T'VArqs ' HER- \ : LETTER , fl ± 1 I PUBLISDED i For Benefit of Women who , Suffer from Female Ills . Minneapolis , Minn.I was a great sufferer from female troubles which - C- , . . . , , . . . . . , . : : - ; ; } -Niii.0 31 caused a weakness " > $ : @j . 1 and broken down > ' y. . . condition of the . , : . : - . . " ' ' / system. I read so : : % Uf:1 muchofWhatL dia : : . . , . muchofwhatLydia ' + . . : , ; : ' " : . . < E. Pinkha m ' S V eg- . . . . . etable Compound " : : ' < ' . . ; f. ; fJ 4 ' . : : : : . * . , . : . JjI , . ' $ I had done . for other i' + . : . } 1 7J suffering women 1 I ' . ' } # Jif ; . felt sure it would : < o.w ; . ' . . ) .v " . < 0. . ' . . ; { . . . . { . .w . .f.t. ; 1 : . " ' ! . : : . : . , , help 1 me , and I must ' - . , vt. , . . ' t.kf.l : ' . ' say it did help me : " : tt " : " " . . , : : : : . , : . . . . . , ; . ; v , _ wonderfully. . My . ; : " " pains all left me , I 1 / VP > " ! grew stronger , and within three months ; JL i : was a perfectly well woman. , "I : i : want this letter made public to f show the benefit women may derive , ' from [ Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable . "Compound. : " - Mrs. Joirx G. MOLDAN , 1 S115 Second St. , North , Minneapolis , { < Minn. J Thousands of unsolicited and ' > geiiu- I tine testimonials like the above prove . J I Tthe efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's { ; Vegetable Compound , which is made 'exclusively . from roots and herbs. r I Women who suffer from those dis- ( 'tressing ' ills peculiar to their sex should J . . aiot lose sight of these facts or doubt - t { the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's 'IL I fVegetable Compound to restore their c ( health. .k t If you want special advice write C fto ! Mrs. : Pinkbam : : , at Lynn , Mass. f 1 JSIiowilltrcatyourletterasstrictly t confidential. ! For 20 years she lias been helping sick women in . [ this way free of charge. Don't ; .hesitate - \vrite at once. , . Best for Children _ , .pios F : fr C'URE j r . m BtS1'V1i.U\t1\\t \ YOK J1S \ " ( j.S . 1 % , Gives instantrelief when little throats - ( d are irritated and sorfi. Contains _ ,1 I no opiates and is as pleasant to take d ( ' as it is effective. f All Druffglettt , 25 cents. 6 _ : : _ 1 : ; : = > . . JJ , - I . \ . SICK HEADACHE - - 9 Positively cured by iCAD'JER'S r these Little Fills. ; h1 ! LF11O They also relle . Dis , W2 tress Iroza Dyspepsia In ITT digestion and Too Hearty - I ' if E' D Eating ; A perfect rem . l ; V L Lr\ edy for Dizziness. Nausea , r PI Lla5e Drowsiness Bad Taste In the Mouth , Coated _ _ - - Tongue. Pain In the SIde . _ _ _ _ _ _ , _ TORPID TJVER. Tney ' - golato the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. - \ SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE _ J \ CARTERS Genuine . Must Bear ITTLE Fac-S mda Signature - . IVER A' 41 PILLS. / , , < ? dJtfl : Ii' REFUSE SUBSTITUTES . - / , , I. TOILET ATSPTIO { - - NOTHING ! LTKE IT FOR - TJf..lL' ' " T'TM ! Paxtine excels any 3entifric l .2r Ir II i 1 in j cleansing wliiteninp end removing tertai from the teeth besides d ' ccyin { : * fl germs of decay and disease which ordinir ; : _ _ _ _ _ toolh ' preparations ouuot do. YPI ? : : IfifilBilTiyS : Paxtire mcd" as * mou. I ffSEi ! R2y ? ) / y I H wash Ji nfcc.a the raotub and throat. purifies the breath and kills the gerr.i ' which collect in the mouth : causing ! tote throat , bad teeth , bad breath , grippt auJ rua-- " t.- " TUr. ; ; p'V S when innaned , tir ns , ccts * I [ 'i& : i ? 1i and burn , ocy be instoptly /relieved and strengthened by pAXteie. ! tf 'F'AESSiyi P19 wiJI detr"yhe germ IK E Morio that caure cat-irh : h-nl l the ia t ----.t. ' , flanmalion _ _ and . stop the discharge. It is a sun' ' " - .z . ' tetnedy : for uterine < catarrh. . . . Paxline is a harmless yet po'verlul ! " RenaJadedis5nfeclanl and deodorizer. ' -t"o. . . ; a Used in bathing it destroys odors and , T . . leaves the bcdy anhseptically clcen. ! , FOR SALE AT DRUG STORES.BOc. - - OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. e - . . LARGE SAMPLE FREE ! THE PAXTON TOILET CO , BOSTON , MAS& A WNI PAY IF CURED " PiLES We par pottage Bed . ecd . , Fnl : . FKKB : : JiKD CUOSS HI - and n tnlo Can. ' . -REA CO. . DEPT. B5 , MINNEAPOLIS UIHB. - - - - - - - " I , Preparatory Delay "Did you ever try gardening ' ? " . .ak.4 Mr. Cros lots. . . . . . . "Once " ' answered the man who al - ways has a discouraged look. "By the time I had read all the publication necessary to inform me on the ub- ject. the season for flowers and ' vege. . tables was o'p.r.- " Washington Star. WORTH KNOWING. Simple Remedy That Anyone Can Prepare at Home. : Most people are more or less subject to coughs and colds. A simple remedy that will break up a cold quickly and cure any cough that Is curable is made by mixing two ounces of Glycerine , a half-ounce of Virgin Oil of , Pine com pound pure and eight ounces of pure Whisky. You can get these In any good drug store and easily mix them in a large bottle. The mixture is highly recommended by the Leach Chemical Co. of Cincinnati , who prepare the genuine Virgin Oil of Pine compound pure for dispensing. Several of the ten commandment have been repealed and the others amended. Dlotcntpcr In all its forms , among all ages of horses and dogs cured and others in the same stable prevented from having the disease with Spohn's Distemper Cure. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 500,000 bottles sold last year. $ .50 and $1.00. Good druggists or send to man ufacturers. Agents vanted. Write for tree book. Spohn Med. Co. , Spec. Con- tagious Diseases Goshen , Ind. Rabies Laid to Strange Caaae. In Baluchistan even the wolves go mad. In his book "The Frontiers of Baluchistan " G. P. Tate writes : "The shepherds give a strange "eason for the epidemic of rabies. According to them it was caused by the wild beasts eating dead larks. In some years , they : said the larks develop extraordi- nary vitality and pour forth such a flood of songs as they rise on the wing that they become suffocated 'and _ fall to the ground dead. A wild animal which eats one of those dead birds in- fallibly develops rabies. This is a widespread superstition and seems not unfamiliar to the natives of India who were with me. " WISHED DEATH ' HlGHT COME . To Relieve the Awful Suffering of Advauceil Kidney : Disease. ' William Gibson , Greenup , Ky. , says : "Three months I was in bed , and would have died , I be- lieve but for Doan's Kidney Pills. My doc ! tor said the case was \ hopeless. My back 1 felt as if it were be- - . ing seared with a red- , ' , . " . , hot iron. The kidney tIf . , . secretions were pain- , . , . . . , . \1 \ . 't t , , ' 1/ : . ? ful , irregular and full " of sediment. There were puffy spots beneath my eyes and my head pained terribly. I was miser- able In every way and often wished death might relieve me. When I be- gan taking Doan's Kidney Pills my condition was so serious that they had little effect , but 1 persisted getting gradually better , and it was not a great while before I was cured. The effect has been lasting. " - Remember the name-Doan's. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster- Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. When a young man is handed his college diploma he knows everything there Is to know - except how to earn a living. How's This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CITENEY & CO. , Toledo , G. We , the undersigned. have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable In all business tran ' actions and financially able to carry OQ. any obligations made by his firm. WALDINO , KI.VXAX & MARVIN. Wholesale Druggists ; , Toledo ' O. Hall's . Catarrh Cure is taken Internally acting alrectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. Testimonials sent free. Price , 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take ! Hall's Family nils for constipation. About the only thing a bachelor and the father of a family regard from the same : : point of view is a baseball game. BETTER THAN SPkINQ1 Spanking does not cure children of bed- wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers , Box 4 , Notre Dame , Ind. , will send free to any mother her successful home treat- ment , with full instructions. Send no money , but write her to-day if your chil- i dren trouble you in this way. Don't blame the child , the chances are it can't help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day night. or _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . , . Even the IleuN Watch. 'Em. Hank Stubbs-Hens layIn' much now Bige ? Bige 7\filler-Skurce any. Hank Stubbs - What's the trouble ? I Bige Miller-Don't htime fur flodgin' them pesky autymobiles. : - Bos- Ion Herald. - , . 3 _ - ir1 AA cyv _ - . v _ _ _ _ - : - I t 7 The RAYO LAMP is a high-grade lamp , sold at a low price. E I There are lamps that cost more but there no belter lamp at any I ii2 : price. The Burner the Wick the Chimney-Hc'dcr are . Ix q4 vital thing : in lamp ; these parts of the RAYC/LAMP are JI I - perfectly constructed and there is nothing known in the art of .7 4 , lamp-making could add to the value of the RAYO as . 'FHE a light-giving device. Suitable for any room in i any house. - 4 . LADY - * Every dealer erprywhero. It not at ) 'ours.wr.1to . : L ; 4r. for descriptlro circular to tro nearest Agency of tfao . S STANDARD OIL COMPANY ' . Lcrr _ _ _ _ _ . Qncorporatcd ) - . " . . " ' - _ t - . , . I # . . ; ' a - 5 5 - . -S -S -5- T.fr : I - - - - , " . t"4"ttc.4 t4 1t. . . ! 4a1 ! | _ WORTH - QUOTING .4 I . . .4 . . " 4" . + . " . . y44p4 " I : : - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : " .IIIo : _ . : . . . . : fZ ; . . . , 'f . ' ; 4 One beauty of having cro-wda In New York City , chirps the World , is that we are not left exactly lonesome when they are gone. j A nervous woman can be relied upon , - thinks the Philadelphia Rec ord , to solve the problem of perpetual emotion. Fortune never wastes 'her ' time , witt men , insists the Washington Herald who' have neither the ability no courage to seize the opportunities she offers. - - Perhaps most airship inventors art merely tr.J ing to devise a plan , sug gests the Chicago News , to enahl6 them to visit their castles in the air. Says the Pittsburg Gazette-Times : Henry Hudson didn't make a cent out of his discovery of the river. If he were alive today he would never be admitted to the Explorers' UnI * . "Dingoism. " the new word intro duced into Australian ' : politics 'by wai \ of antithesis to "jingoism , " is deriv ed -from the name of the 'wild dog ol the Antfpodes - dingo. When a man is proud of his stub bornness , confesses the Dallas News , it is a sign that he hssn'-t anything else to brag about. Somebody has hit upon the idea ol distributing a "family dollar" as q medal to commemorate t&e founding of a family. Quite appropriate , de dares the Washington Herald. ' CaQ : think of several families that nevei would have been founded , If sonue- body hadn't gone faustling ! ' ! after do lars. literature it Almost every form of - represented in the Bible claims the New York Press , from the war song the lament and the lyric to the rhap sody and the philosophical drama . , Parables , enigmas , proverbs , stories , biographies , epistles , orations and prayers are all found In this librarj of the literary activity of. the Israel- itish race. . I A St. Louis man has ffaad one thou sand . ! , lue buttons made and wlD give them to men who agree to weal them , as a sign they are willing to give their seats in street cars to women. observes the Syracuse Post- Standard. As St. Louis has ; about one hundred thousand males of streetcai age , the button / ( distrihutor evidentlj placea its gallantry at a'bout ' 1 pei cent. ent.At At the University of Missouri : is th first working school of journalism In the / world announces Lriippincott's. Ag practical < laboratory work , a daily pa per with telegraph reports is issued Walter Williams , its dean tells of the vicissitudes he encounters in turning laymen into journalists. . A student was sent in haste to cover a railroad wreck : at a town a few miles away. It was almost time . for the daily to gt ! . to .press ; , and'still no word had ! "been " received from the young man on the assignment. In desperation Dean ' Williams telegraphed , asking -why thE story was not forthcoming. The re ply was : "Too much excitement Wait till things quiet down. " France's cobbler poet and Get man's tailor dramatist , to whom ref erence : has been made , must hido their diminished heads before two accomiplisihed ; members of our Brit. ish proletariat , boasts the Westmin ster Gazette. -Streatham possesses : a chimneysweep who is an erudite au thority on Egyptology ' and ' author of a ! j.orkon the population question. A certain Yorkshire : town can boast ol a learned bargee , who has lon ; ; ' boc-B a deep student of Greek mythology. When his boat is moored to the wharf awaiting a cargo lie spends the leisure time in the local reference library reading : up his subject and making copious notes. His constant ! ' companion as he deftly steers ibis ! gal land ship along tho canals is a well thumbed translation of Herodotus. The much < discussed low grade o the criminal bar in New York Cit ? has led a Judge of the Court of Gen eral Sessions to appoint three of the most proirdnent civil lawyers to de. fend persons ' charged with murder. The , assignments have been accepted and one of the attorneys has : this ' to ' say : . "It is only with us , and prin cipally in Xenv York ' City that the flower of the bar has 'been ' drawn away : from the : higher sphere of ad vocacy by ' the temptation of money , to become highly raid clerks to finan. ciers , and , too often. to assist them in 'keeping prayerfully ( within tho law. ' For tin's the press and public also bear their share of the responsi bility , through importance and po sition which : , they give to the mere Defense of private " interests. " As scon as we realize that the defense ol life , liberty and reputation is more important to the community than the mere championship of money inter ests there will be a change -for the better. " He eays further that in oth er civilized countries : the defense of life and liberty is considered one of the highest duties of the lawyer , but : that in NCTV York City tho practice > f criminal law has become a ref oc tion upon the lawyer. . . . 5 . . . . . . ' 4 , , d' . - " , " , ' - . . . . . ' * \ To Enjoy the full confidence of the Well-informed of the World and the Commendation oJ : the most eminent physicians it was essen , tial that ths component parts of Syruj of Figs and Elixir of Senna should be known to and approved by them ; there fore , the California Fig Syrup Co. pub lishes a full statement with every package The perfect purity and uniformity of pro duct , which they demand in a laxative : : ' remedy of an ethical character , are assured ! by the Company's original method of man- I ufacture known to the Company only. The figs of California are used in the production of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna to promote the pleasant taste , but the medicinal principles are obtained from plants known ' to act most beneficially. To get its beneficial effects always buy genuine-manufactured by the Cali- fornia Fig Syrup Co. only , and for sale by all leading druggists. Different IVoVr. The captain was receiving the new middy. "Well , my boy the old story , I suppose-fool of the family sent to sea ? " I "Oh , no , sir " piped the boy . "that's all al'tered since your day. " - Purple I Cow. % Recipe for Cntnrrh. The only logical treatment for ca- tarrh is through the blood. A pre- scription , which has recently proved wonderfully effective in hospital work i Is the following. It is easily : mixed. I "One ounce compound syrup of Sarsaparilla ; one ounce Torls com pound ; half pint first-class whiskey. " These to be mixed by shaking well in a bottle , and used in tablespoon doses before each meal and at bed- time. " The ingredients can be gotten from any well stocked druggist , or he will get them from his wholesale house. It Is too much to expect a romantlo girl to express a soulful yearning ovftr a red-hot cook stove In summer. THANKSGIVING DAY. Canada' I > ny of Thanks a. Month Enrlier than In , the Unlt d States. For some reason , better known to the Canadians themselves than to the people on this side of the line , our Canadian cousins celebrated their Thanksgiving a month or more ear lier than we do. It may be that the Canadian turkey had become impa- tient , and sounded a note of warning , or it may be that the "frost on the punkin" declared itself. But whai- ever the reason , their Thanksgiving day is past. It may have been that the reasons for giving ! thanks so much ear- Her than we do were pushing them- selves so hard and so fast that th ' Canadians were ashamed to postpone the event. They t have had reasons , and good ones , too , for giving thanks. Their great broad areas of prairie Ian1 have yielded in abundance and here , by the way , it is not uninteresting to the friends of the million of Americans who have made their home in Canada during the . ast few years to know that they have participated most generous ly in the "cutting of the melon. " Prob ably the western portion of Canada comprising the provinces of : Manitoba Saskatchewan and Alberta , have the greatest reason of any of the provinces to express in the most enthusiastic manner their gratitude. The resulto . in the line of production give mple : : reason for devout thanksgiving to Providence. This year has surpassed _ all others In so far as the total in- crease in the country's wealth is con cerned. There is no question that Providence was especially generous. The weather conditions were perfect , and during the ripening and harvest- ing period , there was nothing to In terfere. And now it was well it was so , for with a demand for labor that could not be supplied , there was the greatest danger , but with suitable weather the garnering of the grain has been successfully accomplished. There have been low general averages but these are accounted for by the fact that farmers wer indifferent relying altogether upon what a good soil would do. There will be no more low averages , though , for this year has : shown what good , careful farming will ! do. It will produce 130 million bush- els of wheat from seven million acres , and it will produce a splendid lot of oats yielding : anywhere from 50 to 100 bushels per acre. This on land that has cost but from $10 to $15 per acre- many farmers have realized sufficient from this year's crop to pay the entire cost of their farms. The Toronto Globe says : "The whole population of the West rejoices in the bounty of Providence , and sends out a message of gratitude and appreciation of the favors which have be.n bestowed on the country. The cheerfulness which has abound- ed with industry during the past six months has not obliterated the concep- tion of the source fro.m which the blessings have flown , and the good feel ing is combined with a spirit of thank- fulness for the privilege of living in so fruitful a land. The misfortunes . . of the past are practically forgotten. because there is great cause to contem plate with satisfaction the comforts of the present. Thanksgiving should be a season of unusual enthusiasm. " _ _ _ S. C. N. U. - No. 48-1909. - 5- - V Mont Powerful Scaroullrht. The world's most powerful search light Is now part of tho equipment of the Connecticut of the United I States navy. The great mirror is five feet in diameter and was made for the govern ment in Germany. The searchlight will throw such a powerful beam of light that it will be able to detect a submarine or torpedo boat at a dis tance of ten .miles. Dr. Plerce's" Pleasant Pellets regu late and invigorate stomach liver and bowela. Sugar-coated tiny granules , easy to take. Do not gripe. A Clln er. " liggins used to say he admired 8 clinging woman. Did he marry one ? " "Yes. She hangs on to every cent of his salary-Exchange. ! FOK DEEP-SEATED COLDS and couehs , Allen's Lung Balsam curob wlu-u all oihor remedies fall. This old reliable medlcluo lias : bora sold for orerM { ) years. 25c. 50c $1.00 bottles. All dealers. The white man has his burden. but what would you call that of the colored man In Ohio who has a wife nineteen children and eleven dogs to support on 16 a week ? Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething softens the gums re- duces inflammation. allays pain , cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. . Romance of the Future. "Do you see that cloud ? It was be- hind one just like that I first kissed I . you. : " - Town and Country. I PERRY DAVIS' PAINKIfXElt should be taken without delay when sore chest and tick- line throat warn you that an annoying cold tUrea ( s > . At all drujgUta In CSc. Sic and Me bottles. Artistic Vociferation. "You will miss your son John when he goes back to school. " . "Yes , " answered Farmer Corntossel. "I don't know how I'm going to get , , along. He has got all the critters on the placo so used to his college yell ' that I don't s'pose anyone else kin drive 'em. " - Washington Star. About the worst combination In a man is stupidity and stubbornness. - - - 1 VITALIZER . . -fl , - ' " " < \ O""l , 1zi' : , ' " . . . ' .f , . . . . RESTORES LOST POWERS. A weak man Is like a clock run down. MUNY.ON VITALIZER will wind ulm up and mak him go. If you are nerTous If you are Irritable If you lack confidence In yonr- oclf. If you do not feel your full m&aly : vigor begin ( on this remedy at once. There are 75 VITALIZER tablets In ( one bottle ; every cablet Is full of vital power. Don't spend another dollar on quack doctors or spurious remedies or flll your ayatem wlta harmful drugs. Begin ou ' AIUNYONS VITALIZER at oncis , and you will bPgrl to feel the vitalizing effort of thta remedy after the first dose. Price. $ l. post-paid. MTunyon. 53rd and Jefferson , Phlla , Pa . Keeping cheer- . ful is an easy matter , with the bowels open. Millions carry candy Cascarets. At the first sign of bowel clog- ging , they take one tablet. They end the trouble in an hour. Tho many dull days are avoided. V Vet.pocket box. 10 cents-at drosr-storss. People now u&e a million boxes : monthly. M | . -i - - - - - - - _ - " - Dr. MclNTOSH colotura tf 1 . ' Natural Uterine Supporic * % I:1vellmml'dlate relief. Hold brllJJ t I I I glcal Instrument dealers and . = ' I II druggists l In United Htati And = t 'V , - ' - M' . Catalog. price lint and partlaOu 'ti . on application. THE HASTINGS & MclNTOSH TBO5S CO . 113 , WaUitSt. PHILADELPHIA. , / manofacturors of tnw , e * and tola makers ot the G nulno ittu2Ded Xcfntoeti" Supporter. , - - - - - - -.f - - - - - _ _ - - - - Silence I . . % :1 - : . ' . : ; . . - 1 _ The instinct of modesty natural to every woman Is often a _ great hindrance to the cure of womanly diseases. Women shrink from the personal questions of the local physician - _ _ _ which seem indelicate. The thought of examination is ab _ _ _ _ _ _ _ horrent to them , and so they endure in silence a condition of disease which surely progresses from bad to worse. It has been Dr. Pie fee's privilege to care a great many women who have found a refuge for modesty ia his offer ot FREE consalta : . ilon by letter. 2111 correspondence ia held as sacredly confidential. ZLddress Dr. R. V. : : ; Pierce , Buffalo , N. Y . . < : . - ' . . . . : ' _ _ _ _ Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription restores and regulates f : . the womanly functions , abolishes pain and builds up and : puts the finishing touch of health on every weak woman . who gives it a fair trial. - . : It Makes Weak Women Strong , Sick Women Well _ You can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute - for this non-alcoholic medicine OF KNOWN : COMPOSITION. . - . V -S When Cold Winds Blow When cold winds blow , biting frost - - Is in the air and back-draughts down ( the chimney deaden the fires , then the . : ) - PERFECTION - . Oil Heater ( Equipped with Smokeless Device ) shows its sure heating power by , . steadily supplying just the heat that ' 5. is needed for comfort. aZL The Perfection Oil Heater is unaffected by weather conditions. It never fails. No ' ' smoke-no smell-just a genial , satisfying : . "heat. Th e new Yg V newAutomatic t Automatic V .o Smokeless Device . ' prevents the wick being turned too high. V Removed in an instant. Solid brass font holds 4 quarts of oil - sufficient to give out a glowing beat for 9 hours - solid brass wick carriers-damper top-cool handle-oil indicator. ! Heater beautifully finished in nickel or Japan in a variety of styles. Every Dealer Everywhere. If Not At Yours Write for Descriptive Circular to the Nearest Agency of the STANDARD ' OIL COMPANY ( Incorporated ) W , w : m 1 I $ ; $ / J M JJll . :6.a. ; - ' ' _ t ; - - : 'p : :1e"t _ _ : . _ _ j < : ' . . - . ; : _ t : : " " " . . . : , _ : - : " " ' ; ; - : - 't. ! ' - . ' " . - . _ - _ _ _ _ - _ _ " ' 4 , -I . 'V _ . V VI , ' 0 . : % c . - - . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ' _ _ - --5 -----5- - - 5'5 S THE LARGEST MANUFACTURER OF , . . VS - V MEN'S FINE _ _ SHOES _ _ _ IN _ THE _ WORLD j 1 Wear W. L. Douglas comfortable , 'V ; S. easy-walking shoes. They are .4- . ( made upon honor , of the bast leath - I ers , by the most skilled workmen , & I ---4 -ath t ' _ % In all the latest fashions. Shoes In 1Itt1V& ; - w - ovary style and shape to suit men 'i& In all walks of life. : If ! could take you Into my largo p factories at Brockton , Mass. , and show you howcarefullyw.L..Dou- - ' las shoes are made , you would . , ' c- then understand why they hold : ' . their shape , fit batter , wear longer . - 4 and are of greater vaiue than any other make. CAUTION" . - See that W. L. Douglas _ _ _ _ _ . . name and tho retail price Is ssamped on . - . - .5 tho bottom. Take No Substitute. , . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - : - - I - V THE OIL THAT PENETRATES tga , I - - - - - I PUTr.yAM FADELESS DY1tS ; - Color nor ? goods briobfer and tasiercolers ban ( any other die. One lOcpachaae colors ail fibers nC1 dye In cold water better than aav other dye. : Icaczn : : In aiy aermcsl / wiibooi ( rippia ? opart. Write Ur tree boaJJ ; ! - ilow 20 ! Dye , Hhach : and Mix Celon. ! MOjV.'R"OE ' D'RVG ; CO. . Quincy ilfinolt , I - _ - . . . .J. V J V ' " V V -5 t . S