Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, September 26, 1901, Image 2

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    Harrison Press-Journal
a. A. PU1PPS, Pabllauer.
HARRISON. - -
NEBRASKA
Ths Nebraska State f",am Warded
has forbidden the farmers to fight the
grasshoppers longer with poison, say
ing that the loss of birds and game is
loo costly a price to pay for the de
Itruction of comparatively few Insects.
A famous entomologist says that not
one mosquito in- four hundred ever
tastes human blood. To know how to
avoid making the acquaintance of thai
one ia the important thing, and on
that problem the scientists seem to be
making good progress.
By the will of the late Jacob H.
Rogers, the locomotive builder, th
bulk of his fortune, possibly eight mil
lion dollars, is left to the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York, a3 an en
dowment fund, the income to be used
for the purchase of objects of art. This
will place the museum on a splendid
footing.
Commander-in-Chief Frederick St
George de la Tour Booth Tucker of the
Salvation army, is now a citizen of the
United States. The commander has
secured his final naturalization papers,
having been in the United States th6
required five years. He will vote at
the coming election but will not say
what ticket he will Indorse.
A railroad company that operates
coal mines in Pennsylvania recently
prevented its striking miners from in
terfering with non-union workmen,
who were employed in pumping water
out of mines, by building a barbed
wire fence seven feet high about the
pump house and dynamo plant and
thea charged it heavily with electric
ity.
Youthful aspirants who plan to
make a living by writing poetry ought
to note the fact that the livelihood of
the English poet, Austin Dobson, was
earned as principal of the fisheries and
harbor department of the Board of
Trade. He has Just resigned after
nearly half a century of service. A
few men only can earn fame as poets
Fewer still are they who can trust to
the productions of their muse to pay
the butcher's bill.
As soon as the weatuer will permit
and proper locations can be selected,
there will be pitched near Boston the
first of a number of camps for con
sumptives. This camp (and each suc
ceeding camp will be like it) will con
sist of ten piano-box tents, arranged
in a circle, with an open-air fire in the
center, and surrounded by a duck wall
eight feet high. Each of these tents
will be a consumptive's home: a con
sumptive will sleep there, even
through the coldest weather, with no
other protection than plenty of felt
blankets, felt sleeping boots, and
two-inch gallon jug of hot water.
At a result of a tangle in the steer
ing gear of his automobile, Arthur
r'asker of Philadelphia met with a pe
culiar accident He started to take i
spin down to Baltimore recently, but
turned aside from the high road when
i few miles out from the city. He was
coursing at a speed of eleven miles
when suddenly, without apparent
cause, the machine spurted and veered
to one side. It was going at the rate
of seventy-five miles an hour when it
lumped a fence and struck a tree. For
tunately, instead of being an upright
tree, it was leaning, and instead of be
ing crushed by the impact the ma
chine slid up the tree and lodged In
the branches, forty-five feet from th
ground. Mr. Fasker was unhurt. He
;1 imbed out of the seat and slid down
the tree and walked to a farm house,
where he hired a farmer to bring him
to town.
According to the Medical Record,
gang of swindlers has been playing
despicable trick on numerous pharma
cists la Brooklyn. A man goes to
Irug store with a simple prescription
has it made up, and takes the mix
ture away with him. In an hour or
two, or the following day, the pur
chaser returns with the medicine,
which lie says he gave to his wife or
child, as the case may be; and that the
patient was nearly killed by poison
which was there through the blunder
of the compounder. He says hit pby-
tlclan has analyzed the mixture and
iemonatrated the presence of poison
ind he allows the druggist to test It
then and there. The. poison Is, of
;ourse, found, as the swindler ha
idded it himself, and he thereupon an
a ounces his determination to sue tb
irugglst for damages to atone for the
results of his alleged blunder. If the
pharmacist becomes frightened at the
idem of a suit for damages, and think
It may be possible that a mistake has
been made, be maf accept the sugges
Jon of the blackmailer to settle the
w out of court, The amount of set
:lement If said to vary from 150 to
1200.
Miss Mattle Helen Beals, the young
a-oman of Wichita, Kan., who drew
t farm near Lawton, Oklahoma, In the
recent land lottery at El Reno, was
narshal of the new town of Ltwton
tor on day, and she says that was
raough. 8n says: "I am mighty
flad td get oat of Lawton. Such
mooting, drinking, robbing and kill
lag yon Barer saw. It makes me hud
lar. I don't think tnare are a dosen
roanM on th town ait. But those
n a il trantad." 8b thinks
nVa win fat 131,090 for bar farm,
vtik ia to b rat a? into town lota.
THE KOBBER TARIFF
IN no WAY
PROTECTS
LABOR.
AMERICAN
Still a Mendacious KepresentatiY of the
Party of Trusts ao.4 Comhln slf
to Bolster t p 1U Alleged UeneBU to
Our Working Men.
It Is not very satisfactory to quote
that mendacious representative of the
president. Gen. C. H. Grosvenor, for
he has a habit of crawling out of any
tight place he gets Into by denying the
interview, but as the one about to be
quoted sounds grosvenoresque and is
being quoted by the trust organs who
take Grosvenor seriously, it may be
ell to expose its absurdity. Speaking
of the increased number of American
products he found for sale in England,
he said: "I understand that Mr. Bab
cock would take the duty from all
these articles. While that might not be
fatal to our prosperity,- it would cer
tainly cripple our strength. The tariff
assists in developing our foreign trade.
It this tariff is removed the goods of j
foreign mills will be rushed in on
s, weakening our manufacturing j
strength. I find we are selling barley
England. If the tariff was off, Can-
dlan barley would kill our barley
production. The same arguments are
as good now as when the McKinley
bill was passed.
"I find in this increased transporta
tion for foreign markets an additional
ncentlve for the building up of our
merchant marine. We should not
hesitate to take prompt measures to
bring this profitable carrying trade un
der American control. Mr. Babcock's
proposition is practically one for free
trade."
In the first place, Grosvenor knows
very well that the Babcock amendment
to the tariff bill only proposed to place
the iron and steel products of the
trust on the free list and especially
provided that articles manufactured
from them, such as cutlery .should still
be protected. Grosvenor calls that free
trade, which will arouse the ire of
Babcock, who lately declared he is
still an ardent protectionist. This dis
agreement of these Republican breth
ren can be viewed with equanimity by
those who wish to Bee real tariff re
form.
Grosvenor, like all the trust repre
sentatives, knows that the weak Epot
in the tariff policy Is that the farmers
of the country get no protection while
they have to pay the tax that the
trusts add to nearly everything they
use. This is why he cites the tariff on
barley and says he found we are sell
ing barley in England, and that "if
the tariff was off, Canadian barley
would kill our barley production." He
might have added that he found our
wheat and flour there also and that
the same result might follow If there
was no tariff on these articles, but
that would have been too barefaced
even for this trust advocate to argue.
The tariff on barley is thirty cents a
bushel and we are evidently growing
more barley than we can consume or
we would not be exporting it: the sur
plus, like our surplus of wheat and
corn, has to seek the best foreign mar
ket it can find. The surplus of the bar
ley crop of Canada has to find the
same market. The price Is fixed by
the English buyers and the price of
barley in this country is fixed by the
price of the surplus sold abroad.
Would Canadian barley, even if the
tariff was removed, be sold here for
less than it will bring in England? It
would surely seek the highest market.
The Tear Book of the Department
of Agriculture on page 781 reports that
the exports of barley in 1900 reached
23,661.602 bushels and that the export
price fell from 60.7 cents a bushel to
47.4 cents.
This official Information Is rather
unfortunate for Grosvenor as with this
large surplus to sell and the conse
quent low price, the Canadians or any
other foreign growers would certainly
not look to this country for a market.
It Is also an equally unfortunate argu
saent for protection that the price of
burley is almost the lowest on record
wUh the highest tariff. This is the
wonderful protection that the farmers
are getting under the Republican
tariff, showing that protection to any
farm product Is Impossible as long as
there is a surplus of that product that
muBt be sold abroad.
CONTROL BT TAXATION.
It Is well to remember when leglsla
tlon to control the trusts la being pre
pared that the most potent power that
can be used against them Is taxation
this can le applied by the states them
selves. Not by any unfair mode but
by making them pay equally in pro
portion to what other people pay ac
cording to the amount of their prop
erty. At present the monopolies do
not pay but a small part of what they
should. The steel trust owns or con
trols 80 per cent of all the Iron mines
in the northwest which in a great
measuse enables them to be the glgan
tic monopoly tbey are, on this they do
not pay one-tenth of the taxes that
they rightfully should. Mr. Schwab
testified before the Industrial Com
mission that these iron mines were
extremely valuable for the reason that
they contain only a limited supply of
ore, a supply which cannot "last rery
long, perhaps 60 years." He continued:
"We own something Ilk 60.000 acres
of Connellsville coal. Ton could not
buy it for 160,000 an acre for thre Is
no mora Connellsville coal." I believe
that Connellsville coal will be ex
hausted in M year." Th Columbna
Press Post ia commenting on this
aid: "That monopoly control of th
(aw materials, without Which there
can be no Industry, furnishes the trust
an impregnable fortress against which
the boats of labor cannot hope to pre
vail with their present methods of
warfare.
"It is contrary to public policy to
permit such a gigantic monopoly of
raw material provided by nature.
"To prevent such a monopoly there
are but two courses open. One is so
cialism. If we were to try to cure
the evil of private monopoly by tak
ing the remedy offered by socialism
we should probably be like the Irish
man who said that, on account of the
awful medicine prescribed for him,
be was sick a long time after be got
well.
"The other course is that suggested
by the platform of the Ohio Demo
crats, the most radical anti-plutocratic
platform ever adopted by tho
Democratic party. Mr. Schwab says
that the Connellsville coal is worth
$60,000 an acre and declares that the
ore field of the northwest are of almost
inestimable value.
"The employe of the trust, if he says
enough to own a bovine, will pay taxes
on CO per cent of the full value ot that
house. Would it not be interesting to
now how much taxes the trust pays
on its 60,000 acres of coal fields?
"President Schwab says the value of
the great ore fields of the northwest
Is more than equal to the entire cap
italization of the United States Steel
Corporation.
Why does the trust acquire prop
erty in all these fields?
"Certainly not because it has any
present use for them, but because it
wants the legal power to keep others
from using them eo tliat it may com
mand a monopoly price for this raw
material.
"The way to destroy that monopoly
power is to tax It to death. Let the
trust pay taxes on the true valuation
of its property and it would not find
it so profitable to hold Idle the raw
materials without which competition
Is impossible.
The power to tax Is the power to
destroy. With that power intelligent
ly used, the people could eliminate the
element of monopoly from Industry,
ncrease the security of all legtlmate
forms of property and Increase the op
portunities for remunerative employ
ment for both labor and capital. But
no one is going to drive them to free
dom. Until they gain wisdom we must
expect their blind protests to end in
failure."
WHICH SHALL IT BET
That disinterested capitalist,
Mr.
Carnegie, made millions out of
steel
and has for the past year been trying
to appease his conscience by building
libraries. But the Homestead horror
is a spectre that will not down and his
vast fortune that was wrung from the
exhausting labor of thousands is but
of little use to him. The trust has
taken his place and it too wants its
pound of flesh and being a corpora
tion It will never make restitution like
Carnegie. In commenting on these ex
traordinary mutters the New York
Journal says: "Is it better for the
United States that the steel Industry
with all the minor industries depend
ent on it should support in comfort a
million human beings, the steel work
ers, their wives and children, or that
It should make a dozen human beings
enormously rich so that they don't
know what to do with their money, or
in fact, how to give it away?
'Is it better for the United States to
have a quarter of a million steel work
erg well paid, educating their chil
dren, feeding their families properly?
Or is it better to have Mr. Carnegie
scattering millions, Mr. Morgan buy
ing fine pictures and yachts and brie
a-brac, and Mr. Schwab drawing 1,
000,000 a year?
"For our part we are bound to say
that we think a great national Indus
try should be made to support lncom
fort and In plenty a great section of
the American people, that It should
muniflclently reward organized genius
but that it should not be distorted
into an instrument for manufacturing
a few multimillionaires regardless of
those who actually work.
"If the founders of this nation
could return, which would please them
more
"To see a million homes made happy
by a great American Industry?
"Or to see a few Individuals rendered
cynical. Intolerant and over-bearing by
Tast, useless wealth?"
When Lord Pauncefote returns to
Washington he will bring with him
a new treaty that the "Birmingham
Post" bears from a most reliable
source will be satisfactory to bo- na
tions. The Post alao says ar- Im
portant announcement" will be .oade
soon. Tbe people of the United States
will be quite anxious to hear this "an
nouncement" and know how much of
our Alaskan coast and territory !s to
go with the deal. It is said that Pres
ident McKinley bas smoothed out
some of tbe rough places In the United
States senate for the new treaty.
That Is a stranrje tale that comes
from Tampa, Fla., and monstrous If
true, that a committee of citizens or
ganized by the cigar trust, kidnapped
the labor leaders who were heading a
strike of the cigar workers and trans
ported them by sea to some unknown
place. On of the kidnapped Is said
to have escaped from the vessel. How
would it do for Morgan to kidnap tb
leaders of th steel strike and trsns-
nort them beyond aeas? The b
strange times, my masters.
Tb Monroe doctrine need not worry
any of th European nations, If they
do not rtalt America on any land
stealing tpdttlon.
SIAVES UNDER FLAG.
THOUSANDS OF BONDSMEN IN THE
PHILIPPINES.
Official Report to the National Govern
ment Ulies Feet and Kig-nrrs A Con
stant Hoorce of Trouble to American
Bulers In far fcaat.
Not long ago the Manila government
sent us the news that one of the dattes
t the Sultan of Sulu had abolished
slavery. This was an evident effort
of the censor to lead us to believe the
whole institution as it exists In our
new possessions was being extinguish
ed. The official report of Col. Pet-
tit and Major O. P. Sweet, who are
the commanders of the United States
troops In the Islands where slavery
and polygamy exist, tell a different
tale. The first named officer says:
"Under our orders I believe all Fili
pino slaves and captives have been
turned over to us, and further slavery,
either by conquest or traffic between
Islands, has been prohibited. The
abolishment of slavery can be at
tempted In one of two ways by war
or by purchase. The latter would be
futile. I cannot Imagine a more deso
late people than the More slaves would
be If set free. Their freedom would
be of short duration. War could be
had for the asking. It is for the
United States government to decide If
it wants it. The Mores have plenty
of arms and ammunition and a coun
try passable only by its waterways."
Major Sweet says: "Tho question of
slavery, although not recognized by
the United States, is still a fact, and
is a constant source of trouble on ac
count of slaves escaping from one mas
ter to another, or their being stolen.
Whenever a question of relating to
slavery comes before me, I simply
make the owners prove they are slaves
beyond doubt, in which case I have
nothing to do with them, but in case
I can pick a flaw in their title, I give
the alleged slaves freedom papers.
Thousands of Mores are held as slaves
who are by right free people."
Thousands of free men slaves under
the stars and stripes and the Taft
commission and the home government
doing nothing to free them. "If they
are slaves without doubt, I have noth
ing to do with them," says this officer.
Sixty thousand troops hunting down
Filipinos and not. a man or gun used
to even attempt to suppress this trade
In these unfortunate and miserable
people.
Congress has given President Mc
Kinley full power in the Philippines,
Increased the regular army to 100,000
men, appropriated all the money asked
for and yet he has made no move to
suppress this blot on our civilization.
In his tour through the South and
West his every hour theme was full
of rapture and exultation that the flag
waved over freedom and prosperity.
How free and prosperous are these
slaves? But they can dally gaze upon
the flag. The Republican party has
made President McKinley as great an
autocrat in the Philippines as the Czar
of Russia is in his dominions, and
Russia with all her barbarous customs
has none of this.
Yet the American people with their
jyes open but blinded by partisanship
or the pelf promised and distributed
by the Republican machine, voted for
Imperialism, of which this slavery in
the Philippines is one of the attributes
MYSTERIOISLT DISAPPEARED.
The politicians who are running the
Republican party are having piled up
against them a good deal of evidence
that they are not only the greatest
treasury looters that the United States
has ever been cursed with, but they
ire also guilty of pillaging the gov
ernment archives to accomplish their
ends. Evidence of this was lately pub
lished and the Washington Times
?ays: "It was developed yesterday
that all of the secret correspondence of
the Signal Corps of the army relating
to the Spanish war has mysteriously
disappeared from the files of the war
department Among the missing docu
ments Is a dispatch from Colonel Allen
to General Greely, announcing the
presence of the Spanish fleet In Santi
ago harbor. This message, It Is said,
was immediately communicated to
Sampson, who allowed eleven days to
elapse before taking any steps to meet
the situation. As the original of this
communication and the official en
dorsements which may have bjen made
upon It are very necessary for Ad
miral Schley's counsel to see, perhaps
the public need not be surprised to
know that it has been put out of the
way.
The excuse Is offered at the depart
ment that possibly General Greely,
chief of the signal corps, deliberately
may have destroyed the records, with
a view of concealing the names of per
sons used In the secret sarvlce of the
United States. But nobody will be
deluded by any such subterfuge. If
General Oreely bad done a thing of
that kind It would be a matter of pub
lic record and his reasons and author
ity for the act would be spread upon
the flies of the department. He Is
conveniently In the Philippines, and
will not return until November 1, so
there are several weeks during which
the onus mar be laid upon his shoul
ders problematically. All the same, the
American people will conclude that the
signal service records have been stolen
for a purpewe. as many public record
have been stolen or falsified for Tar
tans, but always infamous, purpose
during tbe fast few years.
"On would think that the Samp
son ; scandal had become too hot for
even ft administration to bear, and
that it would do something in tb.; iia
of an attempt to convince the coun
try that it is no longer an active party
to the conspiracy against the victor of
Santiago. It would better make the
effort before it Is too late; because
every day now adds to the proof that
a plot has been hatching ever since
August, 1898. to rob Admiral Schley of
hlB laurels and transfer therr. to Samp
son, the man of the Mantanzas mule.
AN ADMIRABLE PLATFORM.
The Democrats of Cambria county,
Pennsylvania, adopted at the late
convention a most admirable platform
which shows that the fiscal policy of
Tom Johnson, the mayor of Cleveland,
Is spreading beyond the confines of
his own state aiid is worthy of more
extended adoption. The most Impor
tant declarations are: "The Democratic
party stands for equality of rights and
demands equality of opportunities. It
Is opposed to the granting of special
privileges to individuals or corpora
tions. It, thtrefore, condemns the pro
tective tariff and demands that taxa
tion shall be for public revenue only.
It condemns the trusts as a monstrous
outgrowth of privilege and it propo3e3
to destroy the trusts by the simple de
vice of withdrawing from them the
benefit of the laws under which they
have established and are maintaining
monopolies. All goods controlled by
trusts should be placed upon the free
list; and every legislative advantage
now conferred upon aggregations of
capital should be recovered by the peo
ple. Taxation should fall, not upon
Industry nor upon thrift, but upon spe
cial advantages; and It should be ap
portioned in accordance with the
benefits conferred by the govern
ment. The democatlc party, therefore.
condemns the existing system and
practice in Pennsylvania under which
the great burden of taxation falls
upon the labor and Industry of the
people while aggregated monopoly
practically escapes. Corporate mo
nopoly Is scandalously favored at the
expense of the farmer, the merchant,
the manufacturer and the artisan. The
latter contributes proportionately a
hundred or perhaps a thousand times
aa much to the cost of the government
as the railway and other privileged In
terests and they receive Infinitely less
in return. The principle of local op
tion in taxation should command the
widest recognition."
SHIP NCBNIOT STEAL.
A conference io soon to be held by
the Republican leaders to arrange for
the jambing through the next Con
gress of the $180,000,000 ship-subsidy
steal. The Pennsylvania railroad's
team of experienced lobbyists Is re
lied on to make Its pathway pleasant
and profitable to those members of
Congress who are open to this kind of
argument and the Administration will
aid the atrocity with all the Influence
It can bring to bear. The chairman of
the Republican national committee,
Mark Hanna, Is the engineer In charge
and will put forth all his power to
pass the steal and our good kind and
generous President will sign tbe bill
and see that his good friends of the
steamship combine get the swag regu
larly. They put up a good stiff sum
for the campaign fund last fall when
Hanna needed the money and of
course common gratitude would com
pel this promised favor In return.
These people who voted for Presi
dent McKinley cannot grumble it the
steal goes through for It was well
known and Indeed proclaimed by those
who are Interested that it would pass
early In the coming Congress and that
President McKinley had promised to
recommend its passage and he carried
out his part In good faith In his mes
sage to Congress just after the elec
tion. Doubtless a large number of Repub
licans voted for President McKinley
with their eyes shut to this and other
raids on the treasury, quite satisfied
because he was labeled Republican
and they voted for Congressmen wko
also are pledged to support it on th
same broad basis.
Democrats can point with pride thai
those who have been elected by their
votes are solidly opposed to this class
of legislation and if a black sheep ap
pears when the flock is counted, he
will be marked for slaughter at the
first opportunity, for It will be known
that he has been bought and branded
by the Hanna herders.
When some poor devil of a moon
shiner with no political pull Is caught
by the government he la put through
the courts and Imprisoned without loss
of time. If a bogus sliver dollar or
hank bill Is passed, the secret service
is everlastingly after the forger. There
seems to be great tenderness In
bringing the larger thieve, like Necly
and Rathbone, who are accused of
looting the Cuban postal department,
to justice. In the New York customs
department peculations have been
pning on for a long time and the
treasury department had full Informa
tlon to that effect but has not dared
to even arrest the thieves because of
their high political standing. It
would hurt "the party" you know.
The report that the keg combine of
the army and navy departments, head
ed by Corbln and Crownlnshlnld, ar
to represent this country at the coro
nation of King Edward, Is not extrs
ordinary In view of the othir antic
of these favorite ridden department.
Congress should stop this nonsense,
anyway, we ar represented enough
now with an ambassador and attachei
both military and navy and sons ol
some father to whom Hanna Is undai
some obligations for a good stiff con
tiibutlon to the Republican campaign
fund.
Mme(riillc Rules Mortf
and all wise mother
make
St.
Jacobs Oil
a household remedy for the
simple reahou that it always
Conquers Pain
Started a Fortune With Ten Dollars.
V. R. Beatty, one d"f the new Texas
oil kings, was a reporter when the
news of a great oil "strike" came in.
He got together $10 and by putting
that up as a security he "bluffed". tl.
discoverers and got valuable lands,
which proved so fruitful that he was
able to pay the balance due on them
in a few weeks.
"OH, MAMA,
Something Is lilting He."
It la not itcblnif piles that alls you or your
child, ll I Hie piu or scat worm that causes
you or your child to have rectal trouble. Soon,
after rctlriuK (or the night the worm appear,
it bites and Htfncs and cauc scratching and
aching. Mother know what it means when the
child cries out: -Ma. Ma, something is biting;
me." And sure enoujrh. upon examining her
child, she Undi the nauKhly. while, sharp point
ed at both ends, the troublesome pin worm Im
bedded In the child's recium. Th a worm
cause more nervousness to young or old persons
than any other disease. And tbe ilebing Is Dot
f)lles but pin worm. The only sure and harm
ess remedy Is STF.KETKK S PIN WOKM
DESTROY feR. Ask your druggist for bteke
tee's I'ln Worm Destroyer. In order that you
ret tbe right meolclne, send me 26c postage.
Will send by return mall. Address
GEO. ti. STKKKTFK. Grand Kaplda, Mich,
Please mcutlon this paper.
Cranks are persons who do not sc
things as you do.
Row Clothes Are Blistered.
Many of the starches now being used
In washable fabrics contain lngredli
ents that break and blister the good)
so that after a few washings they aP
of little service. Defiance starch (moi
in Nebraska) is manufactured wltr
special view to obviating tho difficulty.
It contains a solution that can 1 no
way injure the linen but Instead
gives it a smooth, glosay finish that,
makes goods look new after each Iron
ing. Sold by leadng grocers. Mado
by Magnetic Starch Co., Omaha. Nb.
Hope Is the froth that hides th
dregs in life's cup.
12 3 PAINT
When you paint you want
it, 1 to last; 2 look well; 3
protect your house. Some
paint does 1, not 2 or 3;
some does 2 awhile, not 1 or
3; lead and oil does 2 well, 3
airly, 1 badly.
Better have it all; 12 3
paint: Devoe ready paint;
the best isn't too good.
Get Devoe of your dealer; take noth
ing less. Pamphlet on painting; sent
free if you mention this paper.
(SOOD-PAINT DEVOE, CILICAGO.
and tf.bO ehoes for style, comfort and
wear has excelled all other makes sold at
these prices. Thia excellent reputation has
been won by merit alone. W. L. Douglas
ahoes have Co clve better aatiaf action than
other $3.00 and 3.60 aboea because h la
reputation for the beat 3.00 and S3. 60
horn roust bs maintained. The standard
baa always been placed so nign ina iu
wearer receive moro value for bie money
in ths W. L. Doua-laa S3.00 and UM
hoes than be can get elsewhere.
W. L. Douglas sella more 3.00 and 13.60
shoes than any other two manufacturers.
rV. L. Qjmgitu fs.iw U'l tag unm
cannot bt tqualit at ana pries.
Bold by th beat shoe dealers everywMM.
laelss opsin naving . I- imwfiassnuew
with MSB and price tampad on bottosmw
Saw t Ossser ay Mall. II w. I. inane)
an po wnn m jom wwn, arm nwr m i.
y. stiea)srnt snywhers on rerelvt of ansa aa
m. aouiunrau lav hi
asomdsmnntii wllliaasswaa
satftatwtljsaaal(Hao4Maas.
aawa "Wl nos, in mjmt in was
taut, fake eiMMiiaiiis at
lest as shews au Rwaat i etas
Sstfiaaestraa; sa sad ansa
us
tesi
ff3attW PWaal I
4VM WW m
V 71' If Mhom
J I for Mure Than a Quart er of a Cental
. Anntatinn nf W. T.. Douclaa S3.0O
MMvtMl fwWaPi" m&9m w 9 maWm w&
saiii m-at twm html mm mmm.