The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 03, 1904, Image 7

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    BLOOD WILL TELL
A THEORY SUPPORTED BY FRESH,
CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE.
A Recent Instance Proves That a
Woman’s Happiness Is Largely De
pendent on the State of Her Blood.
When the blood is disordered every
organ of the body is afTected unfavor
ably and fails to discharge its func
tions properly. In the case of every
woman nature has made special pro
vision for a periodical purification of
V ^e blood, and so long as this occurs
^ her health and spirits unfailingly re
■£l veal the beneficial results. So slight
a cause as a cold or a nervous shock
may produce a suppression of this
vital function, and until it is restored
she is doomed to misery. The remedy
that has proved most prompt and
effective in all disorders peculiar to
the female sex is that which brought
such great relief to Miss Mattie
Griggs, of No. 807 Indiana street, Law
rence, Kansas, concerning which she
speaks as follows:
“In the winter of 1092, from some
unknown cause, thert w»s a cessation
of functions pf'/ill^r my sex for a
period oi f_ar months. I became very
weak and could not get up stairs
without help. I had nausea and pain
and a constant headache. I was un
der the care of a physician for three
months, but he did not succeed in cur
ing me. Then a lady friend told me
about the merits of Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills which she had used in her fam
ily, and she induced me to try them.
It was in May when I first began
to use them, and in June I had fully
recovered my health, and have since
remained perfectly well.”
In all cases of delayed development
of young girls; in anemia or weakness
due to impoverished blood and show
ing itself in pallor, lack of ambition,
despondency and nervousness; also in
the great constitutional disturbances
attending the period known as the
change of life, Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
are invaluable for women, wThose
health is always closely dependent on
the state of the blood. They are sold
by all druggists. A booklet of valuable
k information relating to the care of a
' woman's health at all important peri
ods, and entitled “Plain Talks to Wo
men,” will be sent free in a sealed en
velope to any one who chooses to
write for it to the Dr. Williams Medi
cine Company, Schenectady. N. Y.
Occupied Queer Pulpit.
| A curious pulpit was that used by
Bishop Bickersteth, who once occu
pied the lantern-space of a lighthouse
in which to deliver a short address to
a small gathering of visitors and the
lighthouse men themselves. On an
other occasion the saintly old man
preached in the operating theater of
a hospital to a congregation of pa
tients.
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers say they don’t keep
Defiance Starch because they have a
stock in hand of 12 oz. brands, which
they know cannot be sold to a custo
mer who has once used the 16 oz.
pkg. Defiance Starch for same money.
A young man likes to have a girl
sit up with him till midnight during
courtship, but after marrage he does
not want her to sit up for him that
late.—Chicago News.
No ehromos or cheap premiums, but
a better quality and one-third more
of Defiance Starch for the same price
of other starches.
If a girl wants to be kissed a young
man doesn’t have to waste much time
looking for an opportunity.
u Save i on Drugs
write for our 100-page catalogue,
_ j showing 10.000 articles at cut prices.
PATENT MEDICINES. RUBBER
M GOODS, TRUSSES.
fT SHERMAN & MCCONNELL DRUG CO.
Cor. 16th and Dodge. Omaha. Ne-b.
Many who fonnerly smoked lOfCItars now smoke
LEWIS SINGLE BINDER
STRAIGHT 5* CIGAR
Tour Jobber or direct from Factory, Peoria, 111.
Fair of Beaucaire.
An unsuccessful effort has been
made in France ip revive the fair of
Beaucaire on a scale comparative to
that of the good old times. These
fars began in the thirteenth century,
and gradually rose to such proportions
that in 1790, for instance, the busi
ness transacted amounted to 40,000,*
000 francs. Before the middle of the
last century, the railway changed all
this, and today the fair is a mere
shadow of its former self.
. _
Great Country for Wheat.
The delta of the Tigris and the
Euphrates, now partially a desert and
partially a swamp, contains over 5,
000,000 acres of land. Perhaps no re
gion of all the regions of the earth is
more favored by nature for the pro
duction of cereals. It is claimed that
wheat in its wild, uncultivated state
has its home in the semi-arid regions,
and that from here it has been trans
ported to every quarter of the globe. i
Oaks Named for Drttish Queen.
Many English queens have chosen
oak trees in Windsor forest whereon
their names, with the dates of their
choice, have been commemorated hy
means of brass plates. In different
parts of the forest, with seas around
them, are oaks bearing the names of
Queen Elizabeth, Queen Caroline,
Queen Charlotte find Queen Victoria.
London’s “Little Italy.”
Reporting upon the “Little Italy”
one of London’s most crowded dis
tricts, the health officer of the dis
trics says that the Italians are “gen
erally superior” to the English per
sons who are their neighbors. They
also take more care of their children,
among whom the death rate is low,
and they are sober.
Source of Petroleum.
Until recently it was almost nni- j
versaily believed that petroleum was. j
like coal, derived from fossil vegeta
tion or possibly from animals or fishes
of some long past age. ?iow it is as
serted by many scientific men that it
may not be of any organic origin, but
may be due to subterranean chemical
action.
Popular Taste Changed.
Two generations ago an author
could not make his heroine success
i ful without constantly calling the slen
derness of her waist to the attention
ot the reader. For certain small
mercies let us be duly thankful. The
eighteen-inch waist is no longer the
basic motif of the popular novel.
Church on Mountain Top.
It is proposed to build a small con
crete church on the top of Croagh
Patrick. County Mayo, Ireland, for the
celebration of the annual pilgrimage
mass. The church will be almost
! 2,GOO feet above the sea level.
—
Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used
for all affections of the throat and lungs.—Wm.
O. Endslkt, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,1000.
True Friendship.
The good friend is the friend that
knows, not thinks, of fancies, or imag
J ines, or hopes, but knows that he can
tell us what he thinks and how he
feels with perfect freedom and aban
don.
_ “
CITC permanently cured. Wo fits or ncrrcuraes* after
lllw ilrst day's nse of Dr. Xllnti’s Great »rve KeMop.
er. Send for FREE S3.01) trial bottle and treaties,
1)6. ii. U. KUN6, Ltd., 331 Arch Street, ^iuladslphia, tm
Increased Varieties of Fruit.
“Man will eat 200 or 300 more foods
in the year 20o0 than he eats now,”
said a chemist. “A movement is on
foot among the world's governments
to increase the varieties of our foods,
and every week, from somewhere or
other, a new vegetable or fruit or nut
is added to the international bill of
fare.”
It is easier to win a girl’s heart than
it is to earn her hand.
Superior quality and extra quantity
must win. This is why Defiance Starch
is taking the place of all others.
A girl's watch is usually more orna
mental than herself.
' •
*
' «
JZtctpe of Old &SAMII1F11W2R
/W^ Sad' v I
_!
Aperfecl Remedy for Constipa
tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
| | EXACT COPY OP WRAPPER,
f I !
I For Infants and Children.
| The Kind You Have
Always Bought
I Bears the
Signature
Of
• In
Use
For Over
t Thirty Years
CUSTOM
I
p I
_mm
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
BEGGS'BLOOD P0RIF1EH
CURES catarrh of the stomach.
5
. i
■ * -
The Rainbow Gold.
“2 wanted to bring you some gold,” he
said.
With a flush on his warm little cheek,
rose-red,
And a shake of his tresses sunny,
“Before the rainbow had faded away.
I climbed to the top of the hill to-da>.
To dig for the pot of money.
“I parted the grasses that grew on the
knoll;
And dug and dug such a deep, deep hf'.e.
Bu/ I wish my hands were stronger.
I’m s:;re that the rainbow touched the
ground
Just there, and I might have found
The gold if I d waited longer.
"But I grew so tired and hot pretty soon.
That, when all the bes were ringing
for noon.
I gave up tr.ying to find it.
I don't much think, after all—do you
The story they told me can be quite
true;
But, please, oh, please, not to mind it.
“For look what I gathered and brought
you instead.” . .
With a dimple in each round cheek, he
said:
“I think they are just as splendid—
A posy as big as my hand would hold.
Of buttercups shining and yellow as g< -d;
That grew where the rainbow ended.
He poured the gay blossoms out over
my knee.
And lifted a pair of red lips to me,
With a kiss that was sweeter than
honey;
And never was treasure so fair in my
sight,
Nor would I give one of his buttercups
bright.
For a pot running over with money!
—Margaret Johnson.
NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD.
Items of Interest Gathered from Many
Sources.
Thomas Neal of Chicago was re
elected treasurer of the United Broth
erhood of Carpenters and Joiners by
acclamation.
A State Federation of Labor has
been organized in Utah, and efforts
are to be made thoroughly to organize
the workmen in that territory.
The ten leading laundries of To
ledo, Ohio, have declared “open shop,"
and as a result 200 men and girls
belonging to the Laundry Workers'
union are on a strike.
The Monongahela works of the
American Sheet and Tinplate com
pany have resumed operations, giving
employment to a large number of
men.
Efforts to bring about peace be
tween the cotton manufacturers ana
their employes were given a slight
setback when 1,200 striking weavers
held a mass meeting and by a unani
mous vote decided not to return to
work.
At its recent convention the Work
ingmen’s Federation of the state of
New York decided to send a commit
tee to wait on President Roosevelt
and urge him to appoint William S.
Waudby of Rochester, N. Y., as the
successor of Carroll D. Wright.
The paper mill employes of the Fox
River Y’alley district in Wisconsin
have sought aid from the State Fed
eration of Labor in a plan to purchase
and operate a mill on the co-operative
plan. The union workers in the
'‘trust’’ paper mills have been locked
out for several months.
The Chicago Sausage Makers’ union,
comprising 1,000 members, which re
cently seceded from the Butcher
Workmen’s union, has decided to re
turn to the parent body. At a meeting
a vote was taken in favor of keeping
within the fold of the organization of
which Michael Donnelly is president.
Correspondents in The Telegrapher,
the official organ of the Order of Rail
road Telegraphers, suggest that a
general demand for a $2 a day mini
mum rate of wages east of the Missis
sippi river, and $2.50 a day minimum
west of that stream, be adopted for
all telegraphers, agents and levermen.
One of the newest international
unions to show rapid growth is the
Brotherhood of Foundry Employes.
Jurisdiction has been granted this or
ganization over the cliippers, cupola
tenders, grinders, mill men, handy
men and helpers. Chicago has a large
quota and they are enthusiastic union
members.
n 1 » 11. . n _111 / T_ « %
£iUi^MUJCO UL IUC OUUUiilU
mine, to the number of 150, struck
because the miners were not per
mitted to select their own ‘buddies,”
or fellow-workmen. Three mines of
the Island Valley Coal company are
shut down because of the company’s
refusal to give the night firemen an
eight-hour day.
The United Typothetae of America,
the organization of the employing
printers of the country, at its conven
tion recently, threw down the gauntlet
to the union printers by the adoption
of resolutions “That the United Typo- [
thetae of America declares that it is
opposed to any reduction of the fifty
four hour week” and “that the United
Typothetae of America will resist any
attempt on the part of the Interna
tional Typographical Union to reduce
the present hours of labor.”
The “readjustment” at the Joliet
plant of the United States Steel cor
poration has resulted in a sensational
reduction of wages. Nearly all of the
4,000 men employed at the big plant
are affected, and in many cases the
decrease amounts to 50 per cent. The
tonnage system has been eliminated
and all have been placed on a flat sal
ary rate. The anger of hundreds of
the skilled hands is at white heat, al
though many have remained at their
posts, with the intention of submitting
until after election.
Efforts to bring about closer alli
ance between the printers and the
commercial telegraphers’ unions have
met with fair success during the con
ventions of the past summer. Now
the railroad and commercial telegra
phers’ organizations are talking nego
tiations so that a close affiliation may
result. The reports in the Commer
cial Telegraphers’ Journal, a very
bright paper, predict a meeting later
at which an agreement between the
two unions of wire clickers will be
made.
A wonderfully interesting value of
800 pages is a report of the census
bureau dealing with the occupations
of the people of the United States. It
shows that in 303 specified occupa^
tions there are employed in tho
United States 29,073,233 persons, of
whom 10,381,765 are engaged in agri
cultural pursuits, 1,253,538 in profes
sional service, 4,766,904 in trade and
transportation, and 7,085,309 in manu
facturing and mechanical pursuits.
In the professional service there are
more teachers than physicians, more
physicians than lawyers, and more
lawyers than clergymen.
The Structural Building Trades Al
liance, composed of the principal in
dustries in the building trades unions,
is designed to regulate the organized
building trades as to bring about har
mony between employers and work
men throughout that industry* to en
courage the investment cf capital in
the structural operations, to substi
tute arbitration for strikes and lock
outs. and to mak*e impossible any
where such a situation as has existed
until of late in the building trades in
New York city.
The lowest wages in Germany pre
vail in the purely agricultural districts
in the eastern provinces, adjoining
Russia. The highest wages are paid
in the German seaports and in the
industrial centers. The hours of la
bor are never less than ten a day, and
are frequently twelve. “When it is
borne in mind that the necessaries oi
life, like meats and breadstuffs. are
as high and even higher than in the
United States, and that rents oi
houses are nearly if not tfuite as high,
the wages of unskilled laborers seem
very low to an American,” says United
States Consul Guenther, who is sta
tioned at Frankfort, Germany.
“Do you want the eight-hour day.’
That is the question now agitating tht
printers under the jurisdiction of th<
International Typographical union
The membership all over North
America is voting on the question ci
indorsing the plan to inaugurate the
eight-hour day in the book and jot
offices of the country on Jan. 1, 1906
Reports received at the headquarters
of the parent body in Indianapolis
indicate that nearly 200 chapels ir
New York and Chicago have indorsed
the measure, and the local unions
have been instructed to take a refer
endum vote, completing the vote noi
later than Oct. 21, and sending the
result to the International officers be
fore the expiration of the month.
The premium system so strongly
advocated by the National Metal
Trades Council and other anti-union
associations of employers is not likely
to find much support among the Brit
ish trades unionists. By agreement
with the Employers’ Federation the
Amalgamated Society of Engineers
some time aao decided to give the
system a trial. The trial proved sc
satisfactory to the employers that
they endeavored to extend the opera
tion of the system. Thereupon the
Engineering and Shipbuilding Trades
Federation, which includes twenty
seven unions—practically the whole
engineering trades outside the A. S. S.
—promptly appointed a committee to
consider the matter. That committee
has now reported and condemned any
attempt to make the system general.
By a vote of 8,759 to 4,135 the Brick
layers and Stonemasons’ union has
decided not to affiliate with the Struc
tural Building Trade Alliance. The
Bridge and Structural Iron Workers,
at their recent convention, submitted
the question of remaining affiliated
with the alliance to a referendum
vote. Altogether it looks as if the
“basic” building trades conglomera
tion launched by George Gubbins,
“Bill” Spencer, Frank Duffy and
Frank Buchanan is having a hard time
to keep its head above water. It is
really too bad. because it furnishes a
position for Spencer at $l,5u0 a year
and allows Frank Buchanan to be the
head of a real federation of labor.
What's the difference if it is about as
much needed as a fifth wheel to a
wagon?—Chicago Inter Ocean.
The semi-annual report of the
Brotherhood of Painters, Decorator?
and Paperhangers has just been senl
out to the local unions from head
quarters at Lafayette, Ind. While the
decreased activity in the building in
dustry during the year has resulted
in a loss of membership of building
trades organizations, the brotherhood
is an exception. In the six month?
covered by the report 7,412 new mem
bers were added to the roll and 4,244
were reinstated, a total increase oi
11,656. During this period, however
10,154 members were suspended, mak
ing the net increase in membership
1,502. Charters were issued to fiftyj
one new local unions. According to
the financial statement the balance
on hand Jan. 1, 1904, was $18,977.04,
and the receipts for the six months
amounted to $7d.195.32 and the expen
ditures to $81,S67.06. leaving a balance)
in the treasury of $12,305.30. The
death and disability claims paid foi
the six months aggregated $21,925,
and the total amount paid by the
brotherhood from March, 1887,
amounted to $179,075.15.
James O'Connell, president of the
International Association of Machin
ists, sends out a warning to local
unions to be careful in their selection
of officers, because of the detective
system through which employers are
seeking to destroy the organization.
He says: “I know of no organization
that has been so infested with spies
and spotters as the International As
sociation of Machinists has been, and
is at the present time. Why our em
ployers should be so persistent in
their efforts to employ so-called detec
tives to secretly report the business
of our association is beyond my com
prehension. Machinists are employed
by several detective associations with
the understanding that they must
hold membership in our association
They are advised to go into our local
lodges, make themselves active in the
work of the local, and whenever pos
sible secure appointment or election
to the position of recording or finan'
cial secretary, or president—record
ing secretary being preferred—in or
der that they might be in a position
to secure all correspondence between
the local and grand lodges. I take
this opportunity of warning our mem
bership against the policy of selecting
those with whom you are not thor
oughly familiar and acquainted to fill
the official chairs in the local lodges.
I have every regard for the traveling
brother, but believe that the officers
should be chosen from the permanent
residents in the locality where the
lodge is in existence.”
Character.
The habit of industry can be ac
luired as easily as the habit of idle
ness. But it is always the naan or
boy of character who intrenches him
self with good habits, and it is always
the moral weakling, the characterless
person, who becomes the slave of evil
habits. Accomplishments are either
helps or hindrances to genuine suc
cess. High qualities of character alone
can make them worth wrhile, mighty,
and enduring.
Virtues of the Amethyst.
The amethyst, in days of chivalry,
was believed to have great power for
good in battles. The wearer wTas ren
dered brave, far being and honorable.
The amethyst was also said to destroy
the craving for lquor, which was as
prevalent in those days cs it is in this.
Many Days Without Sleep.
A Philadelphia physician tells of a
doctor who went without sleep for
eight days and nights, and of another
who did not go to bed for eighteen
days. Napoleon rede for days in the
saddle apparently without sleep. No
authentic tests probably exist.
Healthy Occupation.
It is remarkable that men attending
the pans in salt works are never
known to have smallpox, the grippe,
scarlet fever of cholera.
Then He Went to Bed.
"Poor old Prof. Thinkard wont home
the other night, and he knew there
was something he wanted to do, but
he couldn’t think what it was.”
More Flexible and Lasting,
won't shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better re
sults than possible with any other
brand and one-third more for same
money.
Little Objection to Slavery.
It may be better to be an old man’s
darling than a young man’s slave—
yet there are more slaves than dar
lings.
Write MURINE ETE REMEDY Co. ChVasro. tf
your eye* are sore or Inflamed, and get oculist’s
sdvlce and free sample MURINE. It cures uil eye-ills.
Sometimes a stern parent allows his
daughter to wed the man of her
choice because he has a grudge
iganst him.
Mrs. Windows Soothing Syrup.
For children teethlr , softens the p>iru». reduce* fp.
ummatioD,nilayapa n euro* -la.tculU,. sacauouie.
The female shopper doesn’t have to
go to the exchange desk in order to
change her mind.—Philadelphia Rec
ord.
Did you know that you can get
more LIGHT for less money from a
Monarch Carbide Feed ACETYLENE
GENERATOR than from anything else
In the world—except the sun? Why
not Investigate. Send for catalogue
D, Monarch Acetylene Gas Co., 1012
Farnam street, Omaha, Neb.
A grain of sand leads to the fall of
a mountain when the moment has
come for the mountain to fall.—Er
nest Renan.
“Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy Is
•xceilent for the liver, i iired me after eiUil year* of
suffering.” S. 1‘eprou, Albany, V. V. World famou*. 11.
A good woman is usually too good
for any man—but fortunately she
doesn’t know it.
Those Who Have Tried It
will use no other. Defiance Cold Wa
ter Starch has no equal in Quantity
or Quality—16 oz. for 10 cents. Other
brands contain only 12 oz.
Things that are almost right are al
together wrong.
WESTERN CANADA’S
Magnificent Crops for 1904.
Western Canaca’s
Wheat Crop this
Year Will be 60,
000,000 Bushels,
and Wheat at Pres
ent is Worth Sl.OOa
Bushel.
The Oat and Barley Crop Will Alto Yield Abundantly.
Splendid prices for all kinds of grain, cattle
and other farm produce for the growing of
which the climate is unsurpassed.
About loO.OOO Americans have settled in West
ern Canada during the past three years.
Thousands'of free homesteads of 160 acres
each still available in the best agricultural dis
tricts.
It has been said that the United States will
be forced to import wheat within a very few
years. Secure a farm in Canada and become
one of those who will produce it.
Apply for information to Superintendent of
Immigration. Ottawa, Canada, or to authorized
Canadian Government Agent—W. V. Bennett,
601 New York Life Building, Omaha, Neb.
#
C*"* ^WSWi®
AJTOf* C1M5WU1A&MA
ora cuaRNUHiaiannaciw.
Strawberry and
Vegetable Dealers
The Passenger Department of the Illinois
Central Railroad Company have recently issued
a publication known as Circular No. 12, in which
is described the
best territory in this country
for the growing of early strawberries and early
vegetables. Every dealer in such products
should address a postal card to the undersigned
SSBSBy’llS-ilw**- requesting a copy of
J. F. MERRY, Asst. Gen’l Pass’r Agent.
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
cures Cuts, Burns, Bruises.
W. N. U., Omaha. No. 44—1904
PUTNAM
tolar more goods brighter and faster colors than an? <
Ink Sealer or we will tend poet paid at 10c a package. '
ummmj \ i wm
Miss Agnes Miller, of Chicago, speaks
to young women about dangers of the
Menstrual Period — how to avoid pain and
suffering and remove the cause by using
Lydia E* Pinkham's Vegetable Compound*
“To Young Women:—I suffered for six years with dysmenor
rhea (painful periods), so much so that I dreaded every month, as I
knew it meant three or four days of intense pain. The doctor said
this was due to an inflamed condition of the uterine appendages caused
by repeated and neglected colds.
“ If young girls only realized how dangerous it is to take cold afc
this critical time, much suffering would be spared them. Thank God
for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, that was the only
medicine which helped me any. Within three weeks after I started to
take it, I noticed a marked improvement in my general health, and at
the time of my next monthly period the pain had diminished consider
! ably. I kept up the treatment, and was cured a month later. I am like
! another person since. I am in perfect health, my eyes are brighter, I have
added 12 pounds to my weight, my color is good, and I feel light and
happy.”—Miss Agnes MilIer, 25 Potomac Ave., Chicago, I1L
The monthly sickness reflects the condition of a womaj'i
health. Anything unusual at that time should have prompt
and proper attention. Fifty thousand letters from women prora
that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound regulates
Struation and makes those periods painless.
READ WHAT MISS LENDBECK SAYS:
“Dear Mrs. Ptntcham: — Lydia E. Pinky
ham’s Vegetable Compound has greatly bene
fitted me. I will tell you how I suffered. Mr
k trouble was painful menstruation. I felt as each
' month went by that I was getting worse. I had >
i severe bearing-down pains in my back and abdo
men.
“ A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkhamfr
medicine. I did so and am now free from all
pain during my periods.” — Jessub CL Llndbkgx.
1201 6th Street, Rockford, 111.
_ v >i
FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN. ^
Remember, every woman is cordially
invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there
is anything about her symptoms she does
1 not understand. Mrs. Pmkhain’s address is
Lynn, Mass., her advice is free and cheerfully given to every ail
ing woman who asks for it. Her advice has restored to health
more than one hundred thousand women. Why don't you try
it, my sick sisters?
FORFEIT lf cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures ft
above testimonials, which will prove their absolute genuineness.
Lydia K. Pink ham Uedlcias Co., Ljrnn. Mass.
I
The reaeon W. L. Douglas $*.50 shoes sre the greatest sellers *■ the worm le nefsose or taetr excel
lent style,easy fitting and smiorior wearing qualities. If I coi'ld show you the difference between the
shoes mule in my factory and those of other makes and the high-grade leathers used, you would end er
st:.nd why W. L. Douglas $8.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, lit better, wear
longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other fc.W) shee on the market today,and why the
sales for the year ending July 1. ISM. were gut,263,040.00. . . ._
W. L. Douglas guarantees their value by stamping his name and pslaa on .he bottom. MokBor la—
take no substitute. Sold by shoe dealers everywhere.
SUPERIOR IM FIT, COMFORT AMD WEAR.
**/ hare worn W. f~ Douglas $3.50 shots for the last twelve years with absolute
Satisfaction. I And them superior in At, comfort and wear to others editing from
$5.ft) to F.00."-D. S. He CUE, Dept. Coll., U. S. Jut. Revenue, Richmond, Va.
W. L. Douglas uses Corona Coltakin In his S3.AO shoes. Corona Colt I* conceded to
bo tbe finest Patent Leather tuaile. Fast Color Kyelets used exclusively.
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mamsadmactta.
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I'.,k* w°o1 anrt cotton equally well and is guaranteed to oive nortec*
bnte ler free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors. MOKBOB ltBVu gun Fnfsasib*, JHmmh