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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1905)
Eminent Doctors Praise its Ingredients. We refer to that boon to weak, nervous, suffering women known as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Dr. John Fyfeone of the Editorial Staff of The Eclectic Medical Review says of Unicorn root (Hehmim Dioica) which Is one of the chief ingredients of the "Fa vorite Prescription” : "A remedy which invariably acta as a uter ine lnvlgorator • * * makes for normal ac tivity of the entire reproductive system.* He continues "in Helonias we have a medica ment which more fully answers the above Purposes than any other drug u tth which I am acquainted. In the treatment of diseases pe culiar to women it is seldom that a case is seen which does not present some indication for this remedial agent.” I)r. Fyfe further says: "The following are among the leading Indications for Helonias (Unicom root). Pain or aching in the back, with lencorrhoea: atonic tweak) conditions of the reproductive organs of women, mental depression and ir ritability. associated with chronic diseases of the reproductive organs of women, constant sensation of heat in the region of the kid neys; menorrhagia (flooding', due to a weak ened condition of the reproductive system: amenorrhoea (suppressed or absent monthly periods). arising from or accompanying an abnormal condition of the digestive organs and ansetnic (thin blood) habit; dragging sensations in the extreme lower part of the abdomen.” If more or less of the above symptoms are present, no invalid woman can do better than take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, one of the leading ingredi ents of which is Unicorn root, or Helonias, and the medical properties of which it most faithfully represents. Of Golden Seal root, another prominent Ingredient of "Favorite Prescription," Prof. Finley Elltngwood, M. D.. of Ben nett Medical College. Chicago, says: "It is an important remedy in disorders of the womb. In all catarrhal conditions * * • and general enfeeblement, it is useful.” Prof. John M. Sctidder. M. D.. late of Cincinnati, says of Golden Seal root: "In relation to it« general effects on the system, there ie no medicine in use atunit which there is ruch general unanimity of opinion. It Is unirowally regarded as the tonic useful in all debilitated states.” Prof. Barthoiow. M. P.. of Jefferson Medical College, says of Golden Seal: "Valuable in uterine hemorrhage, menor rhagia (flooding) and congestive dysmenor rhuea (painful menstruation).” Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription faith fully represents all the above named in gredients and cures the diseases for which they are recommended. ^Thompson's Eya W«t«r Use the Means at Hand. It is not money so much as brains that the small merchant wants for ad vertising—the handicap of deficient capital is as nothing compared with the handicap of defective thinking. Whatever excuse may be given for failing in business, the lamest of all is “lack of means to advertise,’’ be cause the business does not exist that cannot be exploited profitably with the means at hand. ULCERS FOR 30 YEARS. Painful Eruptions From Knees to Feet Seemed Incurable—Cuticura Ends Misery. Another of those remarkable cures by Cuticura, after doctors and all else had failed, is testified to by Mr. M. C. Moss of Gainesville, Texas, in the following letter: “For over thirty years I suffered from painful ulcers and an eruption from my knees to feet, and could find neither doctors nor medicine to help me, until I used Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, which cured me in six months. They helped me the very first time I used them, and I am glad to write this so that others suffering as I did may be saved from misery.” Belgium's Good Work. Though Belgium has an area of but 11.373 square miles, which is less than one-fourth the size of the state of New York, and a population of only 6.500,000, it has accomplished within twenty years a mighty task, opening up to the world a vast territory cov ering an are«a of 800,000 square miles with a native and white population of about 30,000,000. European Breakfasts. Mark Twain, in speaking of the typ ical European breakfasts, said. “Do you know what I'll do? I’ll nail a piece of quttle-fish bone to the chim ney, and every morning I’ll hop up on the mantel and take a pick at it witn a tin bill. It will be just as filling and much cheaper than a European break fast.” It is evident that Mr. Clemens pre fers the typical American breakfast dish of Pillsbury's Vitos with good cream and sugar. Woman Has Tenor Voice. Miss Josephine Northmore, of Lake side, Minn., has a genuine tenor voice, with a range from E flat to high C. Any attempt to make her sing soprano in the same range or contralto has proved unsuccessful. ATTRACTIVE YOUNG LADY agents wanted in every Town and City.—Complete outfit furnished free. We guarantee that you can make from $1.00 to It.00 per day. Address P. O. Drawer No. 999, Buffalo, N. Y. A stout heart may be ruined in for tune, but not in spirit.—Hugo. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J , Feb. 17,1900. He who has many vices has many masters.—Petrarch. SLOAN 5 LINIMENT FOR MAN AND BEAST. KILLS PAIN AND DESTROYS ALL GERM LIFE CURES RHEUMATISM WONDERFULLY PENETRATINC. A COMPLETE MEDICINE CHEST. | Price, 25c., 50c., end 11 .OO. Dr. EARL 8. SLOAN, 1615 Albany St., Boston, Maes. TALE OF BRUTALITY SHOCKS LISTENERS IN COURT ROOM Agnes Renaude. mother of little Ger trude Hyland, told in the General Ses sions Court at New York the sordid, brutal story of her life with Gustav Dinzer, her common law husband, and how the man, after she had brought the child to live with them, began abusing the helpless infant and finally, in a fit of jealousy, beat her to death and compelled the mother to help him to hide the body. At the end of the horrible recital the woman went into violent hysterics. The story began with the young woman's relations with Hyland, the father of her baby. Then she told of meeting Dinzer and her life with him, until her own child was taken to his home to live. "Up to that time,” she said, "my re lations with Dinzer were pleasant. After the baby came Dinzer began to mistreat me. He began to hit me with his shoes. He'd punch Gertie and slap her in the face and call her a ‘brat.’ She wouldn't call him ’Father' and that made him mad. “Once he knocked her down so hard that she lost her breath and her eyes rolled up. When I threatened to leave him he told me if I did he belonged to a secret order which would punish me. Then he showed me a knife. He said | it was dipped writh poison. After a while he began hitting Gertie every time she came near him. He used to say, ‘Keep that brat away from my children.’ I begged him please not to hit Gertie, but he would not listen. Horrors of Tragic Night. “On the night of Sept. 4 we came in about midnight. He'd already hit me on the stoop. He told me to get some beer, and I was afraid because Gertie was there. Then he pulled off a shoe and hit me on the head with the heel.” For the first time the plaintive mono tone of the woman was charged with a note of acute bitterness. She took off her hat with its veil, and bent her rather shapely head until the black mourning boa at the back showed and put her hand in the place where the boot heel struck. She paused a mo ment, swallowing convulsively and moistening her lips. She did not vouchsafe a glance at Dinzer, but the accused murderer never removed his eyes from the woman’s face, biting his lip and drumming with his fingers on the table in front of him to conceal his nervousness. “I cried out with the pain and he went out,” the witness continued. "Then he came back where I was sitting at a table trying to stop the blood from running over my face, and he hit me with an iron bar. Then he grabbed the baby out of the bed, car ried her in the parlor and threw her on the floor. He knelt down by her and hit her eight times with his fist as hard as he could. “ ‘Don't hit her any more,’ I said. ‘For God’s sake, don’t. I'll take her away to-morrow.’ ‘I’ll throw her out on the fire escape,’ he said. Tries to Save the Baby. “I ran into the kitchen with the baby, trying to get out. but the door was locked. 1 held the baby in my arms all the time. I backed up against the wall. He grabbed up an iron bat with a hook and a ball on it. He hit me on the head again with the iron bar and cut my head. 1 staggered, but I held the baby fast. The blood ran down in my fall and the baby was making a little bit of a faint cry—a kind of a moan—that was all. “I said to him, ‘Please give me a drink of water.’ Still holding the iron bar, he drew some water and brought a glass to me. He sat the glass down, after I was through, and came back to me. I tried to shield the baby with my arms, but he hit her in the face. She gave one little cry—she said ’Ag gie’—and stopped. “He grabbed her out from my arms and took her back in the parlor, drop ping her on the floor and hit her three times more. I ran in and fell down and tried to cover my baby up. He hit me again, but I held on. Then he got up and said: ‘Here, take your kid, she’s dead.’ “ ‘Oh, Gus. is she dead?’ I said. ‘“Yes,’ he said, ’she’s dead. Go wash your brat's face. Go wash her corpse.’ Plan to Hide Body. “I washed her little face, but she was dead—just as he said. Then he told me we must get rid of the body. I said to wait until morning and then we’d go to the undertaker who buried my mother. He said wc must get rid i of the body right away—that if 1 did ! not do as he said he’d fix me, too. “I took off her little clothes, and. oh. : judge, they were all bloody. I put them in a tub to soak, dressed her in clean | clothes, and he took her in his arms and we went out together. I didn’t say anything. I was too scared. “We walked and walked without meeting anybody. After a while we came to a doorway. He said we’d leave her there. He went in alone, in a minute he came out—he didn’t have her any more. “And we went hack to the house. I j didn’t speak, but he threatened to fix me if I said anything. We went to bed, but I didn’t sleep. I was awake all night thinking about Gertie. I think he slept a while.” Woman Falls in Hysteria. Here the examination ended. Agnes Renaude had sobbed again when she spoke of her baby’s bloody garments, but she did not really break down un-, til she started from the court. Her face was working as she neared the witness room door, and when it opened she shrieked: “Oh, Gertie,” twice and fell forward in hysteria. A court at tendant caught her and carried her out of hearing. Dozens of men in the room had been wiping their eyes for a good while be fore this outburst came. They got up with twitching undorlips and filed out slowly. But Dinzer hadn’t winced. His face whitened around the nostrils, but he kept half a grin frozen on his face and he walked out steadily enough.— New York Journal. Austrian Joins American Army. A recent enlistment at the regular army barracks in Si. Louis was that of Tolbert Von Watson, a native of Vienna. His father is an officer in the Austrian army and the young man is a cousin of Austria’s military attache in Washington. Private Von Watson speaks and writes nine languages. He is 26 years old and has studied medi cine in this country as well as in the Austrian capital. The voting man has traveled extensively, including one tour around the world with his sister. He is very much infatuated with America and gives as his reasons for joining the hospital corps of the army that it will give him an excellent op portunity to learn English and study medicine at the same time. Seattle Celebrates Birthday. Residents of Seattle have just been celebrating the fifty-fourth birthday of the place, for it was on Nov. 13, 1851, that the little colony of twenty-four landed there and founded what is now a flourishing city of considerably over 80,000 inhabitants. For the first time in many years all the survivors of that j colony was present to aid in the an nual celebration. A granite shaft in scribed with the names of the original colony w'as unveiled at the exact spot where the voyagers landed. Beauty Spots of Paris. No people are more celebrated for their love of beauty than are the French, and the government keeps pace with their artistic tastes. In Paris each little crook in the street has its tiny park, its trees and flowers, its benches and refreshing shade. Each “three comers”—which are numerous —has its miniature park, its electric light, its fountain and reposeful quiet. The . people appreciate these favors, and even the loafers affect an air of eminent propriety. A Georgia Goose Story. “Yes, sir," said the Georgia hunter, a drove of wild geese came flying over, and, for a wonder, they were all so close together that for a length of a mile and a half they hid the sun, so that the chickens went to roost at midday. I climbed to the woodshed— so as not to strain the gun—and fired both barrels: then, quickly reloading, I gave ’em another broadside and for two days thereafter the farmers were picking up dead wild geese all over the settlement* What’ll you fellers take to drink?’’—Atlanta Constitution. Size of the Sun. We sometimes see a huge ring or halo round the moon, occupying a space in the heavens so large that ninety moons' breadths would but just suffice to span it. Yet the body of the sun would fill all that space ere we had approached within 2,000,000 miles of him. Once on his apparent surface, were we permitted to travel thereon, and with the speed of an express train, it would require five whole years of continuous journeying before we could make tb* circuit of his orh TWICE-TOLD TESTIMONY. A Woman Who Has Suffered Teils How to Find Relief. The thousands of women who suffer backache, languor, urinary disorders and other kidney ills, will find comfort in the words of Mrs. Jane Farrell of 606 Ocean avenue, Jer sey City, N. J., who says: “I reiterate all I have said be fore in praise of Doan's Kidney Pills Bk <k i naa Deen navtng heavy backaches, and my general health was affected when I began us ing them. My feet were swollen, my eyes puffed, and dizzy spells were fre quent. Kidney action was irregular and the secretions highly colored. To day, however, I am a well woman, and I am confident that Doan's Kidney Pills have made me so, and are keep ing me well.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. Rainfall and Sheep Raising. In parts of Australia where the av erage rainfall is not more than ten inches a square mile of land will sup port only eight or nine sheep. In Buenos Ayres, the same area, with twenty-four inches of rain, supports 2,560 sheep. (From the Chicago Journal, Not. 6, 1905.) When Commissioner Garfield went to the Chicago packers and asked permission to inspect their books, the condition was made that no informa tion he might obtain therefrom would be used In court proceedings against them.* Mr. Garfield gave this pledge. It is stated, and the packers allowed him to study their business in all its de tails from the inside. Now, it is announced, the results of his study have been turned over to the government department of justice to be employed in legal prosecution of the packers. Commissioner Garfield would not have ventured to give the pledge that was demanded by the packers without instructions from Washington. He pledged, not his own word, but the government's. It is not his good faith, but the government's, that is in ques tion now. The Journal has no concern for the packers, except as they are citizens of Chicago. If it can be proved that they are guilty of engaging in a con spiracy in restraint of trade, they ought to be punished. But their guilt, if they are guilty, must be fairly proved. They must be given a square deal. Since the government has elevated its vision to such a height as to over look the nest of defiant criminal trusts in New Jersey, almost within the shadow of the capitol dome, in order to fasten itself a thousand miles away upon Chicago, the government and the President cannot be too careful to avoid suspicion that they are more anxious to prosecute western offend ers than offenders in the east. Some of the methods already em ployed in this case have not been par- : ticularly distinguished for decency. When the government breaks into a man s house and steals his private pa pers, when it drags the wives of pack ing-house employes into court and puts them under heavy bonds, it is hardly dignified, not to say honorable, nor even respectable. From Apothecary to Author. The late Julius Stinde, who won one >f the biggest successes recorded in he German book world for several lecades, began life as an apothecary. How’s This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward foT any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hail's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, O. we, the undersigned, ha'e known F. J. Cheney ror the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly hon orable In all business transactions and financially tble to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waldino. Rinnan & Martin, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting llrectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the ivstem. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per Dottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Marriage and Heredity. Signs are not wanting that among ducated people questions of heredity re allowed some weight in the con tacting of marriages.—The Hospital. Height of Sea Waves. Careful experiments made by a loted English navigator along the rorth coast of Spain show that waves xequently attain a height of 42 feet ivhich is nothing compared to the rise Df Pillsbury’s Vitos in the estimation >f people who like good, pure, com non-sense wheat food. You will like t. Ask for it at your grocers. Skating in Lapland. Laplanders not infrequently cover 50 miles a day on their skates Every housekeeper should know hat if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use the; will save not only time, because it tever sticks to the iron, but because ;ach package contains 16 oz.—one full round—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in %-pound pack iges, and the price is the same, 10 :ents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If vour grocer tries to seil you i 12-oz. package it is because he has i stock on hand which he wishes to iispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let :ers and figures “16 ozs.” Demand De lance and save much time and money md the annoyance of the iron stick ing. Defiance never sticks. Celery is the cultivated variety of he English weed, smallage. Medicine Men Retain Secrete. Bishop Hanlon, of Uganda, in de scribing some of his experience in cen tral Africa, said recently that though many of the medicine men had been converted, they could not be induced to carry their confession so far as to divulge their undoubted valuable rem edies for native diseases. Some of the converted medicine women were not so reticent, but their revelations were generally worthless. Dealers say that as soon as a cus tomer tries Defiance Starch it is im possible to sell them any other cold water starch. It can be used cold or boiled. _ Professional Conversationalists. As there are now so few English men who have the gift of talking agreeably in "society,” of interesting a tablefull of guests and of entertain ing a roomful of people, it has oc curred to some well educated, impe cunious men to set up as “Profession al Conversationalists.” The fee is $5 | for an afternoon or evening.—The [Graphic. Ask Your Druggist for Allen’s Foot-Ease. “I tried ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE recent ly and have just bought another supply. It has cured my corns, and the hot, burning and itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable, and I would not be with out it now."—Mrs. W. J. IValker, Cuxnden, N. J.” Sold by all Druggists, ‘Joe. X-Ray Test for Cables. Novel use of Roetgen rays is made ibv a Berlin company manufacturing submarine cables. The cables are | tested by being passed over two eye pulleys over an X-ray tube, the screen above showing and defect correctly and with greater certainty than the resistance tests usually employed. Don’t you know that Defiance Starch besides being absolutely superior to any other, is put up 16 ounces in pack age and sells at same price as 12 ounce packages of other kinds? Epitaph of Pugiliet. One of the bodies removed in cut ting a road through a graveyard in Nottingham. England, recently, was that of Bendigo, the old-time pugilist. His monument was a granite lion, with the inscription: “In life he was bold, brave as a lion. In death like a lamb, tranquil in Zion.” If you don't get the biggest and best its your own fault. Defiance Starch is for sale everywhere and there is positively nothing to equal it in qual ity or quantity. Peculiar Royal Gift. It was an English monarch who presented the Empress Catherine of Russia with a six-legged calf, the body of which, preserved in spirits, is still i to be seen in one of the Galleries of j the Winter Palace at St. Petersburg, i Hundreds of dealers say the extra quantity and superior quality of De fiance Starch is fast taking place of all other brands. Others say they can not sell any other starch. Favor Wooden Block Paving. Having inquired of the leading om nibus railway and parcel carried com panies as to the best material for road paving, the Council of Lambeth. Lon don. finds that the majority are in fa vor of wood blocks. Storekeepers report that the extra quantity, together with the superior quality of Defiance Sarch, makes it next to impossible to sell any other brand. Returns of the railway clearing house show that 1.000 parcels a day are lost on the railways of the United Kingdom. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces t|>> fUmmatlon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bjttts. The Philosopher of Folly. There are people who contribute 10 cents toward a new church organ and then expect to get a golden harp for their own exclusive use when they reach the other shore.—Cleveland Leader. THE BEST COUGH CURE In buying a cough medicine, re member the best cough cure, Kemp’s Balsam costs no more than any other kind. Remember, too, the kind that cures is the only kind worth any thing. Every year thousands are saved from a consumptive’s grave by taking Kemp’s Balsam in time. Is it worth while to experiment with anything else ? Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. •towen* mmm OILED CLOTHING Mode n black or jtHow for all kinds of wet work. On aaie evtiywhere Look for the of the rtih.ond the none TOWER on the buttons. rnniUMioiMiu ii PRICE, 25 Cts. StO CURE THEfflpl **** ONE DAY * ANTHiRtPINE GRIP, BAD I won't sell A XU Call for * W.W.JHem THE DISCOVERER Of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, the Great Woman’s Remedy for Woman’s Ills. female medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles or such hosts of grateful friends as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It wrill entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration. Falling and Displacement of tho Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. J ^ ^as cured more cases of Backache and Leucorrhona than any other rem* edy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of de velopment. Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation. Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration. Headache, General l>ebil ltv quickly yield to it. Womb troubles, causing pain, weight and backache, in* stantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it invigorates the female system, and is as harmless as water. It quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassitude, “don’t care and “ want-to-be-left-alone ” feeling, excitability, irritability, nervous ^ZZ^neSS’ ^aintne88, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy or the “ blues” and headache. These are sure indications of Female W eakness, or some de rangement of the L terus, which this medicine always cures. Kidney Complaints and Backache, of either sex. the Vegetable Compound always cures Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want—a cure. Sold by Dru* everywhere. Refuse all substitutes. MODEL FACTORY AT PEORIA, ILL. Where the Famous LEWIS’ SINGLE BINDER 5c CIGAR is Made. Formerly the home of the late Col. Robert G. InpersolL Purchased and remodeled by Frank P. Lewis for the Single Binder Factory. A marvel of Sanitary Cleanliness. It Is better to smoke here than hereafter. — In~ennlL The Government of Canada HG i v e s absolutely FREE to every settler one hun dred and sixty acres of land in W estern Canada. Land adjoining this can be purchased from railway and laud companies at from $6 to $10 per acre. On this land this year has been produced upwards of twenty-five bushels of wheat to the acre. It is also the best of grazing land and for mixed farming it has no superior on the continent. Splendid climate, low taxes, railways convenient, schools and churches close at hand. Write for ‘‘Twentieth Century Canada" and low railway rates to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada; or to authorized Canadian Government Agent— W. V. Bennett. 801 New York Life Build ing, Omaha, Nebraska. (Mention this paper.) DAXTINE V-V TOILET I Antiseptic^ FOR WOMEN 2 \ troubled with ills peculiar to I their sex, used as a douche it marvelously juc eessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, j stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness. Paxtine is in powder iorm to be dissolved in pore water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES For cale at druggists, 60 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. The fi. Paxtoh Commawt Bostow. Mas. TI-GRIPIME GUARANTEED TO CORE COLD, HEADACHE AHD NEURALGIA. ■tl-Qrt|»la« to a dealer who won't Guarantee our MOKKT BACK IF IT DON'T CURE. ier, M. Hu H&nulMtarer.SprfnaJleld, Mo. W. L. Douglas ‘3= & *3= SHOES™. W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. ! SHOES ^ ^ W.L. DOUGLAS MAKES A NO SILLS _MOPE MEN'S S3.BO SHOES THAN AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. %lll fUlll KtWAKJ to anyone »no can V ■ UjUUU disprove this statement W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have bv their ex cellent style, easy fitting, and sur erior wearing qualities, achieved the largest rale of any S3.50 shoe in the world. They are Hist as good as those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 - the only difterence is the price. If I could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mas«.. the larges* In the world under one roof irai Irg men s fine shoes, and show you the care s Ith w hich e\ery pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Dou las $3.5!) shoes arc the best shoes produce 1 in the world. If I could show you the difference between the shoes made in my factory and these of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, w hy they hold their shape, fit better, w-ear longer.'and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. wiJ- Oouglaa Strong Warfe Shorn too Mon. $2.60, $2. UO. Bojm ’ School 6 Oroma Shooo, $2.60, 62. $1.76, $1.60 CAUTION.—Insist upon having W.L.D»mg las shoes. Taka no substitute. None genu me without his name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. A shoe dealer in everr town where W. L. Douglas Shews are not sold. * Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon request. • Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not ivear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stria*. W. JL. DOUGLAS, Brockton, ] DEFIANCE STMCH-rr^ —other .r.rchee only 12 ounce.—»,e price .ml “DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY. When Answering Advertisements Please Mention This Paper. W. N. U. Omaha. No. 48—1905.