.
In all cases whero there Is a wasting
away of flesh, loss of appotltc, with weak
stomafTi, as in tho early stages of cop*
sumjftinn, there can be no doubt that gly.
cerinofacts as a valuable nutritive and
aids Mte Golden Seal root. Stone root,
Quecfcs roht and Black Cherrybark fa*
Rromtlinp digestion and building up tb*
esh anVjstrength, controlling the cough
and brlnifog about a healthy condtUoa
of the wfi4lo system. Of course, it musk
not be emocted to work miracles. It wilt
not curefawnsumption except in its earlier
stages. It will cure very severe. ohstl
mile, hang-tm elTome coughs, bronchial
ftmrllirvn'ieai tronnles-and chronic sop*
tl larseness. In acutecougn*
It [snot so effective. TTls In tho lingering
hang-on coughs, or those of long standings
oven when accompanied by bleeding from
lungs, that It has performed its mo*t
marvelous cures.
Prof. Finley Filing wood, M. D., of Ben
nett Med. Collogo, Chicago, soys of gly
cerine:
" 1 n d yspepsla it serves an excellent purposes
Iloldliig a fixed quantity of the peroxide of
hydrogen In solution. It Is one of the best
manufactured products of the present time tat
its action upon enfeebled, disordered stom
achs, especially If there Is ulceration or ca
tarrhal gastritis (catarrhal Inflammation ot
stomach). It Is a most efficient preparation.
Glycerlno will relievo many cases of pyTou*
(heartburn) and excessive gastric (stomachy
acidity."
“Golden Medical Discovery ” enriches ana
purifies tho blood curing blotches, pimple*,
eruptions, scrofulous swellings and old sorak
or ulcers.
Semi to Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo. N. Y.
for free booklet telling all about tho natlv*
medicinal roots composing this wonderful
medicine. There Is no alcohol in It.
Peckham's Thought.
From the Philadelphia Press.
“Well,” the Peckham, rousing himself
from a brown study, “Eve was appro
priately named, wasn't she?’’
“Eve?” replied Clubberley. “Oh! you
mean Adam's mate. Why?”
“Because Adam’s beBt duy was don*
when she arrived.”
Oats—Head* 2 Feet Lon*.
The John A. Saizer Seed Coi, 1st
Crosse, Wis., are bringing out a new oat*
this yenr with heads 2 feet long! That’*
a wonder. Their catalog tells 1
Spetz—the greatest cereal hay food
America ever saw! Catalog tells I
— .. . ■ ■ a
FREE
Our mammoth 148-page Seed and Tool
Catalog is mailed free to all intending
buyers, or send ($c In stnmps and receieo
free samples of new Two Foot Long Oats
and other cereals and big catalog free.
John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box C, La
Crosse, Wis.
You won’t get popular by saying
smart things, but by laughing at them
when somebody else says them.
Gad-u-sel!!
Useful, ornamental; Interests every
body. Send 10c for convincing: sample
Kansas City Stamping Co.,
Argyie Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
FARM FOR SALE—ICO acres In Murray
county, Minn Well Improved. Eunf
terms. Price, $45 per acre. L. H. Mulhali.
219 Toy Building:, Sioux City, Ta.
SIOUX CITY P'TG CO., 1,176—6, 1907
r
For the Stock on the Farm
SloaKs Liniment
Is & whole medicine chest
Price 25c 50c 6 * 100
Send For Free Booklet on Horses.Cattle.Hogs SRaultry.
Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass.
IfML1 iHOMQRMlTff
%j5^8j®j/ SBOES FOR MEN IfS
if ^^Vw__J^k?rS^a2\The highest degree of style, fit and workman-! £«
®. ship are embodied in these splendid shoes.! ?;m
,-? : £ 4?®'****’ S**s«S^'»»LThere are none that equal them la appearance! kH
& jfj I aid wearing quality at the price. They are!
K M BUILT ON HONOR
H;t lijlg That’# what the name means. That’s what a trial will prove. By! {:■
S-j - 'I* all means wear *‘Honorhi!l” shoes. Demand them of your dealer I ' m
—INSIST. Sold everywhere. If you cannot get them^^^^J j.-ffl
: f'J i ^ We also make the “Western Lady,’’ and the &
i^ ji *^2 “Martha Washington*’ comfort »hoe» and a full line a VisS
'|;|cf men’s, women’s and children’s shoes. Our trade- B ^
. r: J F. Stayer ! ;C3^ a Shoe Co., ^ |