The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 03, 1912, Image 7

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    Wanted a Bite.
OB yea: »t wae raining—had been
all day. Bat they dido t mind that so
Well; yoa see. they erera fishermen
AH the same, they were (nidging
Boine, with weary steps and very
weary-look tux faces
Their hwiHi were empty, and. to
he candid, they were la a very bad
As the* watered the little Tillage
a lane* do* ran at oae of the party
The dag had ad*eocfams look and was
harktag farioasiy Bat the fisherman
did aat take mack alarm at the ani
aai Ha jaat kicked it away care
Bamly
"Are* t yoa afraid hell go for yoa*"
la paired aaotber of the party, some
what aexmosty
The oae who had kicked at the dog
toohrd at hi* com pan Km la a sorrow
"I only wish be would*" he replied
Td chance almost aaythtas to be
*Mt to go borne sad aay I d bad a
het#*"
Potteries Prospering.
The output of the pottery industries
ef the l ulled States hsd a value of
S34.lJf.S4a la 1*11. according to the
t" sited State* geological survey chart
of Hay products production, by states
compiled by Jeffersoa Middletown
The pottery collection for 191! was
greater than for 191*. when the out
put was valued at I72.7M.67S. tbe in
crease betas |T3Ji:. Of the total
production Ohio war first, with an
output valjed at |! 4.775 "45; New
Jersey perood with IMIIMI: West
Virgin:a third with 12 MS0.202; New
York fourth, with t; 17(2(1; Penn
sytvasia fifth, with 92 154417. and
Indiana sixth, with $1,094,737. The
output of aw other state had a value
la excess of a million dollars.
Appointed Day of Judgement.
A horse-dealer In an Kngluh town
had lent a horse to a solicitor, who
k.lled the animal through bad usage.
Tie dealer insisted on payment, and
the lawyer, refusing casb. said he
would give a bill for the amount, but
1' must be at a long date. Tbe law
yer drew a promissory note, making
K payable oa tbe day of Judgment
-‘.a action was raised, and tbe lawyer
a»a- d tbe sheriff to look at the bill.
Hating done so. tbe sheriff replied:
This is tbe day of judgment. 1 decree
yen to pay tomorrow "
Swallow's Homs.
Tbe tescher in natural history had
r-^etved more or less satisfactory re
plies to her questions. The Delinea
tor asserts, and finally she asked:
What little boy can tell me where
the home of the swallow Is?"
long silence then a hand waved
"Well. Hobble, where is Itr
Tbe home of the swallow." de
clared Hobble, seriously, ‘is in the
•tammirk "
Almost Entirely.
Wr*’ Quay, at the < oagresa hotel
la d.Kuo. was talking about a no
torious politician
And he's worth eleven millions.**
Mr. Quay ended
"And ts an entirely self-made man.
too. I believe." said a correspondent.
Ejt rHy so. Mr Quay ansmenpd.
except for nine thick coats of white
wash that have been applied to him
by various investigating committees ”
Talk ng Shop.
Hewitt—| see that when our writer
trsead was married nobody was al
lowed to kiss the bride
Jewett -How was that?
Hewitt—At the wedding reception
be pat up a card reading "All rights
reserved "
The Style of tA
"How do they serve meals from
that iiuw-h wagon?**
~1 wwpoos they serve them a la
carl *
Literal.
"My rood woman, do you scrub
with avidity?"
"No rn, with soap "
Unfitting.
"Walt till I hobble my horse "
"Well, please don’t do It on the
skirt of the lawn "
Mot every fortune hunter ts a good
shot.
FREE ADVICE
TO SICK WOMEN
Thousand* Have Been Helped
By Common Sense
Suggestions.
Women goffering from any form of fe
male ill* are invited to communicate
promptly with the woman 'a private corre
apooomce department of the Lydia E.
„ piakhaa Medicine Co., Lynn. Max*.
Your W-ttrr will be opened, read and
answered by a woman and held in strict
cnerfsVnrc- A woman can freely talk cf
her private i!liv-*a to a woman; thus ha*
been estate shed a confidential corre
spondence k hich has extended over
many years and which has never been
broken. Never have they published a
testimonial or used a letter without the
umttew consent of the writer, and never
has the Company allowed these confiden
tial letter* to get out of their possession,
as tbs hundreds of lhnq*and» of them in
their files will attest.
Out of the vast ve lum* of experience
which they have to draw from, it is more
than possible that they possess the very
knowledge needed in your case. Noth
ing » asked in return except your good
w.H, and their advice ha* heired then
aaada. surely any
mtmaa. rfck or poor,
mov'd ba (lad to
taka adviata** of
l
ban, Madkia. Col.
< or rtt. initial) Lyaa, {
j ovgttt to hare
Lydia E. PinJriuun’a tto-page
Teat Peek. It la aot a book for
aa it U too
It la free aad only
by wall. Write for
It today.
Pandora Joins fae
Flying Dutchmans Fleet
’ T
N the dusty records of the |
great maritime world's ;
movements the brief en- j
try of the missing yawl i
Pandora will read like i
this:
"Pandora; yawl Perth, !
Australia. Captains Hlvthe
and ArapakiR From New
York for London. July
JO. 3911. Not reported.”—Maritime
Mlscel
The words give no intimation of
.be mystery, or perhaps tragedy,
which lies behind them Only to
tome bronzed skipper who knows the
North Atlantic in all her moods will!
heir meaning be clear
Those two words are all the world
has time to give to the fight of two
brave men against the unconquered
•trength of the sea against stkrva
lon and thirst, against the winds
»nd the storms and ice and unbear
able heat. In some cases “not re
ported" tells merely the story of a
schooner lost through carelessness.'
but in the case of the little Pandora
»nd her brave skippers a volume
might be written of their adventures
Theirs is the story of the call of
the sea. the song to which tbetr ears
had been trained for generations and
to which they listened once too often
Three years have passed since they
ieard it the -last time, and more
than a year ago the Pandora left
New York harbor for London after
her thrilling voyage from Australia.
She has never been .-eep since she
dropped past the pilot s boat. No
vessel passing in nr out of New York
it any other North Atlantic port has
ever sighted the sturdy little yawl
Now she has become a part of that
mysterious fleet of which the Flying
Dutchman Is the flagship and which
I has the Sargasso sea as its place of
gathering.
The story of Capt Samuel Blythe
and Capt Peter Arapakis Is one of
two men who saw more than the
spray in a breaking wave To them
the se* but meant life and liberty,
freedom of action and thought, and
for years they made it play Its part
Then the waves rose and demanded
their due. and the Pandora, with her
skipper*, was the toll.
The Pandora was 3« feet long and
of generous beam for her length Her
keel was stocky and dwarfed and her
j mainmast the size of a derrick boom
Her sails—she had three sets—were
I t*C the best grade of heavy naval can
vas and as for Interior fittings, she
had none other than demanded by ab
solute necessity. The Pandora «a>
not for pleasure save in an inverted
sense. She was to sail around the
world but her ovdcm also intended
to make certain nautical observations
which they hoped would be of value
i to the world
So. one fine day three years age
she sailed out of Perth harbor,
provisioned for a four months' cruise
»nd with two men on hoard who had
answered to the call of the gea The
Pandora was bound for cape Horn,
but she was to call at several South
American ports for fresh supplies
The voyage across the Pacific was un
PTentfcl. fair wind* and a calm sea
was prevailing all the way. Along the
! Chilian coast they put into two har
bors for food and water and as each
day passed their admiration for the lit
tie Pandora grew for she was prov
ing worthy with every new emer
gency
So far the sea had permitted the
indignity of two men in a thirty-six
foot boat and had left them unmo
lested. but Just after they set out to
Tszzr fawBontt
round the Horn it rose in majestic in
dignation and began to refute their
theories.
If it were not for the unmistakable
signs which such an experience ytould
have left on the yawl the tale of Cap
tain Arapakis could hardly have been I
believed. But the dents which the
compass box had made on the cabin
roof and the scar on Captain Arapa
kis' head were enough proof without
the photographs of the Pandora after
the storm.
The Pandora ran into bad weather
two days after she started around the
Horn and before she had passed the
entrance to the Straits of Magellan
There was a wind of about sixty
miles velocity and it had. during the
course of an afternoon blown up
waves from sixty to seventy feet in
height Toward evening the wind
suddenly veered completely around
with the result that the top o'1 each
wave was blown back and folded
over, much after the manner in
which a cook would treat a piece of
dough out of which he intended to
make a Parker House roll. The little
Pandora was trying to live out the
storm under a try sail and sea anchor
and was succeeding in her usual man
ner. much to the gratiScation of her
designers and'builders. when the sail
was carried away by a gust and the
kedge anchor went by the board. It
was the third they had lost during
the afternoon.
As soon as the restraint of the sea
anchor was lifted the Pandora swung
into the trough of one great wave
Up and up she climbed on the wall of
water until It grew th!n md weak at
the top and was folded back by .he
wind. The wave broke just above
the yawl and crashed back, carrying
the little vessel with It.
Then the Pandora turned complete
ly over and for a space of twenty sec
onds everything tn her cabin, includ
ing her Bkippers. rested on the roof.
By the law of precedent shp should
have sunk like a cannon ball, but the
Pandora was not built along those
lines. She righted herself and lived,
but her main mast had been snapped
short and all of her rigging, with the
exception of the jury mast, was acting
as a flail a^ It followed along tn the
trough It was naif an hour of hard
work before the foul rigging was cut
I
away. All night the Pandora tossed
in the storm, but she came through
on top and was worked into port un
der her jury sail. So great had been
the force of the storm that long strips
of the copper sheeting which covered
her hull had been torn away Perhaps
this fact accounts for her later loss.
With a new mast and another set of
sails the Pandora made her way to
New York and she reached Quaran
tine more than two years after she
left Perth. She looked like some sort
of a dejected mongrel when I went cn
board her as she lay at the Atlantic
Yacht Club anchorage, but her cap
tains were proud and spent several
hours telling of their little yawl's per
formances under the most trying
conditions.
Captain Arapakis was of Greek de
scent, but how far back it was he i
could not tell. He was not an un
imaginative sailor, for his talks about |
his life and his boat were full of phil !
osophies that come only to a man
who has spent solitary months at
sea. The little cabin of the Pandora
contained a number of books, such as
one would hardly expect to 6ee in
such 'a place. There were Darwin
Spencer, two volumes of Ftalzac. the
sea tales of Kipling and Kingsley. i
Captain Blythe was more the usua'
type of stolid British merchant skip
per who always talked with one eye
cocke»d to the weather and his other
resting with a pleased expresion or i
some pet line of the Pandora. While
the Pandora was in New York one of
the Greek societies gave to each ot
the men a medal.
Two weeks in New York was
enough for them. They had hoped tc
take the Pandora out of water and
repair the torn copper hull sheathing
but the weather was so fine and the '
winds so even that they decided tc ;
get under way for London. On July j
20, 1911, they hoisted sail and started
That is as far as the story goes
Three months later Captain Blythe's 1
brother. J. Forbes Blythe, of Coven
try, England, wrote a letter to the
custom house in New York asking
for information about the Pandora and j
saying the little vessel had never re
ported in any English or Continental
port. No information could be given
to him.
\ I
Years Devoted to Sleep
Remarkably Large Part of Man's Life
time Spent In More or Less
Happy Slumber.
"The days of our lives are three
score years and ten." sings the Psalm
ist. and the man or woman whr at
tains tbat age spends years of his life
in doing what are regarded as com
mon. daily actions.
The average person of 70 has spent
no fewer than 23 year* of his life In
bed. assuming that his nightly sleep
had been eight boure throughout life
Most people spend about fifteen min
utes a day over the care of their teeth
The etptuagenarions have thus spent
almost a year in this way.
How long have they spent at table?
Allow halt an hour for each meal and
the answer Is sti years They eat on
au average one loaf of bread a day In
all their life three miles of loaves have
been consumed, supposing that the tat
ter are put end to end Including tea.
coffee and milk. 300 barrels of liquid
have been accounted for.
The office aan of 70 has put. in five
years in wsIking to the station and to
his office A woman of 70. even sfm
pie ;n her dress, has taken seven years
In clothing herself.
A man and a woman who have
reached the allotted span of life will
have used 600 pairs of boots between
them, too dresses and 500 hats.—Lon
dcL Answers.
__
i
Genius and Marriage.
"The married life of a genius is usu j
ally unhappy- *<» is that-of his wife." '
The speaker was Miss Helen Gould,
who- -apropos of her reported stinging
rebuke to the Colorado parson who
wished to banish old maids—was dis
cussing marriage In general.
“To be the wife of a genius is bad.
she said, "but to be the hun£»nd ol j
one is worse. At a musicaie 1 ne&rd a ]
lady say:
“ 'Who Is that man with the sott- j
bosomed shirt and Windsor tier y
“ He is the husband of the wonder
ful contralto. Vivavoce.' her companion
answered.
“ 'Yes,' said the other, "but who was
he before his marriage?’’
Making Yourself Fit
The trouble Isn't so much with
ready-made clothes as It Is with ready
made men. Life remarks. It is per
fectly possible, not only for sculptors
but for scientific craftsmen, to find
out Just what the proportions of ihe
human body are and 10 design models
which will set properly and hang prop
erly If these shirts anj coats and
waistcoats do net fit you. something
may be the matter with you. The
] remedy Is not to have your clothes
made to order, although other consid
, erattons besides (it enter into good
' clothes; the remedy is to have your
! self made to order Koi this purpose
| there exist pnystoal culturists, osteo
| pa’hs. chiropractors, bone setters and
j ordinary surgeons, and even the old
; family doctor might help out in a
pinch. It is quite feasible to have
j yourself designed so that, no matter
where you meet a coat or shirt that le
properly pul together, you will flt it
Documentary Evidence.
The geography clastf was in session
One small pupil astonished the class
by stating that in a certain section
of South America there were talking
monkeys. When the teacher ques
tioned thte statement, the youngster
opened his geography and triumphant
ly read: “This region is inhabited by
a species of monkey; properly speak
ing apes.”—The Delineator.
Footstool Church.
Ur. Kajmond Unwin told a story re
lating to the building of St. John's
church. South Square, Westminster.
The architect, he said, was reputed to
: have worried Queen Anne about the
design Her majesty at length losing pa
1 tlence kicked her footstool over and re
j marked In anger: "Bnlld it like that!”
The architect fulfilled the royal wishes
and the church was built as it stood
today—with corners protruding up
1 ward ilka the four legs of a stool.—
I Reynolds * Newspaper.
Cures Hams by Electricity
A Cincinnati packer some time aJR
discovered a method of curing haf&a
by electricity. He found that Wj
introducing an alternating current
through the pickling brine the hams
could be cured in from thirty to thirty
five days, as against ninety to a hun- j
dred by the ordinary method. A large
plant in Cleveland is now curing meat
by this process. The plant generates
direct current for use in various ca |
■acities, and a portion of it is con
verted into alternating current by
jpbeacs of a rotary converter, to pro
vide the energy used in the curing
vats.
Horses Used to Mix Clay.
Horse* are used to mix the clay by
treading it in many Argentine brick
yards Instead of employing more ex
pensive machinery.
EVIDENTLY OUT OF PLACE
Indignant Frenchman Had Some
Fault to Find With Postmaster,
and Said So.
A Frenchman with a name spelled
a la Paris and pronounced something
like Ca-choo had never learned to
read or write, but he managed to dis
guise the fact pretty well until he
moved to a new community where the '
name was not common. Going to the
postoflice one morning he inquired:
“Got any mail for Joe Ca-choo?"
“What's the name?” inquired the
clerk.
“Ca-choo. Joe Ca-choo.”
“How do you spell it?”
"Can't you spell Joe Ca-choo?"
"No,'' said the clerk, “I never heard
it before."
Then the disgust of the French
man, which had been constantly ris
ing, boiled over and he snorted:
“Well, if you can't spell, why don't
you sell your old postoffice to some
one that can?”
BABY IN MISERY WITH RASH
Monroe, Wis.—“When my baby was
six weeks old there came a rash on
his face which finally spread until it
got nearly all over his body. It form
ed a crust on his head, hair fell out
and the itch was terrible. When he
would scratch the crust, the water
would ooze out in big drops. On face
and body it was in a dry form and
would scalp off. He was in great mis
ery and at nights I would lie awake
bolding his hands so that be could not
scratch and disfigure himself. I tried
simple remedies at first, then got
medicine, but it did no good.
“Finally a friend suggested Cutieura
Remedies, so I sent for a sample to
see what they would do, when to my
surprise after a few applications I
could see an improvement, and he
would rest better. I bought a box of
Cutieura Ointment and a cake of Cutl
cura Soap and before I bad them half
used my baby was cured. His head Is
now covered with a luxuriant growth
of hair and his complexion is ad
mired by everybody and has no dis
figurements." (Signed) Mrs. Annie
Saunders. Sept. 29, 1911.
Cutieura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p Skin Book. Address
post-card "Cutieura, Dept. L. Boston.”
Adv.
Thoroughly Up-to-Date.
"Halloa:" Jellison cried, as he en
countered his acquaintance, Barwood.
in the street. "Thought you were get
ting married today. Postponed?”
"Altogether.” said Barwood. firmly.
"Not even engaged now, then?” pur
sued Jellison.
“No. The lady 1 was to have mar
ried was too modern—too up-to-date
for me.'1
"Up-to-date:” Tbe excuse astonish
ed Jellison. "How on earth—”
"Wiote her last Monday, saying I
was coming to see her on Wednesday,
You see, although we'd been engaged
for some time, I never formally pro
posed, and she seemed to want It, So
I went on Wednesday—just to satisfy
her whim, as 1 thought. Got there
and found she had sold the rights of
photographing me at the moment of
proposing to a cinematograph com
pany.
"That settled it!”—Tit Bits.
Point for Sherlock Holmes.
Somebody wondered how long a cer
tain woman who had just left the
room had been married.
"About 15 years."’ said the jeweler.
"How do you know?" asked the jew
eler's wife. “You never saw her until
tonight."’
"I can tell by the size of her wed
ding ring.' he replied. The width of
wedding rings changes about every
five years. The kind she wears was
in style 15 years ago.”
Why He Borrowed.
"And then Xero had Rome set afire
in every quarter.”
"Alas, how terrible!" murmured lit
tle Moritz, with sd expression of such
deep anguish that his teacher asked
why it affected him so much.
"Why.” said Moritz, ""just think of
the poor insurance companies!”—
Fliegende Blaetter.
Seizing the Opportunity.
She—Old Mr. Steiner told me he
would marry me at once if he were
twenty-five years younger.
He—Why, that would just be my
age?
She—Ach. this is so sudden.—Ex
change.
A Paradoxical Ballot.
"I should think the women voting
in the new suffrage states would
strike one obstacle."
"What is that?’"
"How can the matrons of a party
cast their maiden vote?”
A Dead One.
"’The doctro says that I will live
about a year.”
"That will be a great change for
you."
“What will?”
"Living."'
Melancholy Fact.
Man is weak. That is why he In
vests in a cantaloup when he knows
the chances are ten to one against
him.—Toledo Blade.
Conclusive.
"What am 1 to do about this man’s
attack on me? I can t answer him.”
“Then why don't you call him a
liar?”
11?*. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething. softens the gums, retioccs inMamma
ticn. allays pain, cures wind e lie, 26c a bottle
Ade.
A woman has no business with a
family if she can t take something old
and make over it into something new
—
CURES BURNS AND CUTS.
Cole’s CsrbolisaKc stops tho pain instantly. :
Cures,tuick. No scar. Alldruggists.25aud50c.Adv.
Many a born leader throws up the
sponge and becomes a follower.
It is easier to go broke in a hurry j
than It is to get rich quick.
MI Got This Fine Pipe With Liggett
' & Myers Duke’s Mixture”
All kinds of men smoke Duke's Mixture in all kinds
of pipes—and every other way—and they ail tell the same
story. They like the genuine, natural tobacco taste of
■
Choice bright leaf aged to mellow mildness, carefully stemmed
and the n granulated—every grain pure, high-grade tobacco—
that's whst you get in the Liggett & Myers Duke's Mixture sack.
You get one and a half ounces of this pun . uiild, delightful
tobacco, unsurpassed in quality, for 5c.
Now About the Free Pipe
Inere.y sack of L iggett & Myers Duke's Mix tun we now pack
a coupon. You can exchange these coupons lor a pipe or for many
other valuable and useful articles. These presents cost not one
penny. There is something for every mender of tho family—
skates, catcher's gloves, tennis rackets, cameras, toilet articles,
suit cases, canes, umbrellas, and dozens of other things. Just send
us your name and address on a postal
and as a special offer daring Sep
tember and October only we will
send yoa oar new illustrated cata
logue of presents FREE of any
charge. Open up a sack of Lijgstt
4f Myers Duke's Mixture today.
Coupons from ltutrs Mixture may 04 UB
assorted with tag* from HORSE SHOE,
/7T ^ J. T„ TINSLEY’S NATURAL LEAF.
V I GRANGER TWIST, and Coupons from
^ XJ f . fw _ FOUR ROSES (/ft /»’»* double coupon |S
H PICK PLUG CUT. PIEDMONT CIGA- iff
RETTES, CUX CIGARETTES, an<* JH
o/Arr /<2£i or coupons issued by us. ^KJ|
Address—Premium Dept. df^b
Mill 11
SMILING MARTYRDOM.
Although the iceman brings to you
A lump exceedingly small.
You don't complain, for if you do
He may not come at all.
Like Mushrooms.
As they emerged from the subway
! station they were confronted by a
giant skyscraper rising into the blue.
"What building is that?" she asked,
not being an habitue of the downtown
district. “I don't know,” he replied.
She looked at him in surprise, this
quarter of New York being his daily
locale. “No," he insisted wearily. ”1
don't know. It wasn't there yester
day."—New York Press.
Groping.
"What is Miss itammerah trying to
play on the piano-?"
” 'In the Shadow.’
“I thought she seemed to be hav
ing some difficulty in finding the right
keys."
One occasionally meets a man who
gives a direct answer in reply to a
simple question. But most of them
want to make a speech.
The First Toast.
Wilson, Mizner, tbe well-known
viveur, explained, on a New York roof
garden, tbe origin of the word "toast"
—toasting a lady.
“You will remember,” he began,
"that in olden times it. was the cun
tom to serve punch with toasted—that
is to say, roasted—apples floating In
it. These apples were called thn
toast The toast—remember that
"Well. It happened at Bath one day
that a celebrated beauty stood In the
Cross Bath, surrounded by a^ throng
of admirers, and one of these admir
ers, intoxicated with admiration, took
a glass of the water in which thn
beauty stood and bolding it ak>ft
drank her health, draining tbe watei
to tbe last drop.
"Beau Nash, who stood near by,
shouted:
“ ‘I like not the punch, but I would
I had the toast! ’ ”
_ _ »
Thoughtful Wife.
"Think I’ll go to the ball game to
day.’’
“Ail right Is there a telephone at
the grounds?"
"There’s one near there. Why?"
“If the home team loses I want yoa
to telephone me, so that I can taka
the children and go over to mother’!
until you get your temper back.”
How About This?
"Geese are supposed to be symbol!*
of all that is foolish.” . r
"Weil, go on.” , *
"But you never see an old gander
hoard up a million kernels of corn and
then go around trying to mat* with a
gosling."
It Depends.
"Do you think a wife*should go
through her husband’s pockets?"
"Yes—if there’s anything in 'em.”
One advertiser offers to send a dol
lar package free. It is the concen
trated wisdom of the ages that no
package worth a dollar is free.
For Headache Nervousness
and Backache dueio disorders
of Kidneys and Bladder
W.L.DOUCLAS,
SHOES 1
*3.00 *3.50 *4.00 *4.50 AND *5.00 ’
FOR MEN AND WOMEN L
amor W. L. OoogfM S2.00, 90. BO 9 93.00 School CS
Shomm, boomuwo omo pnlr mill pomlthrmly omtmear two \
palra at ordinary ahooa, mama aa tho man’a ahooa. 1
W.L.Dougla* makes and tells more $3.00,$3^0 Sc. $4.00 shoes m
than any 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 in 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
•h°e Part*c“**r‘T desired by young men. Also the conservative styles which
have mane W. L. Douglas shoes a household word everywhere.
If yon could visit W. L. Douglas large factories at Brockton, Mass., and tee
far 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 CW
CAUTION.-To pretest roe snint inferior .hou, W.LDougla. stamp, hi. name on tha bet
Lo<*.for .St*™*- Bewara of aubrtitutaa. W. L Dougin, .hoe. .re mid in 78 own
' Z a»a«po*a**ksrm oirfwbcra. No matter where you live, they are within your r«ack.
wp^ytm. write direct to factory for rata toy showing how to or tier
bymaiL Shooaaont avarywhare. delhrory denw prepaid. WXj5oo.Ua. BnxXton. M«uu
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES