The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, December 12, 1906, Image 3
> >
Hull to Have Public Abattoir.
. The Hull Tow n Council, at their
last meeting, decided on the erection
of a public abattoir. It is intended
to proceed as soon as possible with
buildings to accommodate about one
third of the business now carried on
in the town, and gradually to extend
the buildings as required. The establishment
will include meat market
and chill rooms, and the cold
storage of general goods will probably
be provided for. The preliminary
plans are in the hands of the city
engineer.
Weeping Brutes.
Travelers through the Syrian desert
have seen horses weep from
thirst, a mule has been seen to cry
from the pain of an injured foot, and
camels, it is said, shed tears in
streams. A cow sold by its mistress
who had tended it from calfhood
wept pitifully. A young soko ape
used to cry from vexation if Livingstone
didn't nurse it in his arms
when it asked him to. Wounded apes
have died crying, and apes have wept
over their young ones slain by hunters.
A chimpanzee trained to carry
water jugs broke one, and fell a-crying,
which proved sorrow, though it
wouldn't mend the jug. Rats, discovering
their young drowned, have
been moved to tears of grief. A
giraffe which a huntsman's rifle had
Injured began to cry when approached.
Sea lions often weep over
the loss of their young. Gordon Cummings
observed tears trickling down
the face of a dying elephant. And
even an orang-outang when deprived
of its mango was so vexed that it
took to weeping. There is little
doubt, therefore, that animals do cry
from grief or weep from pain or annoyance.?Harper's
Weekly.
"What Shall I Do?"
That is the problem which frequently
confronts everyone ? especially
parents with small children. A
slight illness treated at once often
saves a long period of sickness and
expense?sometimes prevents aeam.
The trouble is that so few people can
think on the instant what treatment
to apply, even if they have the knowledge
necessary to recognize the disease
and know what simple remedies
are best To meet this want at small
' expense the Book Publishing House,
134 Leonard street, New York City,
is sending postpaid a doctor book on
receipt of sixty cents in stamps. The
book is illustrated, contains 698
pages, explains symptoms, causes
and simple means of overcoming ordinary
illnesses. It was written by
the eminent J. Hamilton Ayrea, A.
M., M. D. It is a volume which
should be in every household, as no
one can tell what moment he may require
the knowledge it contains.
A Very Long Stairway.
The Philadelphia City Hall contains
the highest continuous stairway
in the world, and tourists who have
boasted of their muscular ability in
climbing the stone steps of the Buntor
will MnniimGnt. at Charlestown.
the Washington Monument or the
monument to General Brock near
Queenstown, Ontario, will tell their
friends of their feat of ascending the
598 steps which lead from the seventh
floor of the City Hall to the
landing about the feet of William
Penn's statue. It extends from the
seventh to the sixteenth floor and
contains 598 steps of iron, arranged
about a square central shaft, in
which runs an electric elevator. To
reach the tower stairway the climber
may mount 245 granite stairs in the
stairways at the northern end of the
r building, thus making a total climb
> of 743 steps.?Philadelphia Press.
Three Bilingual Legislatures.
. Under its new constitution the
Transvaal is to have a bilingual Legislature.
English or Dutch may be
spoken. The empire has had a couple
of double-tongued Parliaments
for manv years. In Canada an M. P.
can address the House in English or
French, and it was only the other day
that Mr. Bourassa, who is a strong
opponent of Jingoism and vehemently
denounced the Boer war, attacked
Sir Wilfrid Laurier for replying in
English to a speech of his in French.
In New Zealand the Maori or native
members have the right of speaking
in their own language, their speeches
being translated sentence after sentence
by an official interpreter.?
London Chronicle.
Valuable Helpmeet.
Mrs. Krick, wife of a farmer near
Belding, is worth having. Recently
between the hours of 1 and 5 p. m.
of an October day Mrs. Krick picked
up forty-four bushels of potatoes, besides
having to stop and bother with
the baby, which it was necessary to
have in the field with her.?Detroit
News.
COFFEE IMPORTERS
Publish a Book About Coffee.
There has been much discussion as
to coffee and Postum lately, so much
in fact, that some of the coffee importers
and roasters have taken to
type to promote the sale of their
wares and check if possible the rapid
growth of the use of Postum Food
Coffee.
In the coffee importers' book a
chapter is headed "Coffee as a Medicine,"
and advocates its use as such.
Here is an admission of the truth,
most important to all interested.
Every physician knows, and every
thoughtful person should know, that
habitual use of any "medicine" of the
drug-stimulant type of coffee or
wViialrv rmirklv pauses irritation of
the tissues and organs stimulated and
finally sets up disease in the great
majority of cases if persisted in. It
may show in any one of the many organs
of the body and in the great majority
of cases can be directly traced
to coffee in a most unmistakable way
by leaving off the active irritant?
coffee?and using Postum Food
Coffee for a matter of 10 days. If
the result Is relief from nervous trouble,
dyspepsia, bowel complaint,
heart failure, weak eyes, or any other
malady set up by a poisoned nervous
avetom vrm havo vrmr antwur with
Jhe accuracy of a demonstration in
mathematics.
"There's a reason" for Posturo.
New York City.?The shirt waist
that is made in double breasted style
is an exceedingly useful garment. (
Made with the skirt to match it be- j
comes well adapted to street wear
during the between-seasons' time,
while made of linen, heavy cotton or
flannel walsting it makes an admirable
separate waist throughout the *
entire year. This one includes the 1
chemisette that is always so dainty *
&nd is made with bos pleats at the ?
Shoulders that give the fashionable 3
broad effect to the figure. In the il- b
lustration Alice blue French flannel b
Is stitched with belding silk and
Jlosed with handsome buttons, while t
:he chemisette is of linen, but this v
last can always be of the material if o
better liked, although unquestionably s
the washable shield is a distinct ad- o
vantage and allows of renewal as n
jften as may be liked. fi
The waist is made with fronts ana | c
backs. The back is laid in tucks that
give a double box pleated effect, and 1:
the fronts in one box pleat each, a
there being pointed straps applied f
iv??? Tviontcs fnr a nortion t
over iucoc uui ? ^
of their length. A Tuxedo collar p
finishes the neck, and the full sleeves a
where they are finished with roll-over b
cuffs. The shield is separate and 1
closed at the back. s
The quantity of material required a
for the medium size is four and one- i
fourth yards twenty-one, four yards T
twenty-seven, or two and one-fourth s
yards forty-four inches wide, with
one-half yard any width for the
shield if contrasting material is used.
Grapes For Hat Trimmings.
Grapes are much in evidence upon
the new hats, and most luscious color
effects are obtained in them, for they
shade through many of the fashionable
colorings and are particularly
u ? nnrnlo V>111PQ
effective in me ui u? uo, ^ui^.v, ,
grays and greens, Golden yellow,
white and purple grapes are often
combined and flowers or plumes are
frequently used with the fruit.
Linen Taffetas.
Linen taffeta is not only useful in
making cushion tops and draperies
for the country house, but it is useful
to cover old boxes. Glove, jewelry
and hairpin boxes can be easily
made, and are inexpensive and
pretty. The domestic taffeta is
lighter and easier to paste on the
boxes than the more expensive foreign
goods.
Riding Hat Veil. 1
A soft, not too long, veil tied about *
the riding hat carelessly, give a s
pretty touch to one's equestrian cos- ^
tume. t
School Girl's Coat. ^
A long semi-fitting coat in one of
the fashionable Scotch mixtures or ]
I English tweed is a very serviceable t
garment for the school girl. j
" ' ' ' """ >- -.vailrt-?-.;
?v
.
Fashionable Buttons.
Wooden buttons Inset with steel
ire upon some of the imported street
frocks.
Gift For Traveler.
Vogue mentions a "bon voyage"
jift that would be acceptable for
jirthday or any other time. It is a
jlove mending set consisting of silk,
scissors, thimble, etc., on pretty
Dresden ribbon.
Cuff Pins For Shirt Waists.
Cuff pins are promised as a subititute
for links in the new fall manlish
shirt waists. They come in gold,
liver and gun metal, and the smartist
of them are about an inch in
ength.
jropuiur x-fis.mii r ur vums.
Short coats, fitted or loose, and
anciful pelerine like wraps are favortes
with Parisian furriers. Some of
he models are braid trimmed, others
idorned with lace and embroidery,
iut the practical fur coat is still at
ts best when of fine quality and unrimmed.
Fancy Blouse Waist.
Every variation of the blouse waist
neets a demand. This one is equally
harming for the gown and for the
eparate waist, and has the great
uerit of suiting all the fashionable
oft materials perfectly well. As ilustrated
it is made of Oyama crepe
n a pretty shr.de of china blue comlined
with white lace and velvet ribon
a shade darker than the crepe.
Velvet ribbon is being greatly used
his season, and is always handsome,
/hile the crepe is one of the prettiest
f one of the lovely materials of the
ort. There are, however, hosts of
thers that might be used, for allost
everything fashionable is suf-:
TirifVl C11P.
cieiiu* ? " kUV"u """ """
ess.
I
II
The waist is made with a fitted
ining aud itself consists of the front
nd the backs. The backs are tucked
or their full length, but the front
o yoke depth only. There are deep
ileats at the shoulder at both front
md back which give the desired
readth, and the fulness at the waist
ine is simply adjusted to the figure
o that the waist can be worn with
. shirred skirt as illustrated, with a
;irdle or any belt that may be liked.
?he sleeves are quite novel and are
*- ' 1 wVl Uo
uirrcu at Lucn uuu^i
hey can either be finished at the eliows
or extended to the "wrists, as
hown in the back view.
The quantity of material required
or the medium size is three and
hree-fourth yards twenty-one, two
md three-fourth yards twenty-seven,
+ *wrr\ Vftw/lo 4 Ti AO Tl/Mo
FX t*YU J aiuo XUi l J-AUUi
vlth three-fourth yard of all-over
ace, three yard^ of velvet ribbon and
wenty-five medallions to make as 11ustrated.
- J&J?.'' ' "
THE GREAT DESTROYER
d/M m pt * r*mr na />mn a rtrvrrm
i3u.ua oi.nviiii.AU raus ADUUI
THE VICE OP INTEMPERANCE.
That Alcohol Makes Men Bright and
Successful Intellectually is One
of the GreatestDelusions Abroad
in the World?Some Instances.
'A very common notion is abroad
that wine makes men bright and successful
Intellectually. This is one of
the delusions of alcohol. One of the
I brainest men England ever produced,
; a very giant in intellect, was Dr.
Samuel Johnson. Dr. Matthew Arnold,
when he wished to put before
the young men of the University in
England a standard work on the most
high-class principle on criticism in
the English language, chose six of
Johnson's "Lives," and published
them in a gem of a volume entitled
"Johnson's Six Chief Lives," and
gave an introduction from himself.
Those "Six Lives" marked the highwater
mark, and-it had never been
nearly reached since. That masterpiece
was produced after he was seventy
years of age.
xxo au CACiupmi UL luiai ausiiucuuc
and an illustrations example of selfdenial
few names occupy a more honored
place than that of Dr. Samuel
Johnson. He was a total abstainer
at a time and among men when it required
courage of a high order to
practice total abstinence.
It was a time of moderation in the
church?the time of a low, groveling,
sensual philosophy. English society
was never at a more materialistic
level than in the days of Dr. Johnson,
and in spite of it all he stood up as
bravely as teetotalers did now before
society and the community. One day
when Johnson was in his club in
London one of his literary friends
said to'him about that very matter?
they were afraid to bully Dr. Johnson?"I
am always wondering what
it was that made you, of all men, an
abstainer." Johnson looked at him
and said?"Sir"?and his very "Sir"
made a man tremble?"Sir," he said,
"God sent me a terrible sickness, and
I took the lesson from His haid, and
I intend to profit by it, and to keep
repeating it to the day of my death.
I saw that my Maker's mind was that
I should cease using strong drink."
Johnson was a total abstainer in
the clubs in London when there was
scarcely a total abstainer but himself.
He did not know a nobler thing a
mortal man could say than that God
gave him a lesson and he learned it.
When in the Hebrides he was one
evening-at dinner in Dunvegan Castle.
The laird had brought in people
from Skye to meet him?the doctor
being one of the foremost men of
England at that time?for even a
king thought it an honor to shake his
hand. The people had gathered from
far and near to see him. Johnson
was seated beside Lady MacLeod,
and as the dinner went on all kinds
of drink were going round, and Lady
MacLeod said to him. "Everybody is
taking something but yourself, I am
Bure you would not carry it too far."
"No, madam," replied Johnson, "it
would carry me too far." Some one
later on during that dinner party
suggested to Dr. Johnson that he
might take something and drink it in
moderation. He turned and said,
"Sir, I feel I cannot take-it in modr
eration." That was one of the greatest
speeches made by the greatest of
Englishmen. He admitted himself
to be a weak man, and that thare
was a danger in taking it in moderation,
and therefore he denied himself.
It was a noble stand for a man
like Johnson to take in a society in
which he stood alone. It was comAn
n?r n**tn 4- /-? V* A n ?
ptuauveiy easy uuwauajo iv uc au
abstainer.
There was another Instance. Seated
in his club one day there was an old
gentleman at lunch, eating and
drinking and grumbling that he was
getting old and done and useless.
Johnson sat reading his newspaper.
His companion was full of the complaint,
as though God was Injuring
him by letting him get old. "How
old are you?" asked Johnson, r
denly. "I am sixty-fire/' replied
old gentleman. "Well," replied Jo
son, "I'm seventy. Drink water ;
go in for a hundred."
Hugh Miller, speaking abou0ft'
ture in his "My Schools and Sch.
masters," said that when ha ttt.
working mason years ago in 0ror
ty he used to read the very beat be
during the meal hours in his
He thus formed that masculine s>
which made itself felt morerabe'
and after the disruption and tm
never been equalled sing#. /
formed that style while workin
his bothy as an apprentice ilia
Hugh Miller stated that after
at some house eating, or sonie^t
where there was an excuse for
ting in whisky, and h.e took hfti fc
in it, when he went back to hjwx
and lifted up Bacon's essays&%
formed food for his intellect &t
days, he could not read. Th|?6
in his head prevented him from;
ing his Bacon, and he laid the
down with such a burning shame
he hacPmade himself so blind
could net read his favorite bo^
he vowed that night that itfvv
never happen again, and it diem'
Kansas Prohibition Popular
.tvansas was never as lempari
State as it is to-day, and t}ie pi
itory policy was never surer ot i
lar endorsement, taking the Ste
a whole.?Topeka Daily C&Qit&l.
Penalty For Xcwsboys.
The Newark (N. J.) Board of Education
will revoke the license of a
newsboy who enters a saloon to sell
papers. What is s&uce for the news-.
boy ought to be sauce for the other
boy.
Ohio's Closed Saloons.
A sufficient number of saioons
have been closed in Ohio through the
efforts of the Anti-Saloon League, to
make a street nearly three miles
long, built up solidly on both sides,
allowing thirty feet frontage to each
salo-.vn.
I
Labor Men Urge Temperancc.
The business agent of a labor
union in Chicago has been preaching
the gospel of temperance to his felr/ow-unionists,
and has won many of
them over.
Just an Illustration.
Here is an illustration of what saloons
produce. In one corner of Oklahoma,
a few miles from the Indian
Territory line, there is a saloon from
which has come in four years ten
murders, sixteen assaults with intent
to kill and eighty-one cases on the
commissioner's docket for the illegal
introduction of whisky into Indian
Territory.
Raises rrice of License.
Knoxville, Ala., is the latest city
to the double the price of its chastity.
It has raised the saloon license
from $500 to 51000.
f '
. .. v/.* ,
r-y-/,';v.:r
\ Spain's New Navy.
^The Spanish naval authorities, actively
supported by King Alfonso, are
proceeding vigorously with the rebuilding
ol! Spain's navy. A consid
erable part of the construction program,
involving an expenditure of
$79,200,000, is already under way.
There are to be eight battleships of
1.4,000 tons and .nine cruisers. Of
fixe cruisera four are already in being?the
Emperador, Carlos V, Cardial
Cisneros, Cataluna and Princess
de ABturlas, and other vessels are
well advanced.
AA/h at .
To*
I as with joyous hearts and
how conducive to health
enjoy, the cleanly, regular
diet of which they should
not by constant medicatio
Ious or objectionable natu
nature, only those of knc
and wholesome and trul;
Syrup of Figs, manufactu
come into general favor ii
of its aualitv and excellen
- J
Syrup of Figs has als<
they know it is wholesorn
ble physicians as to the
original method, from cei
' presented in an agreeable
used to promote the plea:
we are free to refer to ;
? medicines and never favc
? Please to remember i
0 always has the full nam
printed on the front of ev
only. If any dealer offe
printed thereon the name
the genuine you will not j
1 a bottle on hand, as it
(ft whenever a laxative rem*
a o o
PUTNAM
UMOt more goods brighter and foster colon than any <
qreonj garment witnoutripping apart. Write tar
Women of Denmark turn their
hands to almost any operation that
pays. A number of them are pilots
and conduct vessels in and out of the
harbors as successfully as their fathers
or brothers.
Life ia a dreadfully stupid game -when
the other fellow holds all the trumps.
The 20th Century Limited.
To Chickeo in 18 hours. Leaves New
York 3.30 P. M., arrives Chicago 8.30 next
morning?a night's ride by the New York
Central Lines, "America's Greatest EailA.
down fher. ftaMroiM toOhfriter'a
hopes come
. white envelope.
Sjropfor Children
t-m&j J,redncesinflamma'
i'' ad COMc, 25c a bottle
tt rainbow gold is
it on bargains.
??'
. 4 'fri
RT, BRUISI
flAC
jMdONK-CURE
PHca.
5
hi
^ ;!
11 ?{
7*- - ?can lie
Oil Hei
sAplX ?< 0 toyioP'L its ope:
f ** anotl
? PERFE
8 00 H
/T1 1^.?O
Iiuiuipiicu VVIUI a
Turn the wick as high or low
Carry heater from room to room,
intense heat without smoke or sir
less device.
Made in two finishes?nickel a
fully embossed. Holds 4 quarts
hours. Every heater warranted,
heater or information from you
nearest agency for descriptive circ
fan
y Aayw ?
BP| and steac
rj 6truction
8&1 Equipped with latest improved
MB brass throughout and nickel platec
Qa any room whether library, dining-i
HH room. Every lamp warranted.
Bn agency if not at your dealer's.
Ry STANDARD OIL COl
mm?i? ?
v^.f. ' Avf
' '*?' ' ' "'.'w.''~K '%; * v'
Mme. Patti's Big Feea.
. . In reference to the statement that
$4000 was the highest fee Mme. Pattl
e-rer received, Colonel Mapleson
writes to a London paper to say that
he and his father paid the prima
donna In America $5000 for each performance.
There are 10,700 pieces of wood,
cloth and felt and 1180 feet of wire
in a concert grand piano. The earliest
recorded public performance on the
pianoforte took place at Covent Garden,
London, on May 16,176?.
^i
JoyThe\
Every H<
I smiling faces they romp and pis
the games in which they indu
habits they should be taught to
partake. How tenderly their he
n, but by careful avoidance of ev
re, and if at any time a remedial;
Dwn excellence should be used;
y beneficial in effect, like the p
3 1? ii- _ r*
reu uy uic v?/a.iiiuniia. ng o_yiup
i many millions of well informed
ice is based upon personal know
3 met with the approval of phys
e, simple and gentle in its actior
medicinal principles of Syrup
rtain plants known to them to ;
j syrup in which the wholesome
sant taste; therefore it is not a i
all well informed physicians, whc
ir indiscriminate self-medication,
md teach your children also that
e of the Company?California
ery package and that it is for s;
rs any other than the regular ]
of any other company, do not ac
get its beneficial effects. Every:
is equally beneficial for the p;
idy is required.
FADELE
>therdyei One lOo. package colors all fiber*. Theyd:
iree booklet?Horo to ?70. Bleach and JUx Color*. B
Motoring in England and France.
There is a delightful feeling when
one runs for mile after mile along
those glorious tree-lined roads of
France without a check or any drawback.
And what a contrast when one
reaches England! Tortuor.8 ways,
with* bad surface, badly drained, most
of them, and badly constructed, full
of dangerous turns and corners, and
perhaps a "bobby" lurking behind
a bush with his "ticker" ready to
swear you were going at thii-ty miles
an hour or more when to do ho would
risk your own neck!?Lady Montagu
of Beaulieu, in Throne.
Esperanto meetings continue to
attract many adherents in Paris.
Plays and recitations in the new language
are features of these conferences.
v N. Y.?47
i OR SPRAIN
OBS OIL
RELIEVES FROM PAIN!
: and 50c
=SS=SS=SSSSB=SSSSSSi
rzn
LI V A AVI V IH
)ld Rooms |
an only knew how much comfort II
derived from a PERFECTION IB
iter?how simple and economical H
ration, yon would not be without fflS
ler day. z R
can .quickly make warm and cozy . N
d room or hallway?do matter in |[9
art of the house. You can heat II
ind do many other things with the Ifl
:ction i
eater I
mokeless Device) ||
r as you can?there's no danger. Sgj
All parts easily cleaned. Give9 H|
tell because equipped with smoke- IB
nd japan. Brass oil fount beauti- H
of oil and burns 9 P=i fjfl
If you cannot get J ^ gat
j dealer, write to r S
;ular. J* S3
rtw% cannot be / \ B.j
LI W equalled for ( il Kg
[y light, simple conand
absolute safety. S|3
burner. Made of t > ~7 jgjag
i. An ornameui iu B'l
oom, parlor or bed- l_T Kg*
Writ? to nearest J v Pa
t
^
Brother Dickey Paid.
"Lathenxs." eaid Brother Dfciey* H
"lay down at de rich man'B gate* ' '!
didn't be?"
"He fho' did!**
"An' how did de rich' man treat'v
him?"
"Nerer once know he wuz dar!"
"An' whar is dat rich man now?"
"Looky yer, Bre'r Dickey," said t&t "
weak member, as he funbled in hi#
oocket, "ef you 'bleege ter have dat
fclrty cents right off?yer it Is! Take
it, an' go you' ways!"-?Atlanta Con-^
stltution.
'm* |
rBwWG|
DME J
ay?when In health?and '
ilge, the outdoor life they J
form and the wholesome
lalth shoulci be preserved, ! %
ery medicine of an injur!-' H
agent is required, to assist I'
remedies which are pure ?mJ|H
leasant laxative remedy, -||
Co. Syrup of Figs has
1 families, whose.estimate I
ledge and use. . If '
iicians generally, because 1 \|
i We inform all reputa- If
of Figs, obtained, by an I
act most beneficially and
Califomian blue figs are |
secret rsmedy and hence | J
) do not approve of patent I
the genuine Syrup of Figs J.
Fig $3'rup Co.?plainly '
ale in bottles of one size. I
Fifty cent size, or having a
:cept it. If you fail to get 11
family should always have IE
arents and the children, /II
TTo TV V ? C 4
dd y i b a
re tn ccUHiiUur UulUu -Uun any other dm *oa c? .'
lOMTM OKVCI
It goes straight to the
mark i
Hale's Honey
of Horehound
and Tar
Quickly Cures Coughs |yjj
and Colds
Pleasant, effective, harmless . t|
Get it of your Druggist
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure la One Minute
Readable, Though Incinderated. . . 1m
While clearing away the debris of -t
the Exhibition fire at Milan, the re-. . '
mains of one of the most precious ex-;'M
hibits has been found. This was the %-j
first volume of the expenditure- for ' . I
the construction of the Cathedral
T1 ? nor.
Milan. It was aiuiusi, tuiu^iicwij wu- LVim
bonlzed, but the entries on the leaved
in the centre of the book are still'
readable.
Won't See Friend Roasted.
"Uncle Remus" draws the line at-, rJ
barbecued rabbit. He and Bre'r Rabbit
have never broken their contract a
of friendship since the old days, when '>;
Uncle Remus bribed Jedge B'ar
turn Bre'r Rabbit loose from the 2
Tar Baby.?Atlanta Constitution.
nPnPQY^ DiscoTSSYf &
1/ n W I O I (Itm qalek rtllaf all MM ?1
(nntcaita. Bwk orintlMiitali ud lODan'lrNtMt . - )
fw>o. Pit H. H. fiKKM-S BOIT8. Box B, AOmmIm, Ok 0
W. L; DOUGLAS 1
'3.50&*3.00 Shoes |
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.LDoiigfas$4fiilt Edge
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I bins:' HoaseY/uie mort I 9$ \
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SHOES FOE EVERYBODY AT AXL PEICBS.
Hen's Shoes, 96 to il.SO. Boy** Shoos, $3
to $1.30. Women'e Shoes. 9*-00 to S1.S0.
?- rr\. (7>,~o. MOKfnlll nn
Try W. I?. Douglas Women's. Mlases and
Children's shoea; for style, fit and irear c
they excel other makes. ' ' 1
tf I could take you Into my largft -&
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show i
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand h
Z m - ? AIJ. 4.4
why tney noia ineir snipe, m ucuci,
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any other make.
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L.
Douglas shoes. His name and ( rice Is rtnrnpen ,'v
on tne botto~a, which protects you against hlglj
prices and Inferior shoes. TaJr# no tukatl*
tut*. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas ?boe*
and Insist upon having them. )
Fast Color Euelets usta; they uMH not wear brats* i
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Pall Stvles.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. J}*, Brockton, Mas* '
"