Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 22, Petersburg, Pike County, 12 October 1894 — Page 7
& ===== OUR FASHION LETTER. ■lata on the All Important Question of Dvoaa—Rare Combination* |n SUk and Wool—Birds All ths Rage for Hat aad Bonnet Decoration. [Special New York Correspondence. 1 Every importing house and dry woods establishment in this city is
now filled with busy hurrying throngs of women, all apparently in the brightest and best of moods, and for the ( simple reason £ that they are wholly absorbed in deciding that most important question: 4 'Wherewithal shall ye be * (clothed?” Certainly the fair shoppers are busy with a confusion of
'bewildering temptancos whs autumn season, for wherever the eye may turn, there 4s found richness, novelty and rare elegance. Jhat enough of tbs picturesque element is added to the newly-opened textiles and garnitures to make them increasingly attractive. The materials which enter very largely into the composition <of the new handsome toilets and costumes of the •season consist, in a great degree, of Tare combinations in silk and wool, in mixtures of brocade or moire an<$ •corded silk, or exquisite light-weight v - __; wools to be made up with satin or velvet, plain or fancy in style. A great variety of fabrics in black are brought out in silk, satin, wool and fancy mixtures. Some of these are in brocaded effects, while others are plaid«d, Checked or striped.
This season very stylish separate coats are made, that are not designed *to match.the gown in color, still there Is a certain harmony between it and ♦he costume, which it is to complete, not eclipse. Dark green, dark blue and black can be worn almost indiscriminately with any gown. The most fashionable skirt of the aeason is in three pieces-- one part composing the front and sides, and in the back are .two gored breadths with a seam down the oenter. The bell skirt and the seven-gored model also remain in popular favor, though the first named style is a novelty. Some of the new tailor gov?ns show a slightly draped overdress slashed open at one aider to show a velvet underskirt, or a 'panel to give the idea of such foundation. The 'overdress is arranged to ahow the velvet, but not prominently. The other<extreme is the stately and enveloping Trench ared ingotes, which
not a lew aesigners and 'tailors think ■are the most distinguished ■looking street garments that arema^e. Real dreadnaught* for utility wear in rough weather have a decidedly English air. They are finished with ail the smart ac1 oesaories of the i modern long ^ cloak, the silk raklined shoulder ■r capes included.
■ — They hare a faint peaty odor and a basket weave, and they wear as only English tweed and cheviot can be made to. Dark' hoed green, dark Neapolitan bine (an exquisite shade), tan, olive, brown, and a number of very dark, fruit shades that impart a flow of crimson—all these colors in covert, Venetian and ladies' cloth are used in the making of various natty coats in Duchess of York, princess and double-breasted English walking jacket styles, and capes likewise, in shapes innumerable. Fancy . waists of every description are In the height of fashion, and many women for this season have made one or two blafck satin, silk or striped moire and faille skirts of stylish cut and hang, and by the aid of some of these smart bodices they vary their appearance most charmingly at •mall expense; for fane y silks, designed for these waists, are sold at from sixty-five to seventy-nine cents a yard, twenty-two inches wide and of excellent quality and most beautiful pal terra and colorings. Kan Dunham. Memma'i Boy. Minister—Ah, Tommy, is that yont) I trust you are always a good boy, Tommy. Tommy—Yeth, thlr. “That’s right. I am sure you are always kind to yonr good mother.” “Yeth, thir. I was helping her yesterday.” r , “Very glad to hear it. Tommy. What did you do for hur yesterday?” “I helped her with the washing, thir. She said she couldn’t get on with the washing if we didn’t take our dinner an hour sooner, and I took it as soon as shs had it re&dy.”—J’itts* tenth Dianatoh. & ^
USEFUL AND SUGGESTIVE. —Some cooks add to the water in which rice is to be boiled the juice of a lemon. It is said to whiten, lighten, and separate the grains. —Cranberry Jelly .—Three Quarts oi cranberries, tvro pounds of sugar, one quart of water. Cook till well done, then put through a fine sieve. Ke.urn the juice to the stove, let boil ten minutes, and pour into jelly glasses.— Housekeeper. —Green Corn Griddle Cakes.—One pint of grated corn, two egg*, two tablespoonfuls of cream or milk, one tablespoonful of melted butter, salt to taste and one tablespoon ful flour. Beat the eggs well, add the corn, salt, butter, milk and flour, and fry on a hot griddle'.—Boston,Budget —A Good Chip of Chocolate.—Let the milk come to a boil. For every twc cups mix a heaping teaspoonful of grated chocolate with enough cold milk to form a paste. Pour this into the milk which has come to a boil. Let it boil three minutes. Serve with whip* ped cream.—Pittsburgh Chronicle. —Black Betty.—Three cupfuls of bread crumbs, three cupfuls of chopped apples, three cupfuls of sugar, a quar-ter-pound of raisins, a little citron and three or four eggs. Cook the bread crumbs in the milk for a few minutes then add the other ingredients. Bake and serve with sauce.—Good Housekeeping. —At house standing on an incline i* likely to be better drained than one standing upon the summit of a hill, or on a level below a hill. Endeavor to It obtain a position where the direct sunlight falls upon the house, and .give preference to a house, the openings oi which are sheltered from the north and east winds. —Baked Tomatoes.— Select large specimens, cut around the stem end. remove part of the inside; make a stuffing of any kind of cold, cooked meat chopped fine, bread crumbs, green corn, minced onion, a well-beaten egg, butter, salt, and pepper; fill the tomatoes with this dressing, put a piece oi butter on top of eaeh and bake in a. quick oven for forty-five minutes.—
American Farmer. —Plum Jelly.—Put the plums (large blue ones are best) into a preserving kettle, with just water enough to keep them from settling to the bottom oi the kettle. Heat them slowly, and simmer until the plums can be easily mashed, then turn them into a cheesecloth jelly-bag and let them drip until the pulp is dry, then squeeze lightly. Boil the juice for twenty minutes, skimming often. Remove it from the tire and measure it, and to each pint allow one and one-quarter pounds of gaanulated sugar. Stir the juice and sugar until the sugar is all dissolved, then put it over a steady fire and boil it for twenty minutes, or until it jellies. Pour it into tumblers or cups and let it stand two days, then cover with double tissue paper, and put in a cool, dt*y place.—Ohio Farmer. WRAPS FOR THE FALL. Capes Seem to Have Almost Entirely Superseded Coats. The fall wrap is the cape. It is pot the cape that fashion has known in the past, with yokes and shoulder ruffles and lace and ribbon. It is a severe, tailor-made cape of very imposing appearance. It disdains yokes and other supports. It scorns trimming. The only gayety it allows itself is a lining of the most frivolous description. The capes are long enough to hang well below the waist. They are made of heavy tweeds and camel’s-hair stuffs, and in them, as in dress goods, rough fabrics are preferred. Still, there are capes of smooth cloth. These are usually of the fawns, tans and grays which have been popular so long in coats. The capes of rough goods range from tan to seal-brown in color and are frequently made of checked and of mixed materials. They are all in one piece and fasten all the way down the front, so that the unfortunate who wears them has difficulty in using her hands. They are finished about the edges with rows of machine-stitching.
It is in their linings and the linings of the hoods which are part of them *that the capes display their gorgeous* ness. There is absolutely nothing too •brilliant to be used. Heavy silks are {popular. Stripes and plaids are in favor. ’ The fastenings of the capes are ■sometimes on an underlap and do not show at all. Sometimes they are enormous buttons of bone or pearl, and sometimes the wearer seems to be chained in by a heavy steel or brass chain which crosses the front of the cape in a oaupleof places.—N.Y. World. The Best Way to Get Rid of Dust. What an intensely aggravating manner the little particles of dust have ol insinuating themselves the thickest in those cornere and crevices hardest to get at, where the knuckles are bruised and the temper ruffled in the attempt to get at them, that is if an old-fash-iqned cloth or feather duster is used. The latest and best thing to use is a duster made of the best soft and fleecy sheepskin, pointed at the end to get into_ the smallest corners, taking up the 'dust into itself (not scattering it all about the room), and. being so soft it can’t scratch the most highly-pol-ished surfaces. Just the thing for dusting wood mantels, pianos, polished stairs, your best furniture and picture frames, carved and polished woodwork and moldings. It is good-by to dust and the old-fashioned duster after one trial of this most effective and novel duster.—Dcmorest’s Magazine. Keeping It In the Family. Kones—What have you Raised that young bookkeeper’s salary for? Don’t you know that the young spendthrift squanders all his salary giving presents to some girl he’s infatuated with? Bones—Of oonrse, I do. The girl'# my daughter.—Tid-Bits. Temporary Respite. Mrs. Me Swat—That new girl in the kitchen breaks an awful lot of china. She worries me nearly to death. Mr. McSwat—I don’t mind it so maeh. When she’s breaking china she isn’t singing “Sweet Maris.”—Chicago Tribune '.J'f .Y ; ■ ' ■■ ; V ■ v'-y'~
HOW STOUT GOT STOUT. The Remarkable Experience of o Rheumatic Sufferer. * All Bat Paralysed—Lott Hit Fleth and Expected to Die —How He Hot Well and Strong. [From the Mt. Sterling (111.) Republican.] Few men are held in higher esteem by their fellow-townspeople than James W. Stout, of Riply, 111., and it is due, no doubt, partly to this popularity that the record of the case has created such widespread interest While his experience is not without an equal, yet it has been sufficiently remarkaide to demand the attention of thousands of people in Illinois, among whom are numbered some of the most eminent physicians. In January, 18W3, Mr. Stout teas stricken with what was then believed to be sciatic rheumatism, and in a short time was barely able to hobble around on crutches, and it seemed to his friends that his days were numbered. To-day he is a strong, heartylooking man for 100 puonds How this wonderful change was brought about is most interesting as told to a representative of the Republican by Mr. Stout himself: “I was afflicted with sciatic rheumatism and lumbago in January, 1093. The sciatic nerve on tne right side became affected in the hip, running down to the aukle and across the small of the back to the left side, and soon my whole system became afflicted, causing me the most excruciating pain. In a very short time l become totally unable to attend to any business whatever, and the disease rapidly growing worse I had to take to ray bed, where 1 lay suffering almost continuously for mouths the most agonizing torture, scarcely being able to move or be moved. At one time I lay for six weeks flat on my back, the slightest movement causing me such pain as almost to throw me into
convulsions, l cannot Degin to express to you the intense pain I suffered. I was drawn, by the sevoreness of tho malady, over to the left side; lost my appetite, had no desire for food, and what little I did eat I could not digest, the digestive organs failing to perform thoir duty, adding greatly to my already precarious condition. For weeks at a time I was unable to eat or sleep, suffering all the time most intensely and at times fearing I would lose my reason; and would have welcomed death to relieve me of my sufferings. “I consulted with local physicians and some of the most eminent specialists of the larger cities throughout the country, some treating me for one thing and some for another, but without effect, and I received no elief whatever. One physician told me 1 had double curvature of the spine and would eventually becomo paralysed. I spent hundreds of dollars in the short time I was afflicted without receiving the least benefit. My friends all thought that there was no hope for me whatever and said that I must die, and I, myself, had almost given up. in despair, when, in September, 1898, about eight months after I was first afflicted, my attention was called to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Palo People. "Without much hope, I at once sent to C. F. Rickey & Co., Druggists, Mt. Sterling, 111., and procured some of the pills aud immediately began taking them. Before long I became aware of a great change for the better in my almost hopeless condition. My appetite came back and my digestive organs performed their usual functions properly. I took some more and grew rapidly better—could sit up in a chair and my body began to straighten out; continued the treatment aud in a short time was able to be about on crutches. My recovery from that time on was very rapid and assured. My right leg, which before I commenced this treatment, was numb and dead, now experienced a pricking, tingling sensation. I was enabled to throw away my crutches and walk upright once more among my fellows, a better man physically than ever before. When first taken by the disease I weighed 160 pouuds, was reduced to 115; I now weigh 166, u*ore that I ever weighed at any time in my life. Yes, sir, I lay my recovery entirely to Pink Pills.” Dr. Williams’Pink Pills for Pale People are an unfailing specifio for such diseases as locomotor abutia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, palpation of the heart, pale and Ballow complexions and all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box, or six boxes for £3,50—(tiiov are never sold in bulk or by the loo,) bv addressing Dr. Williams’ Modi* ;»><* riv, K«'Kr.nrw'»a(Jy jj. Y.
Another Bright Star. Prison Missionary—I hope that you will not go back to your old ways when your term expires. Burglar Bill—No need to. My pic* tur’ has been printed in all th’ papers, an’ I’m famous. “Alas! You are not famous. You arc notorious.” “It’s all the same, financially speakin’. I'll go on the stage.”—N. Y. Weekly. _ Fastidious. Customer (examining samples ot false teeth)—Will you kindly retire from the room while I am looking these over? Dentist— VVhy do you object to my being present? Customer—You know it Isn’t etiquette to bo sjjten picking one’s teeth in the presence of others.—Boston News. _ From a Professional Standpoint. Young Mother (whose baby has been weighed by tho butcher)—And how much does the little fellow weigh, Mr. Bullwinkle? Butcher—Twenty pounds, mum. Young Mother—Isn’t he a splendid specimen? Butcher (dubiously)—Well, from my p’ints of view, mum, he runs too much to suet.—Tit-Bits. The Reason for the Silence. “Is it true, as Squilters says, that there’s always a breathless silence in the room when he makes a speech?” “Yes—after he gets warmed up to it. You see there’s bound to be a little noise at first, when all the people are getting out of the room.”—Chicago Record. Prepared for the Worst. “Now,” said tho physician who is noted for his heavy charges, “I must take your temperature.” “All right,” responded the patient in a tone of utter resignation. “You’ve got about everything else I own. There’s no reason why you shouldn’t take that, too.”—Washington Star. The March of Progress. Stranger—I hear that the long ..feud between the Willinghams and the Clayridges has at last been amicably settled forever. Native—Yes, sah! What was the use In keeping it up when both families, sah, bought complete outfits of bulletproof clothins?—Pud*
AGRICULTURAL HINTS. SHOCKING FIELD CORN. ‘ Why a SerrUwabto Cora Horae la a Prott. able Investment. The superiority of the shocks built with the assistance of the corn horse over those set around standing- corn I have repeatedly tested by building the two kinds in the same field; andean* other advantage of the former method is that it leaves no uncut corn to din* tract the men at husking time. There is with many farmers a firmly-rooted belief that corn shocks must be made small to secure ventilation and drying for the corn. It is true that corn will dry quicker in a small shock if the weather is good, inasmuch as the corn is nearly all on the outside. But in September and October there are apt to be some heavy rains, and with these the small shocks are beaten through and through, the fodder is ruined and the corn is greatly damaged. On the other hand the shocks, if large and compactly built, mat their leaves together on the outside, and, while per
▲ SERVICEABLE CORN HORSE. mitting free ventilation through the center, form a” waterproof exterior as perfect as thatch. When it is remembered that the fodder from a crop of corn is equal in value to the average hay crop from the same area of land, its perfect preservation is a matter of serious consequence. 1 have preserved sowed corn in this way, and drew it from the field every day to feed stock. The last of it, drawn in February, was in a perfect state of preservation. At the usual time of cutting, the corn, though glazed and beginning to harden, has not yet received the full amount of nourishment that the stalk is elaborating for its benefit. With exposure to the weather, the alternate wetting and parching completely stops this nourishing of the ear from the stalk, with the result that when the corn is cured, the kernels lack the well-rounded outline and glistening exterior that perfect flint corn should have, and present instead a more or less shrunken appearance. For many years I have practiced making the shocks much larger than formerly where the crop is heavy,, cutting eight rows at a time and putting a square of sixty-four hills in a shock. Where the corn is not as heavy 1 put sometimes as many as one hundred or more hills in a shock. These, secured with corn ties, defy the autumn storms, and the corn always oomes out bright and sound. For the main piece of the corn horse I use a sapling twelve or fourteen feet long, from the woods, which I peel and dry to make it light and easy to handle. The legs are strips of board three and a half feet long nailed on, and where they join the main piece, as shown at a in the sketch, 1 have nailed on some light strips in such a way as to form a little cage or box in which the corn ties are carried, each one with its string snugly wound on its block. By this means they are always at hand where they are most convenient. A hole one inch in diameter is made for the crosspiece (b).—Charles E. Penton, in American Agriculturist FACTS FOR FARMERS.
Great as is the cattle industry, the ralue of poultry and eggs p roduced in the United States annually is but litr tie less. Purslaine (pursley) is hard to kill, and has millions of seeds. It grows very rapidly, and can only be eradicated by constant warfare on it. When the farmer is compelled to pay high prices for the food* brou ght on the farm for his dairy cows he should aim to produce high priced articles to sell. Until country storekeepers grade the butter they buy and pay just what they can afford to for each separate lot, oleomargarine will find a place.— American Farmer. When chickens are sent to market they should be sorted about as carefully as you would fruit. Have only one size in a coop, and it is better if they are one color also. A uniform lot, of any product, brings the- best price. Farmers lose more by the use of inferior tools than may be supposed. An hour’s delay each day amounts to a long length of time during a month. Scrub stock does not inflict greater damage than the use of scrub implements. The white snowberry is an exceedingly pretty shrub in late fall. Large, marble-like, white berries are displayed, which last a long while, and which are' much prettier than the small, white flowers which always precede them. Hay should be a paying crop on rich land. With a yield of two tons per acre it is one of the most profitable crops that can be grown, and leaves a [ large proportion of roots in the soil to enrich it If hay is selling rft $20 per ton, the value of the sod on the land, for turning under, may safely be estimated at $8 more. Milk as an K*| Producer. Hens should have all the milk they can readily eat; no kind of food is better adapted to egg production. Some milk mixed with bran will not fatten them; but if given freely, the vessel in which it is fed wUl need frequent cleansing to prevent them becoming offensive. With milk to drink fowls on a range will do well enough on one meal a day, as this will encourage activity and picking up what they can. This feed should be given very early in the morning and should steamed clover hay, with a little corn and oat chop and bran mixed with it, and a a little salt added to make it more palatable. A bird will have a ravenous appetite, and they can eat all of this food they want without injury.—California Cackler.
7 Do You Wish the Finest Bread and Cake? ■ . ' It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest and strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweetest; most delicious food. \ The strongest baking powder makes the lightest foodL That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most digestible and* wholesome food. Why should not every housekeeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food1, with the least trouble ? Dr. Haines, of Rush Medical College, Consulting Chemist of the Chicago Board of Health, says: “Royal is not only the purest, but the strongest baking powder with which I am acquainted.”
Dil Emt>eb—“Years ago the doctors used to bleed their patients tor about even thing they had.” Van Pelt—“The practice doesn’t change much, does it?’’—Truth. Applicant—“Do you need a cook!” Mistress—“Yes. If I did not 1 wouldn't keep one.”—Truth. Gone Out of Business. A most important branch of business in the human mechanism is that transacted by the kidneys. If your kidneys have gone out of business, look out! Soon they will become diseased, unless they resume the payment of their debt tonature. UseHostetter’s Stomach Bitters at the start and all will be well.. Employ it, too. for malarial and dyspeptic troubles, constipation, liver complaint and feebleness
frii. MAKKETS. Nk\t York, Oc% i, 1 CATTLE—Native Steers.$ 4 25 © COTT >N—Middling. CM'S FLOUR—Winter wheat. 2 85 © WHEAT-No. 3 Red. . CORN—50.2 ..'. 5«K© ! ATS—No. 2.. 32*© PORK-NewMess. 14 75 © 1 ; , ST. LOUIS COTTON—Middling.. © BREVES—Shinping Steers... 5 60 © Medium. 4 45 © HOGS—Fair to Select.. 4 75 © SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 8 25 a FLOUR—Patents. 2 40 a Funov to Extra do.. 8 00 a WHEAT—No.2 Red Winter... 49*4® CORN—No. 2 Mixed. © OATS—No. 2. a RYE-No, 2... 47 © TOBACXXO-Lugs. 4 00 a 1 Leaf Burley. 8 00 @ 1 HAY-ClearTimothy.. 8=0 ai BUrilER—Choice Dairy_ 18 © EGGS—Fresh. © PORK—Standard Mess (new).. 13 50 © 1 BACON—Clear Rib. © LARD—Prime Steam.. .... © CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipping .. 4 50 a HOGS—Fair to Choice .. 4 90 a SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 2 50 © FLOUR-Winter Patents. .... 2 50 © Spring Patents.. S 10 © WHEAT—No.2 Spring. 53'-© No. 3 Red. 51X© CORN—No. 2.. © OATS—No. 2. © PORK—Mess (new) .. 12 75 © 1 1 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 3 50 © HOGS—All Grades.... 4 80 © WHEAT—No.2 Red. © OATS—No. 2... 29)4© CORN—No. 2. © NEW ORLEANS FLOUR-High Grade. 2 80 CORN-No. 2...... OATS—\Vestern.. 36) HAY-Choice. 15 00 PORK—New Mess...... BACON—Sides..... COTTON—Middling. LOUISVILLE WHEAT-No.2 Red ... ... 51)4© CORN—No 2 Mixed. OATS—No.2 Mixed (New).... PORK—New Mess.. BACON-Clear Rib. COTTON—Middling.
—Maid servants in New York ufr jfoverped in their choice as to mistresses by the region in which the latter live. The best servants refuse to consider offers from persons living oatside certain fashionable or setHi-fiah* ionable places. Some will not go to the east side below Fourteenth street* and many disdain Harlem as they do the country unless the offer come# from a rich family with many servanta*
BUDS, Society buds, young women just entering the doors of society or woman(hood, require the wisest care. X» be beautiful and. charming they must have perfect, health, with all it | implies — a clear f skin, rosy cheeks, L bright eyes ana S>good spirits. At this period the young woman in especially sens!* tive, and many nervons troubles, which continne through life, have their origin at thin
tune, it mere Depain, headache, backache, and nervous disturbances, or the general health not good, the judicious use of medicine should be employed. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best restorative tonic and nervine at this time. The best bodily conditio* results from its use. It’s a remedy specially indicated for those delicate weaknesses and derangements that afflict womenkind at one period or another. You'll find that the woman who has faithfully used the “Prescription” is the picture <a health, she looks •veil and she feels well. In catairhal inflammation, in chronic displacements common to women, where there are symptoms of backache, dizziness or fainting, bearing down sensations, disordered stomach, moodiness, fatigne, etc., the trouble is surely dispelled and the sufferer brought back to health and good, pints.
“WOMAN’S ILLS.” Mrs. W. r. Bates, of Diltvortk, Trumbull Co., c Ohio, writes: < “ A few years ago I < took Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, which has been a great benefit to me. I am in excellent health now. I hope that every woman, who is troubled with * women's ills,* will try the ‘Prescription ’ and be benefited Ml have been.”
Hits. Bates.
S ST. JACOBS OIL PAMS And all tb« Would Knows tho CUI^H Is THE POT INSCILTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED 5 SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. « SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHENL.
FOR DURABH^tboN^M^ND FOR GENERAL BLACKING IS UNEQUALLED. Has An annual Sale of aooo tons. ALSO MANUFACTURE THE :ORANAptER DINNER SHINE ,ORTO TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH 1AKES NO DUST. IN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXES. ri£ ONLY PERFECT PASTE. M Morse Bros.Prop's. CantolMass.
Rev. John Reid, Jr., of Great Falls, Mon., recommended Ely's Cream Balm tom. I oan emphasize his statement, “It is a positive cure for catarrh if used as directed. ” — Rev. Fronde W. Poole, Pastor Centred Pres. Church, Helena, Mon.
IS
ELY’S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanse* the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Bores, Protects the Membrane from colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm lsqulckly absorbed and gives relief at once. ▲ particle Is applied Intoeach nostril and lsagzee* able. Price S)c9nts at Druggists or by mall. MLiT BBOTHERS, fid Warren Street, New York. AGENTS WANTEDSSf’SSS-j&Sf Experience unnecessary. Either sex. Information free. AUflKUB SOTSLtV CO.. »»Imlxq, UP IOKk. CWHU1U sbs r>ramv«asienia
W. L. Douglas $3 SHOE IS THK BEST. NO SOUEAKIMb.
#5. CORDOVAN* FRENCH* ENAMELLED CALF. $ 3.59 POLICE,3 Sole*. «»«WB EXTRA FINE. *2.*L7-£ Boys'SckobiShsesl •LADIESW SEND FOR CATALOGUE 3Sr w - l.* Doy cla3» ” BROCKTON, MA33L
You eu lave money by wear In* the W. L. Douglas *3.00 Shoe. Bfecauae, wo are tho largest manufacturera of this grade of shoes In the world, and guarantee their ▼alue by stamptug the name and price cat the bottom, which protect you against high prleea eas* the middleman s profits. Our shoes equal (She work In style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold everywhere at lower prtemfbr the value given than any other make. Take meh stituvc. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can. A. N. K,. B. 1521. wmx witiTiso to AoTKRTiaeBa mu* state that yen saw the Advertise awat to «hto>
