The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, April 21, 1910, Image 7
L gtBSp COLDS AFFF'T
i illiwS
> '^ipOR KlDMrtffl
, MM TROUB^
mm A*mof*x M1
r'eruna is sold by your local drug|
gists. Buy a bottle today.
) News Notes.
The l\ S. Department of Agricul'
ture lias issued a cook book, tolling
. cooks how ic make better use of the
' cheaper cuts of meat.
| The combined length of the telephone
and telegraph lines in Switzerk
land is 14.71" miles. There are 2.255
telegraph otliccs. which, in 1908.
J;" handled 4.920.000 telegrams.
The I'nited States government buys
7* about $7,000,000 worth cf coal every
^yenr for use in the navy, in public
buildings in Washington and other
Ek fities, and for other purposes.
The Swiss postal service, which in\
eludes rural free <li>livor\
' efficient. There are 2,907 post-offires
in the Confederation, and 14,220
people are employed in handling the
re mails. So.-10-lO.
1 AFTER
1 SUFFERING
I FOR YEARS
* Cured by Lydia E. Pink*
* ham'sVegetableCompound
| Park ltapids, Minn.?"I was sick for
f: years while passing
k'r through the Change
jjp" 'hf di M W?e
..ing six bottles of
m. J ^.ydia E. Rnklmm's
^ pounds.'am
a able to do my own
PH/'fflinSvA \$l workman d feel
m-,m 'iWmT.a Dou, Park Rapids,
Minn.
| ... Rrookville, Ohio.?"I was irregular I
and extremely nervous. A neighbor 1
recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's I
11^'"* Yegetable Compound to me and 1 have |
? become regular and my nerves aro
gf-* much better." ? Mrs. It. K inn i son, |
if Brookville, Ohio.
k T r r?n I
^Ijuia ij. A maiiauj a V fjjCUlUlf twillpound,
made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotic or harm.
ful drugs, and to-day holds the record
0 for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases we know of, and
thousands of voluntary testimonials
are on file in the Pinkham laboratory
at Lynn, Mass., from women who have
been cured from almost every form o"
female complaints, inflammation, ul
? ceration.displacements,fibroid tumors
irregularities, periodic pains,backache
indigestion and nervous prostration
* Every suffering woman owes it to her
self to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound a trial.
If yon want special advice write
Mrs.Pinklianj, Lynn, Mass., for it.
It is free and always helpful.
Washington is going to have a
' s great spring festival of music, Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday, May
2, 3, and 4. when some of the most
distinguished vocal and instrumental
forces that the Capital and tlie nar
tion enjoys will he heard in conBuy
"Battle Axe'* Shoes.
The Northern Indiana Conference
4)f the Methodist church decided that
owing to the high cost of living families
that entertain ministers shall
not be. asked to furnish more than
one night's lodging and one meal.
|pr?OPERATION UNSUCCESSFUL. i
If A Terrible Talc of Kidney Suffering.
- -JLZmMJI ' Emtly H- Murdock, 6 Lorraine
pMC: ICJjp. Rochester, N. Y., says: "Kidrouble
came upon mo when livP
lug in Cape Town,
Igt consulted the best
physicians and an
I jfe operatlrn was orH|u
\ Hospital. After
together,' but wa
KML^. W**'-* ' jar Jrom a we<
?%F woman. I grew worse, the kldne>
fft secretions bad to be drawn with k,
tP citheter. In despair I decided to tr;KL
Loan's Kidney Pills. I rapidly recovered
and really do not know what I
l? ?ufgould have done without them."
^ ^^llemember the name?Doan's. For
HBu. ? aale by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
J*^TO?ter-Mllburri Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
Smltled Oats.
When oats are scalded at night and
allowed to remain until morning they
make an agreeable change of food
from the regular diet. Twice a week
is sufficient to feed such food. Oats
make better food in summer than
corn, as they are not so heating i't
their effects; but some object to oats
on account of the small proportion of
grain compared with the husks. The
scalding of oats softens the hard,
woody husks and renders them nutritious.?Weekly
Witness.
Xnsnl Certificate Required.
A mare is never satisfied bv either
sight or whinny that her eolt is really 1
her own until she has a certified nasal 1
certificate to the fact. A blind horse. '
recently living, would not allow the
approach of any stranger without
showing signs of anger not safely to
be disregarded. The distinction is ,
evidently made by his sense of smell. ,
and at a considerable distance. Blind J
horses, as a rule, will gallop wildly j
about a pasture without striking the
surrounding fence. The sense of '
smell informs them of its proximity. ?
Others will, when loosened from the j
stable, go directly to the gate or bars (
opened to their accustomed feeding
grounds, and when desiring to re|
turn, after hours of careless wander- ,
ing. will distinguish one outlet, and
patiently awai its opening. The (
odor of that particular part of the ,
fence is their pilot to it.?American (
Cultivator.
Substitute for Gate.
There are places where a common j
everyday gate is an utter nuisance (
and where a turnstile or some other
gate substitute or contrivance is par- J
ticul'arly convenient and welcome.
With the arrangement herewith illus- .
trated the gateway is alwavs closed
jr ^ ,
to animals, but men may pass through ]
I it without difficulty. The accompanying
drawing will give a clear idea of 1
the plan. The sketch is made to rep- i
resent a very small gate, but to an- i
swer all purposes the wing panels and <
gate perhaps should be hair a rod in :
|pnt*th
Hotting of Tomatoes.
There has been a great deal of com- (
plaint about tomatoes rotting this j
year. It is a dry, black rot that at- ,
tacks the blossom end about the time
or just before the tomato begins to ,
get ripe. Some people think it is ,
caused by too much dampness wiieu ,
the tomatoes are close to the ground; ]
or by the vines being too thick. My
experience is that it is dry weather
and hot sunshine that causes them to
rot, instead of the wet weather.
When I trimmed my tomatoes to a .
single stem and tied them up to (
stakes, they rotted a great deal worse ^
than they did when I let the vines j
run and fall down to shade the to- j
matoes. If you have noticed, those ,
that come up "volunteer" around the t
fence where they are shaded from ,
the sun are generally the first ones j
to get ripe and rot the least. So you (
see it is not because they are shaded j
that they rot.
What caused the tomatoes to rot j
so bad last year, I think, was on account
of the hot sun and dry weather ,
when they first began to ripen and
before the vines had got thick enough
to shade them. As soon as the rains ^
came and the vines got rank cnoug.t (
to shade the tomatoes and Keep them
damp, they quit rotting.
Nature knows what is best and t
has given the tomato a vine to cover ,
her fruit from the burning sun. When ^
we try to improve on nature by cutting
away part of the vine to let in
the sunshine, we ruin the fruit if the j
weather is hot and dry. And the
vines that are not trimmed will bear .
fruit of a better flavor, the tomatoes
not being so strong and sour as they
are when the sun shines directly on j
them. I
This is my experience and we never (
fail to have plenty of tomatoes even
when our neighbors have none.?L. ,
O. H., in the Indiana Farmer. (
1
As to Fertilizers. 1
Suppose we have a commercial fer- i
tllizer that we know is good in wheat. 1
Should we, for that reason, risk its (
being good in corn, and use the same 1
fertilizer for both wheat and corn, as i
well as oats, tomatoes, potatoes, etc.'/
Can the same fertilizer be well adapt- i
ed to various crops? J. O. P. i
Answer: The soil ingredients, nl- t
trogen, potash and phosphorus are re- I
quired for all the farm and garden i
i crops, but some crops require a larger i
proportion of these elements than i
I others. A complete fertilizer will 1
help all crops, but in some cases it t
would be wasteful to use them all in i
full proportion. Here is where the I
farmer must use study and skill if he 1
would economize. He must know f
how much of the different soil ele- <
ments each crop requires to make a 1
fall yield. For example, it Is found <
that thirty-six bushels of shelled corn 1
takes about thirty-six pounds of ni- t
trogen, fourteen pounds of phos- i
phorlc acid and eight pounds of pot- 1
' SftMSk ?. -
?
\sli from the soil, valued at about
J6.50. This must all be supplied to J
nake the soil as fertile as it was be- \
'ore. A ton of wheat, 33 1-3 bushels,
akes forty-seven pounds of nitrogen,
?ighteen pounds of phosphoric acid
?nd twelve pounds of potash, worth
JS.50. A ton of potatoes takes on'y
:bout four pounds of nitrogen, a little
jver one pound of phosphoric ae!d
ind six of potash. If you are plnntng
potatoes then you will need l^ss
;han a third as much nitrogen as you
.vould for wheat, and not more than
lalf as much as for corn, and so of
he other elements. We recommend
;nn t o ctuHv t hn ctthiAAf V%r?e/%?. i
. .... OUUJWl >1IUIUUBUI.<
n some good books oil soil composiion
or fertilizers. They will be worth
nany times their cost to you.?lr.dl? I
ma Farmer.
It Pays to Rush Pigs.
There are times in the early life of
i well-bred hcg when he will give
rou 100 pounds of gain for 300
lounds of feed; the are other times
ater in life when he will charge yon
>00 pounds of feed for 100 pounds of
tain. The profits on feeding are
greater therefore in early life.
Profits indeed may fail altogether if
he hogs are not developed rapidly to
narket size and sold before they have
passed the stage where gains in
veight can be made economically.
The number of pounds of feed required
to make one pound of pork
raries from less than three pounds of
'eed to considerably over five pounds,
tceording to how heavy the hog is,
ivhen its weight ranges between fifteen
and 350 pounds. Henry comsiled
the figures on more than five
lundred tests that included over
:wentv-two hundred hogs and represented
the tests of many stations and
hat extended through a good number
tf years, and found that the average
s that:
A fifteen to fifty pound hog needs
193 pounds of feed for 100 of gain.
A fifty to 100 pound hog needs 400
liounds of feed for 100 of gain.
A 100 to 150 pound hog needs 437
pounds of feed for 100 of gain.
A 150 to 200 pound hog needs 4S2
pounds of feed for 100 of gain.
A 200 to 250 pound hog needs 49S
pounds of feed for 100 gain.
A 250 to 300 pound hog needs 535
pounds of feed for 100 of gain.
If a man will use any of the good
areeds of hogs?and no one breed
lossesses all the good qualities?and
will use enough good pasture ar.d
?rops that they can harvest themselves,
the feed needed to make a
100-pound hog ought net to cost over
t n ?M
i>.? ui *u, unu umer weignts will
nake gain at a cost proportionate
vith the figures: just quoted. This is
in the supposition that well-bred
logs are used and that the nianagenent
is good all the time.
These figures carry their own
noral: and if a man will not work
vith the laws of Nature, they will
vork against him.?The Progressive
"armer
Tletter Methods Needed.
Many dairy farmers are prosperous
ind have established the fact that
he dairy industry can be made to
field good profits, while others, who
leem to have the same opportunities,
ail to find the profitable side. On
i large proportion of dairy farms
nany of the fundamental principles
vhich should be observed in produeng
pure milk are almost entirely
iverloolced. This is usually due to
ack of appreciation of their importlnce
more than to intent innn I nooldft
n most cases bad conditions are
trompily improved when their dan;ers
are known. Special knowledge
s as necessary in conducting a dairy
is in other farming occupations.
iVhen one understands something of
he science affecting dairying, the
:hanges in milk cease to be mysenous,
and the work connected with
he dairy, instead of being unprofitible,
uncertain and monotonous, as
lome consider it, may become profitibie,
interesting and instructive.
The value of milk when it is deivered
to the factory depends largely i
ijion the care it has received previous
o delivery, and its condition as well
is its fat content should influence the
trice paid for it. Every dairyman
tnows that the hnndling^of milk the
irst few hours after it has come from ]
he cow has a great influence on its
piality and the commercial value of
he products made from it. The care
)f milk seems a simple matter, but
>etter methods in our dairies are of
he greatest importance to the success!
md reputation of American dairying,
[t is in the interest of every patron ,
>f a creamery or cheese factory that
he milk used shall be the best and
>urest that can he produced.
Anyone who delivers badly contain-"
nated milk to a creamery is standing
n his own light. His milk may spoil
he entire production of the day, and
hus decrease the returns to every1
matron. Butter and cheese makers |
ihould absolutely refuse to accept
nilk that is tainted or unfit for use;
hey must do this in justice to them?elves
and to patrons who deliver
good milk. The attempt has some-1
times been made to estimate the
losses caused by taints or changes in
the milk due to neglect. The expresilon
"pure milk" should not be taken
to mean simply milk having a normal
:hemical composition, but milk free
From all unnecessary contamination;
the word "pure" should be underrtood
in its broadest sense.?Weekly
Wltueaa.
. I
* I
. n l^XVv *'. w
Why Suffer?
Tf yon have rheumatism, catarrh. 1; liney
disease, skin disease or any troulde arising
from impure blood, pive Rlicumacide a
thorouph trial. By purifying the l-lood
Kheinnacide ncutralir.es the acids, starts
the kidneys into healthy action and helps
to build up the nerves and the entire system.
Uheninaeide is put up in liquid form,
also tablets. At druggists, IV and .We liottles.
Tablets bv mail. 2oc. Bobbitt (.'hum- '
,,...i ? .. II..i.M.i
Party faithfulness is party dis- j
honor.
Ilia Hands Cracked Open.
"I am a man seventy years old My
hands were very sore and cracked
open on the insfdes for over a year
with large sons. They would crack
open and bleed, itch, burn and ache
so that I could not sleep and could do i
but little work. They were so bad
that I could not dress myself In the
morning. They would bleed and the
blood dropped on the floor. 1 called
on two doctors, hut they did me no j
pood. I could pet nothinp to do any
pood till 1 pot the Cuticura Soap and
Cuticura Ointment. About a year apo
my daughter got a rake of Cuticura i
Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment
and in one week from the time |
! I began to use them my hands were
all healed tip and they have not been j
a mite sore since. I would not be
without the Cuticura Itemedies.
"They also cured a had sore on the
hand of one of my neighbor's children.
and they think very highly of
the Cuticura Remedies. John W.
Hasty, So. Effingham, N*. II., Mar. 5
and Apr. 11. 1909."
Keep a clean I.earth ami a clear fire
for ?u.?Tennyson.
Dr. Pierce's 1'lcnsant- Pellets first put up
40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate
tnmaeh. liver and bowels. Sugar-coated,
tiny g.enules.
Ring in the thousand year* of peace.
?Tennyson.
For Red, Itching Eyelids Cysts, Styes,
Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes '1 iiat Need
Care. Try Murine Eye Salve. Aseptic
Tubes. Trial Size. 23c. Ask Your Druggist
or \Vuc Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
IIow we apples swim!?Swift.
Buy "Ratti.e Axe" Shoes.
GUMPTION ON THE FARM.
Sort well your seed, hut first be
careiiu in seicci nit* rigiu son.
The bung-hole does not empty half
st> many barrels as the little, everlasting
drizzle from the spigot.
Never heard of anybody running
the cultivator too inueh, except one
man who was too busy cultivating to
dig his wife's Hower-bcds for her.
it will pay to have on hand duplicates
of the most breakable parts of
the harvester. It costs time, which is
valuable, to stop a machine in rush
days to wait for the broken parts.
When you wish permission to go
across another man's land, go and
ask for it. Don't take it for granted
that "it will be all right." You can
only be sure of that by going to headquarters
and talking with the master.
Out of '2.5(10 boys recently examined
in the schools of Kansas, only six
cigarette smokers were found to be
what would generally be called
"bright." Ten of the remainder
were average students, while all the
rest of the 2.500 were found to be
poor at their studies, or worthless.
One of the handiest things about a
farm is a canvas large enough to
cover a load or stack of hay. Those
who still stack all hay outside need
one most. Out there are many other
uses for one, such as covering loads
of grain that can not be unloaded before
a shower, a protection for the
binder on dewv nights, etc.
*
MIKfKIKF MVKI'lt
A Surprise in Brooklyn.
An adult's food that can save a
j baby proves itself to be nourishing
and easily digested and good for big
and little folks A Brooklyn man
says:
"When baby was about eleven
months old he began to grow thin
and pale. This was. at first, attributed
to the heat and the fact that
his teeth were coming, but. in reality,
the poor little tiling was starving, his
mother's milk not being sufficient
nourishment.
"One day after he had cried bitterly
for an hour, I sue: osted that niv
wife try him on Grape-Nuts. She :
soaked two teaspoonfals in a saucer .
with a little sugar and warm milk.
This baby ate so ravenously that she
fixed a second which he likewise finished.
"It was not many days before he
forgot all about b.-ing nursed, and
has ince lived almo.-t exclusively on
Grape-Nuts. To-day the boy is strong
and robust, and as cute a mischiefmaker
as a thirteen months old baby j
is expected to he.
"We have put before him other
foods, but he will have none of them, ,
evidently preferring to stick to that
which did him so much good?his j
old friend Grape-Nuts.
"Uae this letter any way you wish, j
tor my wire and I can never praise |
Grape-Nuts enough after the bright- :
ness it has brought to our house- '
hold."
Grape-Nuts is not mude^or a baby I
food, but experience with thousands |
of babies shows it to he among the
best, if not entirely the best In use.
Being a scientific preparation of Nature's
grains, it is equally effective
as a body and brain builder for
grown-ups.
Read the little book, "The Road
to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a
Reason."
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
intwMt
' I
I
\
l
ft'*#
Aids Nature
The great success of Dr. Pierce's Golden
covcry in curing weak stomachs, wasted
lungs, and obstinate and lingering caught
the recognition of the fundamental truth
Medical Discovery" supplies Nature wil
ing, tissue-repairing, muscle-making matt
denscd and concentrated form. With ' ni
supplies the necessary strength to the stoi
food, build tip the body and thereby throi
obstinate coughs. The "Discovery" rt-e
digestive and nutritive organs in sound It
and enriches the blood, and nourishes tl
short establishes sound vigorous health.
if your dealer offers some
it Is probably better FOR
But you arc thinking of the
tiicre's nothing " lust as He
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical I
icine Simplified, 1008 pages, o\er /00 ill;
Edition, puper-hound, sent for 21 one-cc
only. (Moth-hound, 31 stamps. Address
SULPHUR?s
| | nil ID t-Altar.. $Hti. MM ALU Mr #Tl
LiyuiVi fctTertlve fnr l>ti'nu. Itch UlncWorm, t '
PoUoIl Oak. 1 !? -< ? -tlnga. etc. All Skill hruptlour / I ' !
and Scnlp Ailment* ) tr*
You nreil not i(o t< the Sulphur Sprlnrv thl* ?l?e? f pe
you a pcrfact suipbur i.ath ami tuTlgoratlu* 1 oiili- S
blink. 1 un
niHTMFIIT i.*nur. .un. sue. sjiai.i. zv. a m
Will I m tn I Swrllli.jrx. 'nflamnl or i lift fell Parti
bpleniM for tht Complexion; keep* the xkln xofi ftioi re
for Sal* by I'rtiKf Kit. HaiiftM by HANCOt K 1,11,
U your lealrr can't apply you. arnt by Mali or
AN UP-TO-D^
Do you realize there is no
you should use a coal range? <
is lighter and easier to hand
heat. Provided you have th<
economical, cleaner and less tr
Mew TPei
pguMWM'jtq :? t * '
The accompanying illustration
Its appearance. You really can't
use it yourself, or talk to someone who 1
a coal range will do?except heat the r
Si
fat
st
I)i
Standard Oil
1 (ncorpori
?ai?am??
IHBHmiHBHHl
MR. GINNER!
Have you ever seen the
i? ^ ^ actu
Youa
and 1
Tlae "John 1
<S Requires one-fourth It
C Never sk'ns or bruise!
Ci CUTS instead ol pus
required lor t!:c cotton stand.
<jj ;v3ore than 120 thousar
as many will be used this yea
When you buy hoes
Molia Uciiy" hoe.
VHV.It- trTiiern rv tnr jmfi
ASK YOUR DEALER,
THE JOHN REILY ISO]
To Ik- honest, as this world goes, ^
is to lie as one man picked out of ten *
thousand.
Bad BLOOD j
"Before I began using Cascareta I bad j
a bad complexion, pimple* on my face, i
and my food was not digested as it should ! J
have been. Now I am entirely well, and I ,
the pimples have all disappeared from my i
face. I can truthfully say that Cascareta
I* inst AS litvprtinMt' T hiv? nnlo
two boxes of them." i
Clarence R. Griffin, Sheridan, Ind. '
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken.Weaken or Gripe.
10c, ZSc. 5Sc Never eold In bulk. The renn*
la* tablet stamped CCC. Guaranteed to j
air* or yoar money back. 127 J
t, is based on
th body-build- ^ &'&**99la
trials, in conntivli
to digest -?
he* nerves?in *
thini "last as ?ood,**
HIM'"it pays better.
cure not the profit, sa
tod" for yon. Say so.
Vdviser, In Plain English; or, Medrstrations,
newly revised tip-to-deto
nt stamps, to cover cost ot mailing
Dr. K. V. Pierce, llutfcilu, N. Y.
HANCOCK
ULPHUR COMPOUND
IRI ETC FcrHtittlp [JO tablel?]$Jc. at#
iWLtigMun.r.-inii.rorf a 11? nrr??ctlT?.
rifj iiik tin* llinoil. Tonlritf thf St* much. a:i<I in th?
-*ltiiein aim prevent to.? of i\l>l..KSl n>S. L?y?.
p*la. I.utti )*?k< ?. Catarrh, ! h? ii'tiutUtn (iuut,
t Urhl. loh,-. >t?>n* In th- Kl.tn.v and Hl*dder,
?i ?in??t Kidney l,lT?rau?l 8t<ittiach Aliiitnuu.
WoNDKU for Hemorrhoid*. I'll#** Sorec.
I'iuUhi, sprain* rtc.
niovr* Pimple*. hlrtnUlifs. pluck hea'l*. etc. Irylk
(l lit srI.l'Hl |{ CO.. Hallimore, Md,
Ex pre**. prepaid. Write for booklet uo bulpbii&
lTE STOVE
longer any reason why
Oil is cheaper than coal; it
lie, and gives an intense
s right stove, oil is mere
ouble. Have you seen the
r/eetioit
k-stove
gives you only a rough Idea of
i appreciate it until you either
has used it. It does everything that
oom. The New Perfection O'l Cook:ove
will do anything, from heating a
rttlc of water to cooking a course
inner, but it won't heat a room. It
acsn't " smell," it doesn't smoke. It
tn't get out of order. Light it and it
i readv. Turn it down and it is out.
nly a woman who knows the trouble
f carrying coal and cooking in a hot
itchen can appreciate what it means to
ave a clean, perfect stove that wil!
Dok anything, boil, bake or roast, i nd
et won't heat the kitchen. How is it
one? The flame is controlled in turuoise-blue
enamel chimneys, and
irected against the bottom of pot, pan,
ettle or oven, and only there. The
arne operates exactly where it is needed
-and nowhere else. ^Vith this Stove
our kitchen is cool.
The nickel finish with the bright blue
f the chimneys makes the stove ornaicntal
and attractive. Made with 1, 2
nd 3 burners; the 2 and 3-burner
oves can be had with or without
abinet.
Ev#ry If not at yonrR, \rrlte tot
wnpt.re Ciiculat totbc ncarebt aj;?-ncy of tliu
Company
itcd)
IHHHBHHBHHIBni
LUMMUS
[R BLAST GIN SYSTEM?
? you want to Increase your profile
at the earne time Icfce.'n your labor?
if have spent 4(i years perfecting a
?vstem tliat would meet t!ic actual
Iremetits. and now we've gut It.
Your name met ut trein #?n a i"?i i crd
Mill l?rtvtic >nti full infcriimtK u
F. H L'JMMUS SCNS CO.. Columbjs. Gi.
INCH OFFICK AN1? SHOW KC.OM!
ell W. Truitc SI.. ? linrletle, >
J
|
:AN GET THIS NEW
R-SAV5NG liOUBLE>N
HOE IN ANY OF
FAVORITE SIZES
PATTERNS.
Relly" Moe
iss labor.
i the young cotton plant.
>hes away the stalks not
id In use last year; twice
ir.
this spring call lor the
IICAN rORk AND HOE CO.
on white to
E CO., New Orleans, La.
W. L. DOUGLAS
B3.00,$3.50,S4-.00&85.00
Un on t B tr\ C Bous' Shoes
Ituit:: O n W EL O f 2.0(1 A $2.60
W. I*. lhnttflas /
ihoes arc worn / Ky
)jr more men tlinn f Ik
l'iiv otlicr innke. C -*
BECAUSE: % Vfil
W.L.I>oufflM?3.0f> f * ; >/ 'ijCjl
mil tS..Vl nhoi'i nri" Ij- i. /W
t.e lowe?t prior*, |^kV
nullity rotialilerrMl, AL^pilkvu r"^
"w.Un'oiiKlaa Ml.no W ]
mil Ki.lKI aliiifi A.
s|ii?l,lnil)'l?,flt ami ^[^Kx /
your. other uukfw /\
'iMtin(M.iK)in*H.nti. ?M w
Fast Color ?(/rlct*. , J?J
T1m> ifpniiiiv* hare \V. I.. Donglaa uum dim] dci.w
lamped on Hip lotlom. Tula Mn fhitUnti
A Ik yoru dealer for W.U Doarieiahoea. If tknin
r* lor aalp tn your town write tor Mall fMet I'ulkw
[Win* rail direction* bow to order by bmuV mHom
E'SSJi'SSr w'TtSSTtSi^TSS'
. _ 5 1