foe Lonp l~\tj Northwestern J W. BCBLEICH Publisher 4—-— LOUP CITY* • • NEBRASKA CCNECKCATICKS CF GREATER CR LESSER IMPORTANCE. •tat ocaL P:1 bed. Perse ca! and Other Mutter* .it Beef Form for All Clasuos of Rea-e-s. Poetical Notes. Mr-up i --ce4 a poatitaj mnmtnX la:. ;.*.c aa the rrpubl team side Ko.th Dakota republicans and prog-• *».v ■-* nuy work in bartnuuy. The appeal of Tail well in the Kali ta* electoral cane has been perfected. Qvii’wc Johnson made the j*r*dic Hm that [rufimiii* will carry Mp4 —'s.n The »•_•. :.«!a y of Cokme! Roosevelt «n a ..< »i-d by Senator Sutherland of flak r«h«el Roosevelt regards Govern tor Wilson as something of a novice la practical things. « aduaet Moose*eit said the progress ive cii e»f. i • was spread;;.;; over the country like w ildhre. in as address at New York Wood row Wilson said democracy repre tented Iks ark of safety Cokurl Roosevelt marked the dlr 7.me line between progressive and Jvortiooary voters. The treasurer of the progressive rat’ • kit* made public tbe contribu tions to tbe cause to date Roosevelt, principal speaker at the MSsaoori progressive convention, as sailed Wilaoa and Arch bold There was no majority for governor In the Vftnoo' election and the leg 1* Sature srflt have to decide It. Governor Hiram W. Johnson of Cal ifornia made five speeches in Wiscon sin in one day in favor of the pro gress; re party, but did not mention Senator I .a Collette by name Tk- Maryland republican state con. v ration reassembled at Baltimore, revoked the list of presidential elec tors chosen last May and named a new -.whet of out and out Taft men V« at king ton dispatch Fred H. Ab bott of Nebraska, assistant Indian corn:: stumer. js espected to succeed Commissioner Robert G- Valentine, oh no* resignation has been submit ted Increase organized labor'* represen tatioa fas coogrtass is the keynote of the 111: poltt.cal program to be of ficially announced In the Washington • eekty news letter of the American Federation of Labor, which sounds la bor's campaign cry. The itinerary of William J. Bryan'* maw’era v* imping tour ha* been made pwM - S ifting from Jvenver Mr. Bryan will riooe his western trip Sep tember 3* in Wyoming, in time to re tarn to Lincoln by October 5. when be is scheduled to deliver an address from the same platform as Governor Wilson Governor Hadley declared his loy alty to the Missouri republican ticket. Government and state veterinarians dmagree as to horse disease but ask owner* to rimeiie care in choice of feed The strike of the ore dock men on the Grant Northern system at Ailou-z Bay Manitoba, was settled on terms proposed by the company. Regents of the I'niversity of Min nesota rejected the proposition of the Mtate Hoard of Health to establish a leper coioay oa the campus. The eighth death as the result of Eddie Hasbas ride into a crowd of lyrftiun at the motorcycle races in Newark. N. J.. occurred Sunday The American AaaoriaTion of Gen eral Bnsaewger and Ticket Agents concluded its fifty seventh annual con vention in Seattle with election of aGtoora Mpnngbeld. Mass , was elected as neat year’s meeting place of the Na tional Association of Stationary Engi neer* which haa been in convent loon In Kansas Oty. The second day of the power boat races oa the Niagara river was marked by tso accidents in which two of the hydroplane* went to the bot tom and the crew of one was seriously IhlTlii A sen.; off rial statement ha* been Mooed denouncing a* absolutely un founded lanuuf arm*paper re;*orts that an agreement had been reached H*|et'.Of the conclusion of peace be tween Italy and Turkey Marie im ^at'e-ltabimdT. an Ameri can opera singer and the site of Max Rsbtnog toe Itussian tmpressa.-io. died sa a hospital in London after an operation She tu formerly Misa Iroir K cbm .rd of Beatrice. Xeb At Keleigh. N C Wa Heiciimann. of the atae university, was killed while being hazed He wac placed in a barrel and when surrounded by bis tormentors fSell og and gasped. "My perk is broken.' and died a moment later Seventy European scientists mho are making a tour of the I'nited State* in * »per.al train arrived in Sonttte fr<.n> eaatern Washington. T*» re*, iut .on* looking to th* world wide safety of buildings sere adopted at the Anal session of the mngress of the International Asso clat h for Tester Materials. Chicago in Angus* was the leading SaatofAre center in the I'nited States. Figures made public show that the Chicago post of lice excelled in re ceipts the Xew York office. It# near os* rt- *L by $fy>*-«.3a for the month cf lag os*. Funds for eircnlating petitions for tbs recall of Governor Oswald West of Oregon are being sdugkt in Port Miss Mildred Montague, formerly Conntens Pasoaiiai. was married to lictrteuaa: Blrliard H. Kimball of the IToveetk l asted States cavalry at Chattanooga- Trttn A serious situation exists in Mon golia. according to a Peking dispatc. to the Daily Mail in Loudon. Secretary Wilson of the Depart ment of Agriculture has decided to establish an experiment station on the Mauti national forest near Epraium. Senator Fall favors recognizing the belligerency of Mexican rebels. Wisconsin progressives at their convention di-1 not nominate a state ticket. I‘-evident Yuan Shi Kai of China is crt-d.ted with shrewd political ma neuvering. V final ord r of cancellation has been issued in the Cunningham Alaska coal land claims. < ! .el Roosevelt was roundly scored at tl.e C< nnecticut democratic s'aie convention. Chicago was chosen for the next t aniai meeting of the general feder- i atton ot women's clubs. Commissioner of Indian Affairs Va- j ' ni ne tendered his resignation to i Join the progressive party. Discrimination against Iowa is 1 charged In a suii filed with the inter- : state commerce commission. Kansas City. Mo., and July S were j seh-cted b> the National Dental as- I social ion for next year’s meeting. Joseph F. Haas of Chicago resigned as ole k of the Illinois Pardon board and hi- resignation was accepted. Chicago was citosen for the next b • ratal meeting of the General Fed eration of Women's clubs by the board of directors. Re. G orge H. Cross, pastor of one of tiie lead tip Methodist Episcopal • - ■ l altunore, lias been elect ed prey dent of Depauw university The Washington progressive state ; convention nominated a state ticket headed by Robert T. Hodge of Seattle , for th.- governorship and named can- 1 didates for congress. The yield of the Klondike gold placer mines for 1912 was $5,000,000, an increase of $1,000,000 over 1911. The increase was due to the employ- : mrnt of more dredgers. The investment of the Right Rev. Reginald Heber Weber, successor as Episcopal bishop of Fond Du I-ac, Wis . to Hisbop Grafton, will probably take place Sunday. October C. That the strike situation in the Knawhala valley coal fields in West Virginia, which has been under inar- ! t:aj law for the last few days, is grow- j :ng more complex is reported. Dr. A. O. Zwick. candidate of the t...rd partyy for “Nick" Longworth's fw-at in congress is going to make a hot fighi. His campaign xvill be largelv a stereoptican campaign. Director Mulvane at national repub lican headquarters announced that John M Harlan of Chicago would fol low Colonel Roosevelt through Ore cert and other Pacific coast states. Government ownership of public Uttiit:** and the conservation of the country's natural resources were urged by Dr. Elwood Mead, chairman of the state rivers and water supply commission of Victoria. Argument was begun at Chicago be fore Examiner Elder, of the interstate commerce commission of suspended •acreages in coal rates on the Chicago Burlington and Quincy railroad from Springfield. 111., to Clinton, la. Governor-elec* William T. Haines received the following telegram of congratulation from President Taft: "Hon William T. Haines. I congrat ulate you on redeeming Maine. It is a notable and significant victory.” Charges that Robert G. Valentine, who resigned as commissioner of In ti an affairs, took liquor with him on an official visit to an Indian reserva tion In Oklahoma, will be investigated by the department of justice. The good offices of the United >'ates as intermediary in the Turko Ainerican war would be welcomed by both nations it is understood. The The United States is regarded as the only disinterested one o.w the powers. The expectations of the state de ment have been fully justified in the complete collapse of the effort of cer tain privvate interests to conclude a $5f the call and who gave assurance .hat everything possible would be ione by the state to co-operate in ieeking a method to exterminate the icourge. Dr. Bostrom, state veterina lail. iUUh i ui i uirruug, iur owing the governor's address, and called upon Dr. Waite, bacteriologist ! jf the state university, for a talk. The latter declared that he had been j irpsent and assisted in the post nior :ein examination of twelve horses and ;hat he had taken fluids from the jrains of several of the animals. These he declared bore dipplococeus germs which he believed to be the cause of the malady. He declared that j he disease, as far as he had ob- : served its ravages, is like many of ; he infectious diseases which attack he human family as far as its method if spreading is concerned. He said hat he had examined the blood of a lumber of the animals but that as fet he w'as uncertain whether this or ganism existed there or not. Several cultures had been made, he said, but hese had thus far revealed little that would aid in determining the cause of he scourge. Dr. Reager of Edgar asserted that le had been treating for forage poi loning and that his success had been : ibout on a par with the results at- '■ ained hv other veterinarians who fol- ; owed different courses. He raised the ! luestion as to the contagious and in ectious characteristics of the disease leclaring that he and others with whom he had talked were unable to lecide upon this. Most of the cases which came to his attention, he de clared. had been horses which had •oamed the pastures either all or a jart of the time. Dr. J. S. Anderson of Seward as serted that the disease had been 'ound mostly in horses which had jeen worked regularly and which lpon Sundays or at nights were urned out to graze on stubble ground >r upon pasture land. Most of these cases he said originated in poorly Irained lands. He did not suggest iny specific treatment declaring that le had not fixed upon anything thus 'ar which he believed could be ermed even partially successful. Dr. ioylman of Franklin called attention o the likelihood of worms and in estiual parasites reciting his experi ences in connection with the battle tgainst the disease. He declared that t had first showed all symptoms of (uto-intoxication but that further in rest igation would not bear out any lefinite theory either as to the cause >r the treatment. He read a letter Trom Dr. Kingsley of Kansas City whom he had called to Franklin to lid him in the work. The communi cation suggested that all horses should be barred from pastures and iccess to green feed and that medi cine, particularly purgatives, should De given freely when the first symp toms appeared. Dr Kingsley stated hat it was very doultful if more than 2(» per cent of the ^nintals attacked, could recover. He advocated the employment of drastic means for eliminating the contents of the bowels. Dr. Nichols of Ravenna declared (hat the belief that horses of weaken ed systems were the only ones to suc cumb to the disease had been dissi pated in his vicinity. Strong "id weak horses alike, he asserted had fallen before the scourge. May Get a Pardon. One of tlip interesting cases before the pardoning beard is that of W. L. Williams, sent up from Douglas county on a statutory charge. Williams has proven to be an expert in the installa tion of boilers and in the six years he has served he has saved the state hundreds cf dollars, not only by his work, but by the valuable suggestions he has made the board whenever new boilers have been put in at the dif ferent institutions. Governor Aldfich has recommended his application for a pardon to the board. Fair Receipts in Full. Total receipts of the Nebraska state fair, in round numbers amount to $102,000 as found by Secretary Mel lor in compiling his figures before he left lor Wisconsin. This is $7,000 more than in 1911. The board of man agers. however, spent all the funds on hand before the fair this year, so that the balance remaining over after paying expenses of the last exposition will not be much more than $20,000. including $32,000 spent for permanent Improvements on the grounds. The expenses of the fair were $107,000. LOOK WELL TO SEED Otherwise Nebraska Farmers Will be the Losers. “We have in Nebraska no surplus seed corn on hand this year", says Prof. C. W. Pugsley, of the Extension Department of the Nebraska Experi ment Station. “If Nebraska does not have good seed front this year's crop, it will be necessary for Nebraskans to depend upon seed brought from other states. Seed brought in from other states does not yield as well us home grown seed. "If every one concerned will select their seed early and then properly cure it, Nebraska will not experience such a seed corn famine as that which threatened the state this spring. Not only will we have plenty ! of seed, but we will get greater j yields, for experiments at the station j have proved that well selected seed : corn will produce front four to six bushels more titan corn not carefully ! selected. “The fields this year were planted late. Immediately after planting, J considerable unseasonable weather I followed and in many fields the corn t which was planted did not have j strong germinating powers. These ‘ conditions must be borne in ntind to ' get good seed for next year's crop.” Arrangements have been, made by the Bureau of Publicity of the Com mercial club of Omaha, whereby bul- | let ins. prepared by Prof. Pugsley, will be furnished, free of cost, either by the Bureau or by the Extension De partment of the State Farm. The bulletins deal with the selection and care of seed corn. The week of September 30 to Octo ber 5 has been designated as “SEED CORN SELECTION WEEK." Every one is urged to select his corn that ; week so that Nebraska will have plen ty of seed corn in 1013. Letter*£rom Delzell. State Vuperintendent Delzell lias Is- : sued the following circular letter to : county superintendents: "The law definitely requires each tpaclier in the state to spend thirty minutes each ! month on the subject of 'Fire Dan gers.' Please call your teacher's at tention to this matter. Urge them to attend to this. Thirty minutes a month is a very limited time to de vote to teaching lessons concerning loss by fire and showing that by care fulness much suffering may he avoid ed and thousands of dollars' worth of property saved. Do not let it be said by one pupil in your county, at the end of this school year, that ‘Fire Pre vention' and ‘Fire Drill’ was not taught in school." New Capitol Building. Definite and earnest steps looking* toward the construction of a new state house at Lincoln were taken by the executive committee of the Omaha Commercial club. The present capitol building is entirely inadequate and in some respects unsafe; a build ing of which no Nebraskan can feel proud. Details of procedure have not been mapped out hut the Commercial club is determined to create the .prop er sentiment for-at building that wJi be creditable to the state. Lancaster Appeals. The county of Lancaster has ap pealed to the supreme court in a case in which the First Trust company of Lincoln objected to the taxing of mortgages to the company wherein the mortgagor had agreed to pay the taxes on the mortgage. Prominent Speakers Coming. For the month of September two prominent speakers have been se cured for addresses by the Lincoln Commercial club, one of them being Baroness Von Stuttner. who will be in Lincoln two days in the interest of the international peace movement. On the 28th, E. F. Trefz. of Chicago, field secretary of the Chamber of Com- i merce of the United States of Amer ica, will speak. — State Fair Receipts. State fair receipts for the first time in the history of that institution ex ceeded $100,000 this year. The exact tctal is not known at present but will be announced just as soon as the ooard of managers has had time to check over the reports. The grand stand and bleacher receipts for the week were $17,811 as compared to $13,000. the best previous record, > made last year. The total cash re- | ceipts of the fair from concessions, gate and grandstand will exceed those of any previous year by more than $12,500, according to the officials. Big Apple Show in January. The state board of horticulture has decided to give a big apple show, which is to be given the third week in January at the Lincoln city audi torium. The apple show will com prise 1,000 boxes and a display of ap ples on plates. The apple show alone will fill half the floor space in the auditorium. These two shows to gether promise to be the best of tne kind ever seen in Nebraska. Douglas County Support. The state agricultural board is feeling exceptionally good over the loyal support given the fair by the people of Douglas county snd express ed themselves as fully satisfied with the result of the get-together spirit between the commercial organiza tions of the two big cities of the state. On Omaha day Omaha people were in evidence everywhere and on South Omaha day, while the rain of the night before prevented the automo bile excursion from the stock yards city, yet 500 were present. Costly Right-of-Way. Union Pacific right-of-way agents are finding purchase of the ground for the new Hastings-Gibbon line a rather expensive proposition. Part of the route was bought before public announcement of the intention to build the line was made, but other was not. and agents are now endeav oring to effect a settlement. In one instance last week, the railroad con tracted for land which only a little while ago was part of the Platte river bottom at a price of one hundred dol lars an acre CAPTURE OF OROZCO LEADER IN FIGHT HELD BY U. S. TROOPS. FATHER OF MEXICAN FIGHTER City of Ojir.aga Taken, the Federal* Driving Rebels Away After Severe Fighting. El Paso.—Ojinaga, the Mexican bor der town opposite Presidio. Tex., was taken away by jederal troops after brisk fighting at daybreak, according to advices receivevd at Fort Bliss by General E. Z. Steever. commanding the Department of Texas. General Steever also received a re port from army officers at Presidio, Tex., opposite Ojinaga, Mexico, that Colonel Pascual Orozco, si\. father of the rebel leader, was captured and is held by United States troops ar Pre sidio. together with Colonel P. G. Orozco. Whether General Pascual Orozco, Jr., the rebel commander-in-chief, was fighting at Ojinaga or escaped over the international line into the United States is no; known. Federal forces numbering 350, under command of Colonel Manuel I-a mi a, entered Ojinaga proper, driving the rebels before them. The rebels took refuge in San Fran cisco. a suburb to the south and away from the American side cf the line, and at last reports fighting continued. Reports of the number of the Yebels defending Ojinaga vary to a iarge de gree. Colonel P. G. Orozco, who was reported captured, is no relation of the rebel leader. Will Hold Orozco. Washington.—The I’nited States will hold Colonel Pascutl Orozco, sr., father of the rebel general, and Col onel P. G. Orozco, with any other captured Mexican rebels, probably for deportation to Mexico. No charges of violations of the neutrality laws are pending against either and their posi tion is the same as that of any of their men. General Orozco, however, if cap tured. will be held for the Mexican government, which is prepared to ask for his extradition to face charges of embezzlement of funds in his care while inspector general of rurales, of murder and brigandage. El Tigre Captured. Douglas. Ariz.—Inez Salazar and his rebel band captured El Tigre, the American gold mining camp, twice at tacked by him. In the fighting several federals were killed and a dozen wounded. Only one American was wounded. He was Gilbert McNeill, but his wound is not serious. Horse Plague Loss. Salina. Kas.—Six million dollars will not cover the loss caused by the hcrse plague in Kansas during the last month, according to estimates made by Dr. F. S. Schoenletzer, head of the veterinary department, and Dr. E. H. Webster, director of the experi ment station of the Kansas Agricul tural college, who have been visiting the plague infested district. Last of Allen Clan Captured. Des Moines.—Sidna Allen, leader of the Allen clan which shot up the Car roll county court house at Hillvilie, Va., March 14, and his nephew. Wes ley Edwards, are en route to Virginia in the custody of detectives, having been started on the homeward trip within an hour after the arrest of Ed wards in this city. Naval Apprentices Drowned. Chicago.—Five naval apprentices were drowned in Lake Michigan and five more are missing and probably will be added to the list of dead as the result of a pleasure sail under taken by a boatload of young recruits from the naval training station at Lake Bluff. 111. Shoots Wife and Self. Nebraska City.—John Lewis, a painter, fatally wounded his wife, and shot and killed himself following a quarrel upon his return home at 7:30 o’clock in the evening. Lewis had drinking heavily. Mrs. Lewis was taken to the hospital. She was shot twice. Will Fire All Moosers. New York—That drastic action will be taken by the republican national committee at its meeting here Wed nesday to oust from its membership men with leanings toward Colonel Roosevelt was announced by William Barnes, jr., chairman of the national advisory committee. Coming to America. Dublin.—William H. K. Redmond, M. P.. for Clare, East, and brother of John E. Redmond, the Irish na tionalist leader, left for the l nited States on the steamer Baltic. Accident in Auto Races. Mason City, la.—Five were hurt, two seriously, during the final event at the North Iowa fair when the rac ing auto. Green Goblin, of the Mar shall flying squadron, Chicago, threw a wheel at the first turn of the track and went into the crowd. Boys Make Confession Butte, Mont—Fifteen boys, ranging from 12 to 15 years of age. confessed in the juvenile court that they at tempted to lynch Joseph Meyers, a chicken farmer. Judge Beers Heads G. A. R. Los Angeles, Cal—Judge Alfred B. Beers of Bridgeport, Conn., was elect ed commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic at the closing session of the encampment. Selection of next meeting place of the veterans was left to the executive council. Many Turks Killed. London.—One hundred Turks were killed and fifty taken prisoners in a fight with the Malissori tribesmen in the Hoti district of Montenegro last Wednesday. Albanians lost 20 killed. Bakes Better CALUMET /S&.BAK1KG POWDER TEXT TAKEN TOO LITERALLY Ten-Year-Old Julia Gets Into Bad Graces of Mother by Giving Tramp a Half-Dollar. ‘‘Be not forgetful to entertain strangers; for thereby some have en tertained angels unawares." The foregoing quotation is from j chapter xiii, verse 2. Book of Hebrews, and it is introduced solely because it I constitutes a vkal part of this story. Julia is ten years old and she goes to Sunday school. It appears that on a recent occasion the Sunday school teacher had considerable to say about this matter of “entertaining angels unawares.” Anyway, it made a deep : impression with Julia. A few days after the lesson Julia's mother left her in charge of the house for a few hours. When the mother re turned she went to a particular cup in the cupboard to extract therefrom one-haif dollar. In this cup is kept • the family pin money, and Julia's mother knew that she had put 50 cents there before she had gone out. But the half dollar was gone. There was an expression of anxiety on Julia's face and mother scented mis chief. “Did you take that money?” asked the mother, somewhat severely. Julia broke into tears. “1 gave it to a man that came to- the back door,” sobbed the little girl. “Gave it to a man!” exclaimed the mother. “What for?" "I thought he might be God.” tear fully replied Julia.—Kansas City Star. Wild Ones. Charles Grafiy. the noted sculptor, was talking at his summer home at Folly Grove, near Gloucester, about the quaint humor of the Gloucester fish 1 ermen. "In Gloucester one day." he said, "as ; I idled among the shipping, an old salt began to narrate his experiences to j me. | “ ‘Wunst.' he said. 'I was ship I wricked in the South sea. and thar I ' come across a tribe of wild women i without tongues.’ ‘“Wild women without tongues!' said I. ‘Goodness! How could thev , talk?’” Compensation. A fairly prominent local pugilist was injured several months ago in an > automobile accident and had three | ribs broken Fully recovered, he was | discussing the incident recently with | friends. "1 got $100 out of the auto owner," he said. "Had to give the lawyer half and it cost $56 for doctor’s bills, but I made them pay $100 for the thing, anyhow.” British Metropolis Leads in Mud. According to L. Meerson Clancey of St. Louis, who is now in London, there is more mud in the British me tropolis than in any other of the big cities he has been in. and his record includes Paris, Berlin. Vienna. New York. Washington. Baltimore, St. Louis and Milwaukee. __ Recognize Value of Sports. The scheme on which King George's | children are educated includes care ful instruction in all typical open air sports and games. Cricket, riding, fencing, boxing, shooting and the like the young prince of Wales has been carefully and scientifically taught by past masters. I Proved. "Do you believe in luck?” "Yes. sir How else could I ac j count for the success of my neigh bors?” Unless you have met the mother iust after her first baby has cut Us iooth you have no idea of real excite ment. And many a man does the things privately that he denounces In public, j : DIDN'T KNOW WHAT ALTERCA TION MEANT. The Justic-'—You say you witnessed this altercation. O'Rourke—No, Oi didn’t see that. Ol was too busy lookin’ at th’ foight. Crime to Kiss. In Russia it is a crime for lovers to kiss in public, and not very long ago two young women and two young women were arrested in Odessa for having been guilty of this offense They had all been dining together in a restaurant, and kissed on parting. They were condemned to short terms of imprisonment, and the sentences were confirmed on appeal. The gen eral fine in Russia for a kiss in the open street is 15 shillings, but in a tramcar it may cost anything up to | 25 shillings. The Educational Step-Ladder. We know what kindergarten is for: | it is to educate children for the primary grades. We know what the primary grades 1 are for: they are to educate children for the grammar grades. We know what the grammar grades are for; they are to educate children for high school. We know what the high school is for: it is to educate children for col lege. But what does college fit you for?— Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Serving Humanity. Few callings are more highly es teemed than that of the trained nurse. Miss Ellen Emerson, the granddaugh ter of Ralph Waldo Emerson, is a nurse in the Massachusetts general hospital at Boston. Disturbing. “Nora, is my husband home?" “Yes. mum; he’s in the library, workin'.” "Then wake him and tell him I want to see him.”—Satire. No thoughtful person uses liquid blue. It’s a pinch of blue in a large bottle of wa ter. A'k for Red Cross Ball Blue, the blue that’s all blue. Adv. Many a man fools himself with the belief that his wisdom is superior to that of the late Mr. Solomon. Vrs. Winslow-* Soothing Syrup for Children ieethinsr, softens the gums, reduces iuMiimma tion, aliays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Adv. The world is full of the sort of friends who take to the woods when trouble shows up. CURES BURNS AND CUTS. Cole’. Carbollsalve stona the pain Instantlv. Cures quick. No scar. Alldruggists. 25 and 50c. Adv. The political candidate who “also ran” is unable to see wherein the world is growing wiser. W.L,DOUGLAS; SHOES ( *3.00 *3.50 *4.00 *4.50 AND *5.00 j FOR MEN AND WOMEN San MfF W. L. Dougin S2.ua. S2.SU A S3.00 School iii »»«. ft*c»«ct onm umir trill (tonltirrjy outwnr two \ WJ-DougUs makes and sells more $3.00,33.50 & $4.00 shoes J than anr other manufacturer in the world. THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS. The workmanship which has made W. L. Douglas shoes famous the world ever is maintained m every pair. Ask your dealer to show you W. L. Douglas latest fashions for fall and winter wear, notice the short vamps which make the foot look smaller, points in a shoe particularly desired by young men. Also the conservative styles which have made W. L. Douglas shoes a household word everywhere. If yon could visit W. L. Douglas large factories at Brockton, Mars., and see for yourself how carefully W. L Douglas shoes are made, you would then un derstand why they are warranted to fit better, look better, hold their shape and wear longer than any other make for the price. Fast Color Cgoloto. CAUTION.—To protect yea «*»■«• inferior .bees, W.L. Douglas stamp, his name on the bot tom. Leak for dsn stamp. Beware of so agitates. W. L Dongles shorn are sold In 7* own stares end skoo dealers osoeynhwo. No -utter where yon Kre. they are within yonr reach, if year dealer manat sapiilj yoe. write 4 root to factory for catalog showing how to order hr mail. Shoos seat everywhere, dcirror, rherges prepaid. W I Hoagies. Brockton.Mata