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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1915)
Are Toe Gines Veer Body A Square Dell ? Read wffce Ills of Life* ^ free booklet is a plain statement of 1 1 people a» to then experience with E^JjfVr hare used Peruna. They what they are talking about. Fathers. Mother*. Sister*. Brother*. Grandtather* jnJ grandchildren. They all apeak. [g,jructtre reading. Send for one. Pentna is a standard household remedy for coughs, colds and catarrh. It is also a slight laxative. An admirable remedy for old and young. It is a great saving in doc* tor's bills to have Peruna ut the house. It is also convenient. If your druggist does not happen to have Peruna in stock order h direct from us. $ 1.00 a bottle. $5.00 for six. We pay transportation charge*. Peruna wins its own way. One bottle will convince you. THE PERUNA COMPANY* , Okie Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure CARTER S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta ble — act surely but gently on lever . Jta- A A the liver. Stop after dmner dis tress-cure ' indigestion. improve tne complexion, Dngnten tneeyes. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature TWO WAYS OF KEEPING LENT Billy Sunday Tells of One of Them in an Anecdote That Is Worth While. Billy Sunday, the evangelist, to whom all Philadelphia has been "bit ting the sawdust trail.” was talking about Lent. "Lent?” he said, throwing up his arm as if about to pitch a ball. “Well, boys, there's lots of humbug about Lent. Sincere Lent keeping is a good thing, a mighty good thing; but the other kind—” With a light leap he landed in a sitting posture on his reading desk. Seated there, his legs swinging com fortably, he went on: "Well, the other kind reminds me of the fat old party who said: “ Consarn this war! Turtle's gone up. oysters have gone up. trout’s gone up. wine’s gone up, canvas-back duck's gone up and beer's gone up. With things in such a condition I hardly see where a man’s to get the money to cele—er—1 mean to keep Lent on. • ” Just Any Kind. Betty and two of her playmates spent an hour shaking Betty's bank and then rushed to the corner store with the single coin they were able to entice through the slot “What's for you, little ones?” asked the storeman. Throwing the coin on the low glass case. Betty replied with an air of con tented indifference: "Our folks ate all rich. Jist give us a cent's worth of any kind of candy.” Basis for a Garden. “What are you and your little friends doing out there in the backyard, Tom my?” ■‘We’re the allies, ma, an' we're dig gin' trenches.” "Well, don't dig the trenches too deep, and I’ll ask you father to drop a few seeds In them.” The Way. "To read Bill's letters of what he Is doing in the war, you would sup pose he kept the enemy on the run." *T don't doubt it—after him.” A frenzied financier is a man who collects every dollar due him and stands off every bill collector that calls on him. Darwinian. “I’m looking up my family tree.” “What are the monkeys doing?”— Boston Transcript. O/YlY the literal truth Sttoncs Sounded Like Those of Baron Munchausen, But They Were Actual Happening*. Some men. dressed in civilian clothes, gathered together in the smok ovs an? the h0teI> discuss'ng the ••tr n ®0rrows of life at the front \\en, Ive been with the arniv and bad a very interesting time,” said one „ got feally alone with the en em- ■ asked another. Bather! I once took two of their officers." “Unaided ?” » * course' And the very next day I took eight men!” "All wounded. 1 expect," sneered a listener. “You didn’t get hurt, did ypu?” "Just a slight scratch, that’s all. And two days after I took a transport wag on, and followed up that by taking a big gun.” ti said a disagreeable auditor I have seen some of the finest speci mens of anything you can call to mind, but I wish to state that you are the biggest romancer that ever trod this earth.” * Oh, no, I am not that,” replied the hero; “but I am a photographer!” Fatner Won Out. Jones’ wife wanted to pay an elon gated visit to some of her relatives in a distant state, and while Jones had no great desire to kiss her good by and do his own dishwashing, he thought it the part of wisdom to treat the matter diplomatically. “Harry,” said the wife one after noon, speaking of the proposed visit “won’t you be awfully lonely and ut terlv miserahV> while I am gone. “Oh, no dearie!” promptly answered Harry, with a brightening expression. “I shall manage nicely. There are Smith, Brown, Green—” “Is that so?” was the quick inter jection of wifey. “Then I don't go! I don’t propose to have my house turned into a poker jubilee!” Then—and Now. “Squabbling and fighting—there’s another very frequent cause of di voree,” said Prof. L. Watts Ingersoll in an address before the Cleveland Anti-Divorce league. “A man had been haled before a Cleveland magistrate for nonsupport or some such fault. “ ‘But, let me see,’ the justice said, aren’t you the chap who was married in a cage of wild man-eating tigers and leopards?' i “ ’Yes, your honor, I’m the man, was the reply. “ ‘Exciting, wasn’t it?’ said the jus tice. “ ‘Well, your honor,’ said the man. ’it seemed so then. It wouldn’t now.’ ’’ A Militant Man. “It Is easy enough to please women and children,” said a business man the other day. “I once owed several thousand dollars and did not have any idea how I should pay the amount, but finally resolving to forget the whole business. I sent down a big box of roses and a wind-up train that ran on a track. You have no idea how happy the. household was then. “But I am still wondering how I am going to pay my debts.” As It Seemed to Fltzstop. “WTas your father a pirate?" asked young Fitzstop of the girl of his choice at a clandestine meeting, after the old sea captain had urged his exit from the family mansion on the hill by the use of his pedal extremity. “No, my darling," was the reply. “Why do you ask?” “He seemed to me to be a good deal of a free-booter,” said the young man. reflectively. What She Would Do. The Houston school children were learning to speak “Old Ironsides," and one little lass when she came to the line: “Aye, tear her tattered ensign down!" was heard to declaim with deep feeling: “I’d tear her tattered inside out!”—Houston Post. Quite So. He—If I were rich do you think you could love me? She—1 don’t know about that; but I should have no objection to marry ing you.—Boston Evening Transcript A man gets down to bed rock when he has to keep the cradle in motion. From Warsaw to Berlin is a dis tance of 398 miles. In Foods— more than in anything else—quality counts more than quantity. Grape-Nuts * FOOD contains more body-building nour ishment, weight for weight, than either meat or bread. Grape-Nuts is delicious and economical, and , “There’s a Reason” [ SECRET OF USING BROOD MARES ON FARM Clydesdale Mare “Boquhan Lady Peggy,” Champion at the Highland Show, Inverness. (By J. M. BELL.) I was on a big stock farm several months ago, and the owner was cer tainly doing things in the matter of raising mules, that is, he was starting about it in the right way. Twenty-six fine, heavy draft mares were being bred to a sixteen-hand jack. So far so good. These mares were doing regular farm work, some of thd» having been on the place for several years, and out in a large, luxuriant pasture were a thriving herd of mule colts; a credit to their mothers. It was haying season when I vis ited that stock farm, and 200 acres of red clover were being cut, wheat was also ripe: 500 acres of that was being harvested. Six mowers in the hay, four binders in the wheat and the mules working to all the machinery, the brood mares working to the wag ons hauling the wheat and* the hay. A pair of them to each wagon. A careful driver and a good harness, the mares sleek and fat, working from 12 to 14 hours a day under a hot, south ern sun; no time to loiter; a steady rush from rising to the setting of the sun. But these brood mares were stand ing it all right and were fat enough for any practical purpose. In buying these mares, the owner, a young Cornell graduate, had succeeded in getting his money’s worth. Many of the pairs were really matched teams, strong bone, heavy muscles, good limbs, no counterfeits among the twenty-six. No cripples, few blemishes, spavins, ringbones, side bones, even splints hard to find. No mares that could be called aged, so all likely to drop good healthy colts. 1 noticed that the brood mares on this farm had on good well-fitting har ness, and were invariably handled by careful teamsters, the majority of them negroes. Here lies the secret of working brood mares on the farm; they must be handled properly and by drivers of experience who understand the dif ference between a $200 animal that is expected to drop a colt each season and the $50 plug mule or gelding. New on this farm where over one hundred head or work stock werr kept and used regularly the hours for -work were “from sun to sun" at all seasons of the year—no loitering—everything carried on in a businesslike manner but at the same time none of the work animals, either mules or brood mares, were overworked or underfed. Take these twenty-six mare?, figur ing twenty of them drop foals each spring, that is six out of the lot will miss—these twenty young colts at weaning time would be worth $40 each, or a total of $800, while as three-year olds they should. If properly grown, be worth $350 a pair, beside the three crops of colts coming on behind them There is no trouble about working a brood mare on the farm, if she is the right kind of mare and driven by the right sort of man, but you must cer tainly select, for breeding, mares ol the right size and temperament. High-strung, nervous mares will not do for farm drudgery, whether they are draft bred or not. You want a quiet animal—not slow or sluggish—but with an equable dis position. An infusion of draft blood will often, insure a patient, willing farm brood mare, just as an infusion of thorough bred blood will give a more spirited animal. Perhaps no other animal on the farm is so profitable as the right sort of a j mare. The price of horses and mules keeps up well and is likely to do so. The small farmer and also the larger ; stock farms will use mules in spite of machine engines and motor cars. The city trade uses up thousands of both horses and mules; riding and j driving horses jre always in demand i if they are of the right kind, and the brood mare on the farm is the source from which they are sprung, so in the selection of them good judgment i should be used. Work them regularly, feed them reg ularly and plentifully. Rest them two weeks before and two weeks after the foal arrives, but let them work a month before and after the colt ar rives. Be light. Never handle them rough ly and never overload them. RAISE GOOD CALVES OR PIGS ON WHEY Fed With Oil Meal and Gluten Feed It Will Give Satisfac tory Results. Whey has a food value well worth saving. Us chemical food analysis compared with skim milk, is as fol lows: Skim milk, 2.9 per cent protein; 5.2 per cent carbohydrates; 0.3 per cent tat. Whey, 0.8 per cent pro tein; 4.7 per cent carbohydrates; 0.3 per cent fat. It will be seen that whey is not as valuable as skim milk, but that it has a very appreciable value, never theless. However, whey has a wider nutritive ratio than skim milk, that iof whey being 1.67, while that of skim milk is 1.2. This fact must be taken into consideration in feeding whey if one gets its full food value. Oil meal, gluten feed, etc., food rich in protein should be fed with whey, while corn meal, barley meal, flaxseed meal, etc., should be fed with skim milk. In this way one can balance the ration and get the full food value of such prod ucts, while if they are fed alone, satis factory results cannot be obtained. You can raise good calves or pigs on whey if you will feed oil meal and gluten meal with it. but if fed alone it does not contain the food nutrients in proper proportion, hence does not give satisfactory results. It is safe to say that whey is worth half as much as skim milk for feed. Green Feed Essential. Green feed is essential as a part of the winter ration. When cabbage and beets are not available, sprouted oats can easily be fed. Soak the oats in a bucket for at least twenty-four hours and then place in a pile on top shelf of the sprouter. On the third day spread them out and let them grow to a height of not over two inches, then feed them. Assurance of Health. Poultry-men, just as in the case of stockmen and fruit-growers, find that sanitation is the best assurance of health in their flocks. No matter how fine the birds may be or how substan tial the house in which they are quar tered. if the building is infested with vermin and disease germs, a profit able flock cannot be maintained. Colors of Eggs. All heavy layers produce white eggs, while the general-purpose breedB lay a more-or-less brown egg. , ALFALFA FOR HOG PASTURE IN FAVOR _ Furnished Good Grazing From Early Spring Until Autumn at Iowa Station. Alfalfa pasture produced tbs cheap est gains on pigs ever secur^jl at the Iowa station. In 1911 alfalfa pasture, with a grain ration of ear coi a plus a small amount of meat meal, orodvced gains at a cost of <2.88 per 10b poinds, considering corn worth 50 cent* a bushel. Alfalfa furnished good graiis;; f*om early spring until late autumr.. It was pastured from May 7 to Nov era be* 25 constantly, a period of 198 c«>* Un der average Iowa conditioi s, alfalfa pasture is available for prac .ici.Ily six months af the year. Being extremely deep ro>. tec, ‘t is not greatly affected by drought. ?r. Au gust and September, when clover pas ture is dry and hard, alfalfa g-u'X-ing beside it is green, succulent »cd palat able. Heavy pasturing of alfalfa Is act ad vised. The number of animal,! jmr acre should be so regulated th^i iso or three small cuttings of haj may be taken from the field. This is leeeXsary to insure tender green growth for graz ing. When little buds begin tc shfot at the base of the stalk the alfa.fa should be cut. In a very few days a t»estt new growth makes its appearance. Over pasturing, without occasional evtting, also tends to injure the crowns of the plant and eventually destroys the stand. Direct Road to Eggs. Warm food and cold moioiigs go well together. Direct road to eggs, and they are what we are all after. Too Many Shotes. If the shotes pile up in th? yen at night, the pen is too cold, and there are too many shotes in the pen. Sewage as Fertilizer. It is safe to use sewage as fertil izer if the plant roots are u itfroken, but a very slight injury to the roots permits disease germs to emor. Bad Combination. Heavy birds and high roosts are a bad combination. Large breeds espe cially need low roosts. Advantage of Concrete Pcgt. The concrete fence post Las the advantage of being the most perma nent and sightly. SAFER CREDITS' _ The Regional Bank's New Measure Will Help Business Men in Many Ways. Better credits, rather than an extension of credit, is the much-to-be-desired effect which the Federal reserve act will have on business. The new regional banks will ex ercise a useful function in assisting mem ber lianks to improve the character of their loans. The most useful function in matters per taining to health is the digestive system, for it is from this source we receive our daily help in renewing the waste portions of the body, keeping the blood pure and well sup plied with red corpuscles, and the general condition up to Nature’s standard. Therefore, watch the digestion and at the first sign of weakness or distress see that immediate assistance is given. This can be efficiently supplied by the use of Hostet- : ter's Stomach Bitters. It has a well known reputation as a'tonic and appetizer and can thus be relied upon i to help you regain your appetite, assist the entire digestive system and help Nature in the promotion and maintenance of health, i Make Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters your I first choice in any ailment of the Stomach. ! Liver or Bowels. You will find it well i worthy of your confidence. Insist on hav- i ing the genuine. Perhaps. Church—I see the pastor of a church at Milford, Del., has been pre- j sented by his congregation with a cor- ■ net. Gotham—Did they think he couldn’t ! blow his own horn otherwise? Stung. ** “It’s wonderful what some insects can do. A grasshopper can jump 100 times its length.” “That’s nothing; I once saw a bee raise a 200-pound man three feet off the ground.” One’s True Friends. Three men are my friends—be that loves me, he that hates me and he that is indifferent to me. Who loves me. teaches me caution. Who is in different to me. teaches me self-reli ance.—Panin. Nothin’ Doin’. “Hello, doctor!” exclaimed the law yer. “How’s everything?” "All’s well.” replied the M. D. sadly. It’s difficult to convince a woman that gambling is wrong if her husband beeps ahead of the game. Red ink and exclamation points may attract attention, but the combination doesn't necessarily make folks think. .'VISIT California’s Expositions Low Round Trip Fares Cia Northern Pacific Ry Grrnl Northern Pafific S S Co and GARDINER GATEWAY Original and Northern Entrance to Yellowstone National Park j. Write at 'one t tor frrr cop> of mr t-x|*~'N»l»ons Folder .ind tr »vrl It* t-r j -i»turc .-*n»l let you m j»l.*u nini; vour 1915 vat at ion A M. CLCLAND, General Passenger Agent Northern Pacific Ry.. St. Paul Minn. \>.\i Beauty Is Only Skin Deep It is vitally nec essary there fore, that you take good care of your skin. ZONA POMADE if used regularly will beautify and preserve your complexion and help you retain the bloom of early youth for many years. Try it for 30 days. If not more than satisfied you get your money back. 50c at druggists or mailed direct. Zona Company, Wichita, Kan. KOW-K' — --is a scientific cow medicine, which has a direct and lasting tonic effect on the orsrans a? digestion. For over twenty years it has been the standard medicine for the prevention and treat' ment of such common cow ailments as Abortion. Retained Afterbirth. Barrenness. Milk Fever, Scouring and Lost Appetite. Too cannot afford to let a cow get down fn health. Bat ter kacp Kow-Kure eonetantlv on hand. Sold by lead duelers and druggiata in 60c and f 1.00 package*. Valuable treatise, ‘Tha Caw Doctor. ” An Easy Disguise. An impecunious young man of this town was being attended to by a bar ber whose chair fronted the street when the youth observed coming one of his creditors, no less a person than his tailor, who had been offering vari ous threats of personal violence if his account were not settled. "Hans,” gasped the youth, "lather me up quick! Lather me to the eyes! Here comes my tailor!" Never Had 'Em. Old Dick was a plantation darky I He was rarely sick, and he always 1 claimed it was due to the way he had I lived. One day as he was walking ! down the street a local merchant, ; taking advantage of his ignorance, ac- ! costed him thus: “Dick, one of your best friends has just told me that you have ancestors of the worst sort.” “Now, look heah, Cap'in Gawg, 1 doan want to hurt nobody, but I jes’ want to know’ who dat man was wot ■ tol you, an' I sho will go after him, ' ’cause he done gone and 'suit me Me got ancestors? Why, cap’in. that’s as big a lie as was eber told; I neber had nothin’ in my life but the mumps and colic.”—National Monthly. A If If PURE! Altana eaTi More than 30 years ago Salzer's Catalog boomed Alfalfa, years before other seeds men thought of its value. Today Salzer excels! His Alfalfa strains include Grimm, (Montana Liscom, Agr. College inspectedt. Salzer's Dakota Registered No. 30—all hardy as oak. For 10c in Postage We gladly mail our Catalog and sample package of Ten Fa mous Farm Seeds, including Speltz, “The Cereal Wonder;” Rejuvenated White Bonanza Oats, “The Prize Winner;” Bil lion Dollar Grass: Teosinte, the Silo Filler, Alfalfa, etc., etc. Or Send 12c And we will mail you our big Catalog and six generous packages of Early Cabbage. Carrot, Cucumber, Lettuce, Radish. Onion—furnishing lots and lots of juicy delicious Vegetables during the early Spring and Summer. Or send to John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box 704. La Crosse, Wis., twenty cents and receive both above collec tions and their big catalog. Oh, My! Prof. K. C. Loomis said at a tea in Chicago: ‘‘The superintendent of the Albany public schools regards the dress of our school girls as 'a moral menace.’ So far, so good.” Professor Loomis shook his head. “But this superintendent," he went ; on, “demands a censor of girls’ fash ions. A censor’s task, however, is never to add—it’s always to subtract, to cut out "If, then, our schoolgirls’ dress is a ' moral menace now, and we put a cen sor at it with his shears—oh, my, oh, me!”—Washington Star. The Little Boston Boy. "George,” said the Beacon Hill teacher, ‘‘what is a hyphen?” The little Boston boy settled his spectacles more firmly on his protu berant nose. “A hyphen,” he said, “is a horizontal line connecting a floating bit of false work with a substantial base. As in Kongo-American and Turco-Christian.” “Yes,” said the teacher, “and you might add. Chelsea-Boston.” “Madam.” said the little Boston boy, with much gravity, "I decline to make a frivolity of a serious subject.” Very True. Church—What do you think of this six-cents-a-loaf bread ? Gotham—Well, I don't think it is any better than the five-cent loaf. No Information. “Are the new people neighborly?” “Neighborly? I should say not! Their hired girl is deaf and dumb.'' The Natural Chase. “How did your wife ever persuade you to learn a fox trot?” “She hounded me into it.” Naturally. "This is a sorry looking laundry." “I guess the maid pressed it with a sad iron.” The real nice girl who knows too much does not give herself a good recommendation by publishing the fact. When a man sneers it is safe to as sume that he is a few notches short of making good. A man is fortunate if he can make himself believe that he is having a good time when he isn’t. Every’ woman is a con”ndrum that keeps some man guessing. Ignorance occasionally borrows a coat and poses as wisdom. Nothing tires a man like being worked by a silly woman. FREE ADVICE TO SICK WOMEN! Thousands HaveBeenHelpect By Common Sense Suggestions. Women suffering from any form of female ills are invited to communicate i.vSlA eFTnxhaM promptly witn um» 'woman’s private , correspondence de ' partment of the Ly dia E. Pinkham M ed icine Co., Lynn, ( Mass. Your letter will be opened, read l and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. A woman can ireeiy talk of her private illness to a woman ; thus has been established a confidential correspondence which has extended over many years and which has never been broken. Never have they published a testimonial or used a letter without the written consent of the writer, and never has the Company allowed these confi dential letters to get out of their pos session, as the hundreds of thousands of them in their files will attest. Out of the vast vmume 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 is asked in return except your good will, and their advice has helped thou sands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, should be glad to take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. Address Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (con fidential) Lynn, Mass. Every woman ought to havo Lydia E. Pinkham’s 80-page Text Book. It is not a book for general distribution, as it is too expensive. It is free and only obtainable by mail. Write far it today. rarker’4 HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. 60c. and f 1.00 at irruggmu. According to the Time*. “I say, old boy, have you a fiver ta lend lor a week or so?” "Here’s a church member note.” “What kind might that be?” “One that is bound to keep lent." The Main Point “What's the best way to come to the front?" “Get good backing.” Always use Red Cross Ball Blue. Delight* the laundress. At all good grocers. Adv. If it were not for politics lots of lasiy men would starve to death. Housework Is a Burden It's hard enough to keep house if in perfect health, but a woman who is weak, tired and suffering from an aching; back has a heavy burden. Any woman in this condition has goor1 Cause to suspect kidney trouble, especial - ly if the kidney action seems disordered Doan's Kidney Pills have cured thou sands of suffering women It's the beat recommended special kidney remedy. A Nebraska Case Utrt Tills a ton.” Mrs. Harries Stump. McLane and Fourth Sts., Falls City, Neb., say s: "For years my kidneys were disordered and the pain affected my back and sides. The trouble kept fretting worse and my limbs swelled badly Doan's Kid ney Pills cured me and I have never had any signs of K-iucey compjajni since. Get Doan’s at Any Stare. 50c a Ban DOAN’S “piYiV FOSTER-M1LBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. V. IB**"0*...S.O»S....„| WHYJiQJ, TRY POPHAM'S ASTHMA MEDICINE » Gives Prompt and Positive Relief in Every 6 Case. Sold by Druggists. Price Sl-OU. ^ Trial Package by Mail 10c. i WILLIAMS MFG. CO, Props, Cleveland, 0. ... M«88ry Wlfl ruMid tier York A SWITCH *#• YOUR OWN HAIR Mall ns your combings. We will make them into a beautiful switch urany other style lfnecesaar add new bair. All furSl.BO.TRAKS-ATLA ' HAIR CO, Dept.L, 81R. 21 at 8t,Ken Nebraska Directory HOTEL Omaha. Nebraska EUROPEAN PLAN THE PAXTON _ CAFF PHICErS REASONABLE DEFIANCE STARCH is constantly growing in favor because it Does Not Stick to the Iron and it will not injure the finest fabric Ft* laundry purposes it has no equal. 16 or, package 10c. 1-3 more starch for same mosey. DEFIANCE STARCH CO, Omaha. Nebraska W. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 13-1915. MEN'S *2.50 *3 *3.50 *4.00 *4.50 *5 *5.50SHOES WOMEN’S *2.00 *2.50 *3.00 *3.50 & *4.00 SHOES BOYS' * 1.75 *2 *2.50 *3.00 MISSES’ *2.00& *2.50 YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY WEARING W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES W. L Douglas shoe, .re made of the beat domestic and imported leathers, on the latest models, carefully constructed by the a expert last and pattern makers in this country. No other make of equal prices, can compete with W. L. Douglas shoes for style, workmanship and quality. As comfortable, easy walking shoes they are unsurpassed. The S3.00, •3.50 and *4.00 shoes will rite as rood service as other makes costing *4.00 to *5.00. The *4.50,*5.00 and •5.50 shoes compare favorably with other makes costing *6.00 to *8.00. there are many men and women wear shoes. Consult them and they will tell Douglas shoes cannot be excelled for erever you live I ing W.I.. Douglas I you that W. L. I the price. IX yon could visit the W. L. liouglas factory at Brockton, Maas., and see bow carefully the shoes are made, and the high grade leathers used, you would then under stand why they look and lit better, hold | their shape and wear longer than other mskfMoMh^rica TT . L. UDU(1U ■hoes are sold K“-~ouch 80 •es in the ■e cities snd shoe dealers every where. CAUTION! When buying W.L. look lor his NAME _ imped on the bottom. Shoes thus Siam worth the price paid for than. For 32 years W L- Douglas AND PRICE . are always the price. ______ guaranteed their value and protected the wearer against Mr* ' ' ' “------.ICE prices for Inferior shoes by having his NAME AND PRIi stamped on the bottom before they leave the factory. Do l be persuaded to take some other make claimed to be Just_ good. You we paying your money and are entitled to the best. If your dealer cannot supply you. write for Illus trated Catalog showing how to order by mail. W L. Douglas. glO Spark St,. Brockton, KlUEj ays A has m £1 £ **• ™ BEWARE SUBSTITUTES-^ J