1
5
MRS, EMMA FtiEISSJTEB
Suffered Over Two Yean Health Was
s Trecariom Condition Canted
by Petvio Catarrft.
ill mwmsM i m-mMkm
1 ?': j :-y-
?H;'A
- HEALTH. -.AHa. STFIEIIOTH
RESTORED BY
PE-B1M..V
' Mrs. Emma Fle'issner, 1412 Sixth Avenue,
Seattle, Wash.., Worthy Treasurer Sons of
Temperance, writes: - ""
"1 suffered, over two years with ir
regular and painful' periods. My
hea lth was in a very preca rious con
dition, and 1 was anxious to find
something to restore my health and
strength.
"I was very' glad to try Peruna and de
lighted to find "that it .was doing me good.
I continued to use it a little over three
months and found my troubles removed.
"I consider it a splendid medicine
and shall never be without it. taking
4i dose occasionally when lfeel run
down and tired." ,'
Our flies contain thousands of testimonials
which Dr. Hartman has received from grate
ful, happy women who have been restored
to health by his remedy, Peruna.
GUARAN
TEED
BY A
$5,000
BANK DEPOSIT
R.R. Fare Paid. Notes Taken
500 FREE COURSES
m.:s-sprLzLf Beard at Cost. Writ Qukai
SEORGIA-ALASAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon. Ga.
will find it) Mozley's Lkmon
,'lJrxra,'.'the- vi&a. laxative, a
pTeasaht :. wd ," thoron gWy re
liable" remedy,- without the
least danger 0r possible harm
to : tliem' .lu any condition
'exViar'tO.'jthemselves . v
I r'leaaaj in taste,. Mn'ild in
ajbio'iii-atid thorougli in rtsults.
,v;.Tst 3-rfbr .35 years."
joe. and $i.oo per bottle at
''ill Drug Stores. -
!,. -MOZLEY'S
LEMON ELIXIR
"One Dose Convinces. "
BACK OF TEE 'ATKINS SAW
Two centuries of patient and
conscientious effort to produce the
best taws in tne woria.
Ten eer.erations of blood and brains.
'! iThu-iariest plant 5n the-world exclusively
devoted to aw-makine. employinz many
,L i hiMidred s of high-class, high-priced craftsmen
' -. ! isd equipped with oostly special machinery.
VI A woria-wicie easiness acrecratins many
mlions of dollars every yeiir.-
A reputation duui up inrouRii iwo centuries
of steady growth, valued more highly than
siny other asset of this great institution.
The guaranty of this Company, which is
respected the world over. 1 -
We make all types and sizes of saws, but
only one grade the best.
r Atkins Saws. Corn Knives, Perfection Kloof
Scrapers, etc.. are sold by all good hardware
dealers. Catalogue on request.
E. C. ATKINS CQ. CO., Inc.
Largest Saw Manufacturer! in' the World.
I Factory ir.6 Executive Otficet, Indianapolis, Indiana-
iKA.'Hi': New KOra, cnicao, juinnoapoua,
i'ortlond, (Oreurom, Seattle, Baa Francisco,
Memphif, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada).
Accept no Subrtitute Ia! on the Atkini Brand
SOLD
BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWrET
Ik Genuine TOWER'5
HAS BEEN ADVERTISED
AND SOLD FOR A
QUARTER OF A QNIUa
LIKE ALL
fSiWATKKOOF
CLOTHING.
It is made of the beat
materials, in black or .yellow,
fully $u&ranteed. and said by
reliable dealers ererwhere.
SirCR TO THE
SIGN 0? THE FISH
TOWt-1? CVfAOIAM CO.lMtt A. J. TOWER CO.
CURED
Removes all swelling in 8toao
days ; effects a permanent cure
in joto 5o days. Trialtreatment
given free. Not hingcan faire
?yfuAr SMclalltt.' Bo O Atlanta. S
So. 43.
urupsygs
rt mM
Ttl 6US Htttl All ELSE fflltST SSI
f Jj Beet Couh byrup. 1 estoa iooU. La C'
Need For Good High ways. ) .
JUOJ. HE good roads- question
flPl continues to attract v'ide
O o spread public ' - Interest,
A judging from the exten-
tfG3PT sive discussion of the sub
ject in the public press. The proposi
tion of Federal support in this respect
seems to be gaining strength in the
country at large, and the good roads
propositions as presented to recent
Congresses are being earnestly exam
ined by many interested citizens, as
the demand upon the Capitol document
rooms at Washington attests. These
bills seek to enlist the financial sup
port of the Federal Government in the
improvement of the wagou roads of
the country, the plan being for Uncle
Sam to supply a sum equal to the sum
any State will supply up to tlie maxi
mum provided for.
Congressman Urownlow, in explain
ing the provisions of his bill, said that
Federal co-operation in the premises
was but just in order to fairly distrib
ute the burden of taxation necessary
to improve the public highways.' lie
jnakes .this telling point:
''So long as we pursue the original
method of taxation the entire burden
oncost for highway improvement falls
upon the owners of agricultural lands
and the persons living in the rural dis
tricts.. When the great mass of the
people lived in the rural districts this
was a.' just and equitable distribution
ff taxes for such purposes, but with
the changed conditions of the present,
day, when one-half of the people live
in cities, and much more than one-half
of the wealth is concentrated in these
cities and in the corporations that are
so powerful at the present time, it is
absolutely necessary that some means
should be devised whereby the reven
ues requisite for the great improve
ment that Is called for shou!d be de
rived from all of the people and re
sources of the country as nearly as pos
sible, and not rest, as heretofore, upon
the farming classes, who are the imme
diate losers by every failure of crops
and suffer by every decline in price of
agricultural products."
Another important consideration is
that, in the last analysis, the cities and
towns benefit from good roads just as
much as do the people living along
them. It is to the interests the mer
chant as well as of the farmer to have
an improved system of roads in every
part of the country.
The, devopment. of the rural , free
delivery system has-served to bring
the -.people of th country into closer
touch w'lth not'; only the towns, but
vith the- Federal. Government, :'than
ever before..' The Governmeht,'-peak--ing
and acting for the country ailarge,
has, therefore, sc direct interest in the
:?Velfare of tlle people Jiving in the rural
Sections'; and. he benefits to be-derived
from good, roads 'would be shared not
"merely .by-those-living upon them, but
by all the people. Atlanta Constitu
tion The Movement's Progress
That the good roads movement ds
popular arid has come to stay is evi
denced by the attention now given to
good roads engineering in our educa
tional institutions. The Rhode Island
College of Agriculture and Mechanic
Arts has recently issued a circular con
cerning its, course of Highway Engi
neering, which circular can be had
from the president. by addressing him
at Kingston, It. I; This 'medium is to
call " the attention of any young men
who are thinking of doing engineering
work to the advantages of including
education along good roads lines. This
last addition is badly needed and will
be of immense value in the Southern
States of the Union where 'less atten
tion, .perhaps, has bee.n given to this
than in those further north. That it
seriously concerns us all is evident
without any argument, and the action
of President Butteriield, of the Rhode
Island College of Agriculture, is to be
highly commended.
In addition to this we learn that in
the Iowa State College at Ames, Iowa,
the Iowa highway commission has es
tablished a road school in which every
piece of the work, including class work,
work, field work, modern road machin
ery, cement in highway improvements,
etc., is taught. Tlans are being made
to build model sections of earth, gra
vel .and macadam roads, and practical
men have been engaged for the schools,
and it is thought that the results will
be very flattering.
Certainly the Iowa people deserve
great credit for their enterprise in this
direction.
Of Special Value.
In Southern Louisiana the good roads
movement is of special value from the
fact that our great crops of cane and,
rk-3 weigh more in proportion to the
area of land on which they are grown
than do the crops of any others of the
States of the Union. Thousands of
acres of sugar can? have been lost in
Louisiana during rainy harvesting sea
sons from the practical impassability
of our roads, awl while no good" roads
movement can change our climate, we
can unquestionably change some of the
effects of our climate by reiterating the
importance of. road drainage and other
physical ameliorations, as well as sug
gest the financial and politico-economic
methods for road improvementLou
isiana Planter.
Admiral Togo, when in Englana, In
the 70's, was commented on by a
critic, who said: "Mr. Togo quite an
noys hiwself with his politeness."
The November "Little Folks."
..9.1
" ,"Tho November ' number of '. Little
Folks;" sprightly ' nnd intensely in
teresting magazine for children, pub,
lishedat Salem, MassV-by S.'E. Cas
iino is" an-especially valuable one
The stones, poems, pictures, etc., are
highly valuable - in .this Thanksgiv
in number, and all the little folks
will be, delighted with it. Among
such an array ot good things as this
number presents it is hard to desig
nate which ' features are the jtnost at
tractive. .The entire contents ought
to be. accessible to every child in the
land.
Stumbled Into Rich Mine
Nannie Brown, eighteen years bid, a
negro servant, while searching for a
stray cow near the Homestake mine
half a mile east of Butte, stumbled in
to a gopher hole out of which had been
thrown several small particles of
quartz in which gold glittered. - The
1 girl carried the SDarkline rock hnm
and assays in Butte show that the rock
carries .more than $1,000 in gold to the
ton. The girl led her employers to the
gopher hole and the whole country
was staked off, tbe' locaters being
"Con" Conklin, S. W. Brown, "Al"
Stevens and Miss Brown, each taking
an equal share. Two shafts have been
sunk thirty feet, revealing two large
gold leads in which the free gold can
be easily seen. About, $6,00 worth of
rock' is. in sight and excitement runs
high over the discovery.
t
Threw Rock Too Far.
As John Jones of Goshfn, Vt, at
tempted to remove a rock from his
yard with dynamite recently, the rock
was thrown to the roof of a cow stable
near' by, crushing through the roof to
the floor and nearly killing some
calres which were in the stable.
A STRONC STATEMENT
JSy Col. J. M. Guffey, Democratic Nation,
al Committeeman ot Pennsylvania.
Col. J. M. Guffey, of Pittsburg, Dem
ocratic leader of Pennsylvania, and
one of the greatest
producers in the
world of oil, coal
and gold,. writes:
Gentlemen: It is a
pleasure ,to endorse
Doan'e Kidney Pills.
Having found them
of great value I have
always been glad to
recommehS them to
my friends. They
are excellent.
(SignedJ J. M. GUFFEY.
Doan's Kidney Pills, a specific for
backa'cbje, bladder troubles and all kid
ney disorders, are sold by all dealers.
Fifty cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Buffalo. N. Y.'
True Warning of Death.
A remarkable case of a dream warn
ing was that of Mr. Henry. Gay, of
Abertillery, Monmouthshire," Eng., who
on Feb. 19, 1901, had a vivid dream, in
which he declared he was standing
with a "radiant presence" in a shining
cornfield. His companion gathered
four ripe ears of corn and handed
them to him with the 'worlds, "These
are all for thee." Mr. Gay "immediate
ly told Rev. D. Collier, of Abertillery,
of his strange dream, and said he was
convinced that he had four more years
to live, a conviction which no argu
ment could shake. Exactly, four later,
on Feb. 10, 1905, Mr. Gay died.
Linking of Coincidences.
Fire broke out on the roof of J. E.
Vouns's blacksmith shop at Enosburgh
Falls, Vt., on July 25. Exactly three
years previous to a day a. fire broke
out on the same roof in the same" spot
and, stranger yet, the same customer,
Edward Brady, was having hs horse
shod at the time.
Revolutionary Cannon Ball. ,
While digging a ditch in the south
east part of the town of Bennington
Vt., recently a workman dug up a six
pound cannon ball that had been three
feet under ground and badly, rusted. II
was on the direct road taken by th
Berkshire couhty troops that came to
participate in the battle of Bennington,
and on the lot where they camped tlw
nisht before reaching Stark's army.
THE SECRET OF YOUTH v
De Soto looked for the secret of
youth in a 'spring of gushing, life-giving
waters, which he was sure he
would find in the New World. Alchem.
ists and sages (thousands of them),
have spent their lives in quest for it,
but it is only found by, those happy
people who can digest and assimilate
the right food which keeps the phys
ical body perfect that peace and com
fort are the sure results, ...
A remarkable man of 94 says: "For
many long years I suffered more or less
with chronic costiveness. and painfull
Indigestion. This condition made life
a great burden to me, as yeu may well
Imagine. - .
"Two years ago I began to use
Grape-Nuts as food, and am' thankful
that I did. It has been' a blessing to
me in every way. I first noticed that
It bod restored my digestion. This wa
a great gain, but was nothing to com
pare in importance with the fact that
in a' short time my bowels were re
stored to free and normal action.
"The cure seemed to be complete; for
two years I have had none' of the' old
trouble. I use the Grape-Nuts food
every morning for breakfast and fre
quently eat nothing else.. The use has
made me comfortable and- happy, and
although I will be 91 years old next
fall. I have become strofag and supple
again, erect in figure and can walk
with anybody and enjoy it." Name
given by Po3tum Co., Battle Creek,
Mich. "There's a reason."
Read the little book,."Tfl9 Road to-'
Wellville," in every pkg.
STOPS B?LCHIVn BY ABSORPTION
-NO DR(JGS-A NEW METHOD-
. ' ' u . . .
A Y.ax of Wafer Fvee Have Tou - Acute
Indication, Stouutort Trouble, Ir-4'
regular rJaatt, XHizy Spells 'is
Short BreatJi. Gas on '
the Stomach ,..'
Bitter Tast :Bad Broath Impaired Ap
petite A teluig of fullnew, weight and
paiu over the stomach and heart, some
time nans? nnd vomiting, also fever and
sick headache?
What cause 'it? Anv one or a-ll'tif :these:
Excessive sating and drinkinir abuse of
(spirits anxiety and depression mental ef
fortmental worry and physical fatigt.;
bad air ineuflicient food sedentary habits
absence of teeth tbHing ofifoodAf.
If -ont' suffer frftm this slovir deatjiciyJ
miserable exitfcnprVlet s send vou a iain
nle bos of Mull'a Anti-Belch Wa'fers abso
lutely free. No drugs. Drugs injure the
stomach. . : ' ' v ;s'
It stops belchinjr and cures a diseased
stomach by absorbing the foul odors .frrfm
undigested food and by imparting activity
to tlie lining of the stomach, enabling it
to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric
juices, which promotes digestion and curea
the disease. .
Special Offer. The regular Drice of
Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers is fiCc. a box. Init'
to introduce it to thousands of sufferers
we will -end two (2) boses npon receipt of
75c. and this advertisement, or we will
send you a sample free for this coupon.
Tins Offer Mat Not Appear Agaix.
102S5
FREE COUPON
12S
Send this cotipon with your name
and -address and nama of a druggist
who doo not sell it for a free sample
box of Muli'a Anti-Belch Wafers to
Mull's Grape Tontc Co.. S2S Third
Ave., Rock Island, HI.
Give Full Address and'Write- Plainly.
Sold by all drug&ists, 50c. per box, or
sent y mail. ,
The Interstate Commerce Commis-;
sion resumed tne investigation into
private refrigerator car lines.
Taylor's Cherokee Remedv of Sweet Gum
and Mullen is Nature's great remedy Cures
Coughs, Colda, Croup and Consumption,
and all throat and line troubles. At druc-
ists, 25c., 60o. and fllOO fer bottle.
-Sir Henry Irving, i'tho -foremost
English actor, died suddenly at Brad
ford, England, aged 67 years. ..
BABY'S AWFUL ECZEMA
Face Like Raw Beef Thought She Would
Lose Her Ear Healed Without a
Blemish Mother Thanks Cut U-ura. " "
'.'My littlqicl. had eczema very bad when'
she -was ten months old. 1-tlrougbt she.
would lose her rijjht ear. It had turned-'
black, and her lace. was like a-piece of-raw
meat, and very sore. It would bleed when
I washed her, and 1 had to fce'ep cloths oh
it day and.nijrht. There was not'a c!ar
spot on her face when 1 began Using Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment, and now it is
completely healed, without, scar or blem
ish, which is more than 1 had hoped for.
(Signed) Mrs. Rose Ether,. '201 Eckford
St., Brooklyn, N. Y." - 1
The Pekin robio is becoming naturalized
in tle parks af London. -
How's This?
Vt'Ofter.Oa Hundred Dallars Revjanaj;
anyoaaebf Ua'tarr'a thac Jiiunot be cured bf
. -.r. J..,C.hekey& Co., Toledo; 0,r
ve, the undersigned, bave known Y,JL
then? VtrtM last aiMbeheveffifm'
perlecvljflioiiorable- mall busiuessttrajisac
tions and llnancially able to carry ou aay,
obligations bladehy tiieir ilrtn'.' ' ' -'
West & T&vxx, Whoiesala Druggists. To
ledo, O, .
Wilding, aixxa .t - Mabvix, Vhole3aiu
Druggists, Toledo, O. s
Hall's Oacarru c'ureis taiiea iutornally, a it- .
Ingdirectly upon tne blood aud mucoussur
lacesof taa system. Testimonials sent free.
I'rice.Toe. per bottle. Sold oy all Druggist.
Take Hall's i'amily Pills for constipation.
'. .v.-'--i --i -v-- V
Peacock leathers arc said to bring ill
luck.
VTTSn rm'ilneritlvcurey. No fits offifcrvous
ness after first day? lise.of Dr.-Jxline's, Great .
Nerveltestorer, atrial bottleantl treatise rree
Dr.R. if . Kline, Ltd.; 981 Arch St., Phila.'.rrf
rj . .).., ,
A bee, unladen, will fly forty miles an
hour.
Mrs! Wins ow's Soothing Syrup for Children
tething,ofteo3thaiirn,roaucosipa.a.rrjniar
tion.allavs r.iin,cures wind coHe.25c. a bottle
-The biggest . cannon
weighed 2000 pour.de.
ball - everV-ntie
Piso's Guraoauttotha'too hlghlysj'XJkaa V
tt
i cough cure. 'J. NV. O'JJbiejt, 522'JChlra
mue, X.. Minneapolis! "Minn., Jan. 6.190J,
Avent
The Russian
five letters.
alphabet contains thirty-
A small boy's idea of greatness is to
be able to lick another boy a size
larger. So. 43.
H. FT. Green's Sons, or Atlanta, Ga., are.
the only successful Dropsy Specialists.intha
world. See their liberal offer in advertise
ment in another column of this taper. .
Petition Six Miles Long.
Six . miles is the length of. a petition,
promoted by the Brtish national ca
nine defense league in support, of the
bill for the" prohibition .of the'-vivisec.
tion of dogs.
"Oar "SIMPLE SELFNSf RifCf .
win triiu ctowat riu t. iMnlitilia
C C tVMw. U mjurn. M. II C - tt
Illlllllll fa t ' MM M'bii.tliHl
mm m. Mm ifcnh -tilt tU .
Wifa far trfifal in Imit 4 n ' ,
ar?aiu. wkty oav orrw.
Fiujr Music CpMTAtiy.
CHARLOTTE. ' : '
.Shorthand and BookkeeDlng.
lUilUlLui lii x tnoroiigri Dusineas course,-
I K ii wr . f -. . . ... . - - -
Kailrottd accounting, ourgraduates cover the
South ; positions guaranteed : catalogue free.
AMERICAN TKLKGRAPH" AND1. COM
MKKCIAL COLLEGE, Mllledgeville, Ga.
NTED
Address of (1J persons OT
part I uitiau blond flhp are
notlivinif w'th aiiy Trile,
itt)Pnn.'wo -wers draltea in Jwprarsv, j
RV bf luotlierB of -soldiers whrliir'.b$iS.fl
dnnifd iienilon oa nocc.niit of their re-
murriae, (4) of men who served in thsFed
erl srruy. or (5) the nevest Vlu .of such
Wolir osailors, Sow vfcx-MtV. 1 ft- '
NATHAN BICKFOHP. Atteraey,
Wajthinstea, 1. C.
Ill
Both Husband and
Prostration and Made'
A nervous, irritable mother, often on
the verge of hysterics, is unfit' to' care
for children ;'it ruins a child'dieproi-
tion and reacts., upon herselfi -"The'
.trouble between cliildren and their
mothers too often is due to the fact
that the mrrther has some female woak-
ess, and sheds entirely unfit to'.bWW"-'
the strain upon her .nerves thatgovevn
ihg. children involvt; it ia. impossible
for her to-do, anything calmly.
ij-.The ills of wpmen act like a firebrand
'upon .the nerves, consequently nine-
tenths of the nervous prostration, ner
vous despondencj'. "the blues," sleep
lessness," ithd nervous irritability of
women arise from some, derangemtnt
of the fenia'le organism.' j
Do j'ou experience fits of depression
Trith restlcssncKs, alternating with
xtreme irritability? Are your spirits
easfly affected, so that one miuutp you
la-ugh, and. the next minute you feel'
like orvinir ? .
; Do you feel something lik"e a-ball ris-
tng m jTour throat "ami threatenino; to
Choke you :- all the Kensea 'perverted,
morbidly sensitive o light and sound ;
pain in thp M oyariei, an especially
between the shoulders ; bearing down,
pains; nervous dyspepsia, and' almost
continually-cross and snappy?
If so, .your jaerves are m a shattered.
condition, "and y'ou are threatened with
ne.rvous prostration.
. Proof is monumental that nothing in
the. world isbettfer for nervous prostra-
tion than .Lydia 'E. "Pinkham's Vege
table Compound ; thousands and .th.ou
Bands, of women testify to this fact.
Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Ad vice-A WsmaH Efcst I'adcrst&BsJs .a Woman's Ills.
. Is the
PRICE,
fT0 (2JRE. THE GRIP
in uiii. uni wi r-
m ensnntEm Is
Tti tin cnum enX.,-U.. 1 1 lJ
-, --(7-pa
sick heaoach:
CONSTIPATION.
Promptly and Pennanontly Cured with
: A eeBtury'sf experience with suocessf-uV'
resalts 4s the hesj tes'timonia.1. Sold' by all
drugfgists '; .. '' "" i ' -
Crab Ordiard ater.vCD.j;..
v ';'.', Loiijrs viLLE, ky
FOR WOMEN M
ible-d with ills peculiar tol' '"
trou'
uwa Bw, uowu no uvaviuv wai'tiivuaij atv-
C2sslal; Thoroughly cleaoses, killA4iseasegerffL3.
Etops dischiiTees' heals inflaiaifiatioii and local
their sex
irHo4 at. a trtaifKa a tns rvahnelff
,poree.SJ, cures leucorrhcea. and naeal catarrh.
raKime 13 in ppwacr iorm 10 uc uiasuitcu en sure
UW anl ' 'ar rnr cleansing, healing, cermicnil
autl economical than liquid antiseptics for all
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
, I ..por saic sit druggists, t-cmo a uu.
TrUr Bo5k and t3ook of Instructions Pree.
Thc B. Paxtn Company boton. Masw.
E.
Crab" '; j
'.Oirc'haird.':.
So. 43.. -. if'i....f :.
1 0 J-MilMSSa!'
ers
If
CShildren - r - 'How -kousanda
Strong -anci-'WeU.
Mrs Chester -Cu-M'lreader of tha
Ladies- -Symp-lieBy tiSdbestra,.4D Sara
togaSt:, EastJitostrttt.uJtlAss., writes: ;
Dear itla . Pmtkaia Jki
" For eight JVfrliJrP'0& with ex
treme nervousnsaift n'y!!ro?fa, brought, on by
irregularities.' TVouRl neitbpr enjey life nor
lrrnayia, norvom
"Lvdia E. PinkhfttWiretable Compound
.was vcuinendeitn)r,o.i to be the only
romwdy: .that clpMMie, I have daily
'ini'provea in hcfirtflrfinxir T'iam now strong -anil
weir, Knd lt(er'!icsd has disap
peared. ? i ...:- ijJC,-.
Mrs. -Charles F liriiijT(n Vice-President
.of' ,the Mpiicr.! Qub, 21 Cedar
JrerrnceT Hot 'SpriiiSiV'Ark., writes :
TWliTr: finlAtoa
v' I cbaggedHfU$li niiaoears of miserable
existence, worn out jJVi, yp.m and nervous
ness, until it seewed'aa fhoiigh I should fly, -
I then noticed a st-sil?rhnt of a woman trwfc
bled as I was, nd the wondful results sh
derived Jfroih-Lydia- KlH'inkham's Vegetable
.Compound, I decided to try it. ; I did so, and
atrthe'erifl of thr fnortffti I was a different
-vvciman: My-neroiftipessa3 allgone, I was
no longer irritable, and iiy. husband fell ia
lo-v,e with, mo kI oysr agftn."
. . Women should, r era jpinbor that Lydia
E. Pinklim,'3 -.y peJtffple Compound is
1-hjiinediclno.th.a hoias the record for
thj? greatest number tfactual cures of
female ills, and; 'jiake. no.substitute.
; .: - Erje Adyicp to Women.1
. . Mrsk Piulih'apaa, ;Lynn, -Mass., invites
allsick wompitgsj'.ritber foradvice.
Mrs..Pinkhajn s &afcjflxperience with
female troubles enables her to tell
you "just" wH'al is best for you, and
she. will charge rou nothing1 1 for her
advice.., , ' '-..'."''V.-.-
Besl Remedy -on ; Earth.
is
IVl UUl
; Very Penetrating. - Kills Pain.
t)R.'.RL ."SlIOAft; 61 ALBANY STE?E?Tr, BOsTTGH, MASS.
. .s . IS GUARANTEED TO CURE
GRIP, bad cold.: IHeadacre'ahd neuhaloia.
I woii'teil Antl-Orlptne- to a dealer who won't Ganrantox It,
Call for yoVrMOXJEX,AC?v IF IT pOESJi'T CURB.
F. IF. itienier, Jl.i.t Manufacturer,' Springfield, Sis.
CAK.fS." Six rUfltif.iT.fol
. Cuiiwj--lsliuitl'I03ha Cii-dOt..
VENIR POST
ored si-wies for 2io,
Couer Inland, N.X,
3 -5? a 3 'S SHOES a
VV. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Lln
- cannot be equalled at any price.
Biistabllshed
July 6,1876.
W.L.Bnism Afi uiMifrs Minn in r fl
MORE MFfU'S .? an xunrsa tua m
ANY OTIlEft MANUFACTURER.
1 fi'fi fiTl REWARO to any one who can
I UjUUU di33rovt this ctatemsnt
, W. L. r)ourla $3.50 shoes have by their ex
cellent styfe, easy fitting, and superior wear in or
qualities, aahlevird the largest sale of any $3.50
shoe In the world. They are Just as good as
those that ccst you $5.00 to $7.00 the only
difference Is the price. If I could take you into
rnjr factory- at Brockton, Mass., the largest la
the world under one roof making men's fine
shoes, and .aliow you the care w ith which every
pair of Douglas shoes l. made, you would realise
why W. L. Deuelas $3.50 shoes are the best
snow prooiicqj m the world.
If 1 could sliow you the ditference between the
shoes maite -irvmy factory and those of other
rpakes, you .would understand why Douglas
JJV90 tlidts-cost more to make, why they hold
tije4rtshapy fit. better, wear longer, and are ot
greatar Intrrnvlc value than any other $3.50
shoe on the market to-day. .
W. L. Doughs Sirnng Hmtlo Shoes tor
Man. 45??.43if, $2.QO. Buys' School A
Dress Shooa.93.lia, 92, $1.76,91.60
CAUTIOtf.- Insist npon having W.L. Doug
las shoos. Take no substitnte. Nona genuine
without his name and pries stamped on bottom.
WANTED, A shoe dealer In every town where
W. L. Douglus Shoes are not sold. Full line of
samples sou free for inspection upon request.
Fast Color Eyelets used; they mill not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles,
W.L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mas.
KL.r'8MuCLAS
SHOES '-J-r(
I ALU K-
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