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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1908)
. I J! eculiar to nseir jprop0'110" . .liAfl. W"01" "... br which their remoami H",pT. .ndproBorted, iW,w:.! "...ii.efulnc.i nnd economy, wld.it rW of !. CmoitKOotfor the money, Sft'icordo,c,,rM,";ii Li's Sarsaparilia to Amuse Baby Owing to tho grout amount of decom. posed vcKotnMo matter contained In Ilmzlllnn wnloi-H, which cuuhcm rnpld deterioration of thin ntccl, tho hull of tho now tlliipntch lxnt Ounniibarn, built for tho Hrnzlllttn Government, In constructed entirely of bronze AKnlnst thin motnl, miy Popular Mechiinlcs, the corrosive notion of tho Hrasilllnn witters linn no effect, imd, nlthoufcli moro cohU ly, both In mtitorlnl unit construction, tho vcnwl In much lighter tlmu If built nf stool or wood. Ti " ... ..jinKio nook" .,, ..... : - .r.rr' nmui' IIV" ear. rz, r ' iot." . , wt h 4a rM5.Cinrot Horax Co.. Oak- INrOHMATION IICOAROINO WNTED TTflrm oi i" !'! i . mm 6 WN E K only who will t?nVTY or Business f .. . . .....i., .Wit kx-dtlon. rUrZrrr Give prim, clmcrlp S'JS'.UU wh.n PC-.U.OH can U RkWiIv, N. Y. Tho brownlHh mints which ntim-iir In iU book nro renlly duo t( tho ravancfl of bacteria. unyn INttilnr Mechanic. Tho liny destroyer la eMjeclaIly fond of Htarchy nmtorlal and Uh proimKiitlon la promoted by dninp. It ban been well undcratood that damp produced dlscol orallon nnd decay, but the Mbare of the microbe In tho oiierntloii haa not hith erto been dUHpected. Tiny futiKUH or mold 1m rejonMlblo for ray and black marka upon old papera. In spotting tho wurfaco the fungus helps to break down tho fabric nnd baHten tho process of lt destruction. It. Lydekk.er, tho Kugllsli naturalist, calls nttontlon to tho obnervat!oiiH of It. I. I'ocork on tho significance of tho npots on lion culm as Indicating tho ,l- vlelarlau Mnsltab. n, EsiU&d which Hiwko tho Inn fllrendr dying In tnt SLiIitlM Mor all thin. r.M .f the country. The lts nno i ' I 1 ..iM.Uf ntfl.n nln.lM..Ul.l.. ..M . .. nj Of DllUre pinjeu m li -.uu i nuiiuiiniii( (i OUH, tlROM Bnil h It the Urea of the ium of tlx leopard On lion culm tho pattern of !t thin turj uo lo ony. iair mo innrKings ih intermediate In chnr Lt for lnitnc, In ttx way lu actor botween the atrlnes of tho tluer tyd birds iixl animals wero wpoknn nnd the roaettei of tho leopnrd, but In- UJ tti Btfaei UTen mcui. i uotc ciinos more townrd tho former. Kaitt null enct er twice heard old people African lions retain moro or less dis til eonntry 'I1" 01 ino ncn " traces of theo early niarklnKi DunPirtlet" One U familiar wun even when they reach maturity. A din- ipirue from hooka, or course u is tinct tljcer-llko feature of tho lion cub r'i "Pertolett" but once or . n wlilto patch over the eye, whldi , m child I actually ncsruji. i dlsappean In the adult IMima cubs ahow a pnttoni qulto unllko thut of tlio Mon, tlfc'er, leojiard nnd Jnjjuar. At the recent meeting of the Ameri can AHsoclatlou for tho Advancement loooUrolcl dueait of Science. In Chlcnco. attention wan i It would be Impossible to heal iujwbtr rndon Outlook. $100 Reword, $100. JtKitiBtthUiiperwlH bo plrel t il.iiuereii uru S'fflV.urrf,0 CH,U'"cM.trh called to tho lnterestlnB fact that tho siiliUeentpoltlTe curennw known tottit UUIriltrnllf. I ilrrn iu uf n cnuiiiiii' iiKImii. tfaulrm conill(iillonl lent- si HHiiClrthCu(oUikoii Inlernnllr jiwecuj u"x;n inr uhmxi inu muroui ur kilihimua, tlierrb iltiorlr thoo in- An ol ih dlxnc. nil rlvlnif I e Dt enl bnith br tulldlnic upllio roruMtU'fbn end taiMi nitnflnuoliiic lu work. The pro- kittiAtnurh (il)i!nlli urttlvnpow titt It (4i U to cuu. tloud for Hit ol xoili'x UltmT 1 CIIE.VKY & CO., Toledo, O. UMi llldrtifrlm.TV. lUiBill'iFinlir l'llli (or conitlpatlaa. Tlioi tlror Prlrixta. Ku-Tlis li Jacle'i latrnt picture. a'ljoi think he looki bttter In profile lU t front ticw? fu-Mnch better, drar. It doein't r l!i fetid ipot. la Itli Rlmn(. lOrurj Orlm You look as If you'd i:i(M to tit lo d iwlm aonifthow. lTi!Jd Koutt Vep; I'm a Kuat Ward Ktir nw, Chlraro Tribune. work on tho Panama Canal Is chaiiKlnj; MoloKlcnl condltloiiH in ranama, nud that It completion will cnnblo thd frwih-wnter fnuiui) of tho Atlantic nut! Pacific slopes to IntermlnKlc. Undoubt edly muny marlno animals will pntm from ono ocean to the other. Thus a jicrmnnent change of conditions will be brotiKht about, which may or may nut possess much practical ltc(ortnnce, but Its sclenthlc Intercut Is very Rreat In view of these facta, the AfBoclntlon re- fMilvel to urtce upon Coiirivbi the necen slty of an Immediate biological survey of the Panama Canal zone. The report thnt the Gulf Stream now runs with crenter njiced than formerly, and Its Influence on the time rcnjulred for tho cronMlng of tlio Atlantic, fur nishes tho theme for tin article by Dr. Iirennecke In tho Uerman maKiizlue, Umsbau. Dr. Hrennecke analyzes tho 'climatic nnd geographical reaKons for the existence and continuance of tho Gulf Btream, nud joints out how the chniiKe lu tho wind currents and the life nud (Kiwcr of the famous current. Tills Is chiefly dependent, he jwlntH out. on the location and areas of high and low pressure over the sea. A series of carefully mado reports over a long period of time by tho German Marine Observatorlum seems to Indicate that the Golf Stream now moves more rap Idly thau formerly. fhe General Demand to Well-informed of tho World has l-'hslty of tho atmosphere nil affect tho Ji been for a almolo. nleasnnr. 14 efficient liquid laxative rotnody of Vn uiue; a laxatlvo which phyal- Ul Mul(1 sanction for family uho m Iti component parts aro to them to bo wholesome and r" "neflclal la effect. arenntnlilA tUijntcm and centlo, yot prompt, I icUoa. f "PPlTlns that demand with lta pt combination of Syrup of p a uixlr of Senna, tho Call- " Syrup Co. proceeds nlons -cu lines and relies on ,.. .i.rf ! luaUvo for Its remarkable. l one of many ronson hv TP of FlEs and Elixir of Rnn i. r the preference) bv th wii. leraed. Tomiiioi n... - . l - ui'iiuucmi ctieciB r1'1 bur tho Pn..i , California KIB Syrup Co.. r' Wa for mio i... n .. im.t. ... " u" 'oauuiB ..-hi. rriPA nfi - ... . ... ...ij v.cuia por DO mo. r'i r , ,.ou"r man- !?" Mn, " Uleveland or the Children 0 Ellcro. .L. vm IlieKR f1oif k'Zm Mow Ib It with Ch ldren ? Are th .m.. Saelcfltr? n WsTo Dnoiforcct 'ovitm.v:; ia. I0U id . ,,,c u,ooa Pure x and buiiriB n ? aI,h ,n cvcrV way. oed 0 fcinSf.y?" 10W1L uiurara of VI HAIR VKJ08. Tf CMPJttY NnrABi. ' ' - . wmwi A Itaplil Cnunlcr, It Is not every ono who proves the In erfectualncHS of lnsomiiln cures at 7 years of iiko; that Is why a youiiKHtcr'a experience, as tho Louisville Courier Journal records It, seeniH remnrkablo enough to (juotc. The father of the lad, who was about 7 years old, was a phyilclnn, and when tho child found dllllculty In getting to sleep, was ready with advice. "I'll tell you something that will soon put you to slcop," ho said. "You begin nnd count slowly up to one hundred, nnd then another hundred, and so on, nnd lwforo you know It you'll be sleep ing. Try It to-night when you go to bed." Everything remained quiet that night until tho father went to retire. As he passed tho boy's bed a llttlo voice piped : , "Papa 1" "Yes, my boy." "Whnt comes after trillions?" Ilut the wakeful youngster's query wna not answered 1 his father had van ished Into his own bedroom. Drowned Alannscrlpt. James Itussell Lowell, tho flrnt edi tor of the Atlantic, was walking across Onmbrldco bridge when his lint blow off and foil Into tho Charles with half a dozen or moro manuscripts with which It was freighted and which ho was returning to tho Hoston ofllco. A boatman recovered the hat, but tho scattered manuscripts porlsbed lu those waves of oblivion. "If they had been accepted articles, It wouldn't have been quite no bad, for," tmld he, "we might wjth some grace nek tho writers for fresh copies. But how cnu you toll a Belf-roflpoctinff contributor that his manuscript hns beon not only rejected, but sent to a wntory grayo?" J. T. Trowbridge In Atlantic Ih 'Me-lodrftMH, Knightly Hero I say, old chap, thnt tatty's glove episode inakcB a groat hit. Admiring Super Yes, sir, you're al ways sure of a hand on that Baltl mon American, DAIRYING IN DENMARK. Land Worked for Hundreds of Years 8(111 Beats Ours. That American farmers and promoters tt agricultural intlustrloa nro rathor lax in grasping their opportnutlcs, onrt aro in dangor of bolng outgonoralod lu tho markets of tho world, unlext thoy Improvo tholr methods, Is tho bollof of Uoan James K. Ituanell, of Columbia University, New York. Dcon Kusscll was rocontly a visitor at tho stato colic-go, and during his stay there art droiriiod an assembly of tho teachers of tho Inland Empire, who wore attending tho teachers' Instituto in Pullman. Itola tivo to the problems juat montloned, ho laid: ' "Thirty years ago Now York was ending butter and cheese to the Lon don markets. New York buttor nnd eheeso wore ruling out similar products from Ontario, and other parts of tho world. JuKt thirty years ago Donmark began to think she could mnko butter and put It in tho London markot. Tho question was, How could sho ovorcomo tho lead that New York alrcndy had in tho London marketst She sont men to London to study out tho ground; to find (Vhat London wanted. Then sho sot about to givo them tho rcquirod product. "Denmark is n country of poor soil, which has been tilled and overworked for a thousand years. Nevertheless, the Danish population nnnunlly sells in the morkets of London $35,000,000 worth of buttor. In 1003 tho cntiro United States exported only $1,004,000 worth of butter. Jn addition to tho vast quan tity of buttor mentioned, Denmark lends out one-fifth as much pork as we do. and just as many horses; and cer tainly, we should lead the world In the breeding of horses. In the meantime tho Danish nation has taught tho lions how to work. Four hundrod snd fifty thousand dollars worth of eggs were ex ported by this country in 1875, and in 1003 this export had reached a value of $8,092,000. In the last ten years Denmark has taken $8,000,000 worth of corn from Iowa and Nebraska, via New York, which she has fed to Danish cows and pigs, and then placed the lattor in the Kuropcan markets in successful competition with similar products from America. "I said a momont ago that twenty years ngo tho competitor of Denmark was the State of New York. In thoso twenty yenrs the Danish people havo increased their exports from $1,000,000 to $40,000,000. In tho tamo twenty years farm values in tho State of New York have decreased $200,000,000, In tho lait fifteen years Ontario has outbid Now York in tho same way in tho rheose mnrket. Twenty years ago Now York companies received Canadian cheese and put the Now York stamp on it to get ono cent moro in tho English mnrket. Today tho New York farmers are sending thoir cheese over the Cana dian boundaries, and paying two cents per pound in order to sell it at all." Showing the superiority of European methods of education in comparison with Arnurlcan education, Dean Kuasoll aid: "Wurtcmburg is a small German stato, a little larger than the Inland Empire of Eastern Washington, and having a population of about two mil lion porsons. Thirty years ago Wur temburg began to roalizo that her pop ulation was beginning to dwindle: tltat something hnd to be done to maintain her integrity as a state. So she set about building up a system of schools for all the people; that would help the boy who wished to be a carpenter, a plumber, or a fanner, in the anmo do greo, according to his needs, as thoy would aniit the youth who desired to bo a lawyer, an ongineor, or a phy sician. Today Wurtemburg has a uni versity giving courses of world-wide fame; technical schools, weaving and manufacturing Kcbools; two hundred and thirty industrial schools in towns and villages; schools for metal worker?, and workers in the textile trades; schools of art, of agriculture, of preparatiou for household management; and numerous farm schools, and high schools through out tho state. " Wurtenihiirjr. n Htn but '"He larger than tho Inland Empire of East ern Washington, support all them' in stitutions, with an income of ten dollars por head of population. What would American citizens think, if in addition to supporting agricultural colleges, they wero asked to support fivo hundrod technical and industrial schools for every two million, of population! This is what is being done in tho small state of Wurtemburg, and from tho point of view of American citlzons today, it is almost inconceivable; the contemplation of which must lead nny American citi zen to infer that his country has much to do and lenrn boforo it can success fully compete with tho old country in tho products of industrial education." Answers to Queries. Or J. L. Aihlock, Wa)ilnston ExperlmanC Sta tion, i-uiunan. Havcrford, Pa. "Is it considered that hog-raising is practioablo in the northwestern part of the United Stat est" H. W. "It is probable that there is no place in the United States where the pricos for pork products average as Wgli as in the Pacifie Northwest. A condition of significance, too, is that tho pooplo of this region aro not sufficiently alive to the necessity of their mooting the demand for pork products. Those who are in tho business are making money. Conditions aro improving, howover, for at tho present time we note a growing tendency among farmers to pay moro attention to this business. The Berk shire breed is proferablo, in my opinion, although the Duroe Jerseys are making some headway. At tho experi ment station we have about concluded that a cross of theso two breeds would bo better than eithor one br Itself." ISventuntlr. Roportcr Do you ever contribute any thing to foreign papers? Comio Bard Why or yes; on look- Imm a trot Hit mltirellanv columns of the pnpors I find that I contribute lota of stuff to the London Tit-Bits. Suns EYerytUtna?. Prosperous Clubman When I first ar rived In this town, forty years ago, I hadn't a shirt to my back, Old Clubman Worso than that; you hadn't a tooth la your bead. fbe deatla Itebair, "Immeasurable -are the rebuffs tha! tho helpers of tho poor, the seekers af ter charity for their suffering brothers undergo," aald a New York charity or ganization official. "A friend of mine, a Methodist mlnlfltcr in a sinnll west ern town, told mo tho other day of his Inst rebuff, a not unkind one. Enter ing the ofllco of the local weekly, the mlnlfltcr aid to tho editor: '"I nm nollcltlng aid for a gentleman of refinement and Intelligence who Is In dlro need of a llttlo ready money, but who I far too proud a man to make bin Bufferings known.' "'Why,' exclnlmed the editor, punn ing up bis cycahade, 'I'm the only chap In the village who anawcrs tbat de scription. What's this gentleman's name?' " 'I regret,' said the minister, 'that I am not at liberty to discloso It' " 'Why, It must bo me, aald the edi tor. ' 'It ! me. It'a me, sure. Heaven proor you, parson. In your good work.' " What Makes tho Heart BentT Prof. Jacques Loeb, the celebrated biologist, Ih his book, "Dynamics of Living Matter," has shown that a atrip cut from the ventricle of the heart put In a solution of chloride of sodium will continue to beat for a number of days, until putrefaction sets In. Ho says this can be done with an ordinary nlusolc after It tins been extirpated from the body. This would tend to prove that tho heart Is a chemical machine and that it Is all due to chemical action. Tho muscular contraction Ih probably duo to the substitution of sodium for calcium salts in the cells of the mus cles. The difficulty of this theory Is that It does not explain the control of the muscles. It Is plain that the problem of control Is not solved by the chemical theory. Mothers wfll find Mrs. Window's Soothing Byruptbs bestremedr to uso for their chUdrja during the teething poriod. Dlncorerlnsr 'Writer. The rejection of a manuscript often left a pang, but the acceptable manu script, especially from an unknown band, brought a glow of Joy which richly compensated mo for all I suf fered from tho others. To feel the touch never felt bofore, to be the first to find the planet unlmnclned lu tho illimitable heaven of art, to be In at the dawa of a new talent, -with the leht that seems to mantle the written page, who would not be an editor for such a privilege? I do not know bow it Is with other editors who are also authors, but I oan truly say for my self that nothing of my own which I thought fresh and true ever gave me moro pleasure than that I got from the like qualities In the work of some bung writer revealing his power. W. D. Howells In Atlantic. CITO et- Vlton' Dance and all Ncrvona Cb-ues li I O prrmnntljr cured br Dr. Kllni'a Ureal risrre JK-storor. Hona for KllEE fStrfa.1 botUs and irewlio. Pr. JL JLJUInc, LO., 851 Arch St., 1'lilUk.l'a. Tb Maatera Title. 1'ror. Key when head master of a large London school was one of the most genial gentlemen that ever filled that position. He was fond of encour J nglng fun In his boys and was not un I willing to recount occasionally during class time when anything prompted It tho manners and customs of countries he had visited. On one occasion be was I telling his class about Spain and said: j "Do you know, boys, that when a man attains to eminence there he is not called 'sir,' but la given the title of 'don?' " Ono of the boys here called out: "Then, I suppose, sir, they would call you Don Key?" Tho gravity of the class was com pletely upset for tho remainder of the afternoon. Strand Matrazlne. Considerate. In a country church one Sabbath, as the eotwegatlon were rising for the first hymn, an old lady entored the church at the name time. She held up her hand, exclaiming: "Keep your seats. Losh, ye needna arise, though I in " t "tuinn Express. MADE FOR SERVICE IN THE ROUGHEST WEATHER AND GUARANTEED ADSOLUTELY AWATRPR00F POMMEL SLICKERS K This trade mark and the word Tower on the buttons dlstln aulsh this hlah arade slicker from (thejitst as good orana H "The OTEL MOORE OPEN ALIj THE YEAB Clatsop Ieagh Seaside. Oregon Dtrectlr on the beach OTerlooklor tho ocean. Hot salt baths ana Pi irf Uniicr snrt bathing. Itccrra ULIrr MUUOt tlon pler Ior ttafalng-. nr Sun parlors. Electrlo Ilrhta. Fire ur place and atraiu htat. t'lna walks flRPfinM" otes. Be a foodi into UrtCUUn i.iT. 11.1.. t.sn ml 5.no per aar. aurriprciai ratri bjr the week. HMDAN.J.UOOUU, rroprletora PNU No. 2108 UEN writing to adrartliars please mention tuia paper. Wha t is Peruna? Is it a Catarrh Remedy, or a Tonic, or is it Both? Some pcoplo call Pemna a great tonic. Others refer to Pernna as a great catarrh romody. Which of these peoplo aro right? Io it more proper to call Pernna a ca tarrh remedy than to call it a tonic? Our roply is, that Peruna is both a tonic and a catarrh remedy. Indeed, there can bo no effectual catarrh remedy that is not also a tonic. In order to thoroughly relieve any case of catarrh, a remedy must not only havo a fapecifio action on tho mucous membranes affected by tho catarrh, bnt it most havo a general tonic action on the nervous system. Catarrh, even in persons who are otherwise strong, is a weakened condi tion of some mucous membrane. There must be something to strengthen the circulation, to givo tone to the arteries, and to raise the vital forces. Perhaps no vegetable remedy in the world has attracted so much attention from medical writers as HYDRASTIS CANADENSIS. The wonderful efficacy of this horb-hao been recognized many years, and i3 growing in its hold upon the medical profession. When joined with CUBEBS and COPAIBA a trio of medical agent3 is formed in Peruna which constitutes a specific rom cdy for catarrh that in tho present state of medical progress cannot bo im proved upon. This action, reinforced by such renowned tonics as COLLIN S0NIA CANADENSIS, COEYDALIS P0EM0SA and CEDEON SEED, ought to mako this compound an ideal remedy for catarrh in all ita stages and locations in tho body. )From a theoretical standpoint, therefore, Peruna is beyond criticism. The uso of Peruna, confirms this opinion. Numberless testimonials from every quarter of the earth furnish ample evidence that this judgment is not over enthusiastic. When practical experience confirms a well-grounded theory the result is a truth that cannot be shaken. Manufactured by Peruna Drug Manufacturing Co., Columbus, Ohio Would AmU No Merer. Mrs. Vick-Senn What do you suppose you would do if you were to meet the fool killer? Her Hushand I'd tell him I was the man he was looking for, all right. I have just firen orders to hare that new addi tion to the house torn down and built acain exactly as you want it. Taklntr So Chance. "Oh, the sorrow of It!" sobbed tho fair. maid. "Last night I refused Mr. Blank and this morning his body was found In the river." "Poor fellow!" murmured ber girl friend. "I suppose he was afraid you might change your mind." RHEUMATISM rzml & is roost painful. What's good? Gives instant relief. Removes the twinges. USE IT, THEN YOU'LL KNOW 25c. ALL DRUGGISTS BOo. WJTSTMi 28 ( Jawsyra Calling nil Attention. Mr. Lineerlone I had a queer adven ture this afternoon Miss de Muir (with a swift glance at the clock) You mean yesterday after noon, I presume. Shop Talk Itarrcd. Friend (at wedding) Where are yoa going to spend your honeymoon, dear? Blushing Bride Sh ! You mustn't let my husband hear you ask that question. Don't you know he's a beekeeper? HEALS OLD SOMES No old sore exists merely because the flesh is diseased at that partic ular spot; if this were true simple cleanliness and local applications would heal them. Whenever a sore or ulcer refuses to heal readily, the blood is at fault ; this vital fluid is filled with impurities and pojsons which are being constantly discharged into the place, feeding it with noxious matter and irritating and inflaming the nerves and tissues so the sore cannot heal. These impurities in the blood may be the remains of some constitutional trouble, the effect of a debilitating spell of sickness, leaving disease germs in the system, or the absorption by the blood of the fermented refuse matter which the bodily channels of waste have failed to remove. Again the cause may be hereditary, the diseased blood of ancestry being handed down to posterity ; but whatever the cause, the fact that the sore will not heal shows the necessity for the very best constitutional treatment. There is nothing that causes more worry and anxiety than an old sore which resists treatment. Every symptom suggests pollution and disease the discharge, the red, angry looking flesh, the pain and in flammation, and the discoloration of surrounding parts, all show that deep down in the blood there are morbid and dangerous forces at work, con stantly creating poisons which may in the end lead to Cancer. Iocal applications are valuable cruly for their cleansing and antiseptic effects; they do not reach the blood, where the real cause is located, and can therefore have no real curative worth. S. S. S. heals old sores by going down to the fountain-head of the trouble I wan t to recommend S. S. S. to any who are in need of a blood purifierand especially as a remedy for sores and obstinate ulcers. In 18T7 I had my leg badly cut on the sharp edge of a barrel, and having oa a blue woolen stocking the place was badly poisoned from the dye. A great sore formed and for years no one knows what I suffered with the place. I tried, it seemed to me, everything I had ever heard of, but I got no relief and I thought I would have to go through life with an angry, discharging sore on my leg. At last I began the use of S. S. S., and it was but a short time until I saw that the place was improving. I continued! it until it removed all the poison from my blood and made a complete and permanent cure of the sore. JHO. ELLIS. 250 Wavy Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. and driving out the poison-producing irerrus and morbid matters which are keeping the ulcer open. It removes every particle of impurity from the cir culation and makes this life-stream pure, fresh and health-sustaining. Then as new, rich blood is carried to the place the .healing begins, all discharge ceases, the inflammation leaves, new tissue and healthy flesh are formed, and soon the sore or ulcer is well. S. S. S. is the greatest of all blood puri fiers and finest of tonics, just what is needed in the treatment, and in addi tion to curing the sore will build up and strengthen every part of the system. Special book on Sores and Ulcers and any medical advice desired furnished free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. tPniCES. FOR EVERY P1 O 4EK.i M "HlvNK-jtfW 111 SHOES AT ALL PRICES. FOR EVERY MEMBER OP THE FAMILY. MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. WOP r. L. KSongtrnm makmm and sellm marm wm9 ntan'mSZ.&U, fa.DO and $3.60 aheam stfur cwMf munutamturmf Hi turn tronu, moqaunm tnajf AeJtf tfimlr cjm mhmrnm, tH better, warn anir. and arm or mrmatmr vmlua than any ether snesa M tha MraWd ta-tlmv. W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edga Shoes Cannot Bo EiualM At Any Pttee n. W, U DrviUi name and price U stamped on bottom. Tnkr Wo Huttltu ho dealer eierywbtr. Saoea maUed trota farterr to any part ot lb world. Ill Mtoanyaddrau.' W. X UorfaiA, Hrockton, .MTOAUXION. rat4 Catalog tree Vuf Jtxctuivih. to HubtltH(. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more good Brtrhter and futsr colon than any other dye. One lOo packs tuia is suuiuHiun v liiuict IIIUUli A1K MBieX. Of Wl WU1 na.BMt tew to dyi bUart4zul mm eeUt f! 1 9 it ' !