Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, October 11, 1905, Image 4
A KALTHY OLD A6E
?rVE?TBE BEST PART OF LIFE
ftatr "Women Passing Through
Change of Life
FlinMenec has allotted us each at
AaMA*e*enty years in which to fulfill
IWI iFininn in life, and it is generally
?ur am fault if we die prematurely.
Wmwhb exhaustion invites disease.
Tl?i? statement is the positive truth.
Wlan everything becomes a burden
-mndywsn cannot walk a few blocks without
aaousive fatigue, and yoa break
oat into perspiration easily, and your
Dm* fljHAhes, and you grow excited and
abakj at the least provocation, and
yea cannot bear to be crossed In anytiemg,
you are in danger ; your nerves
luaw given out; you need building np
at ?xkc! To build up woman's nervosa
system and during the period of
<s2lange -of life we know of no better
cneclfi<7XYe than Lydia G. Pinkham's
"VegviXable Compound. Hero is an
sTtnatrxlkm. Mrs. Mary L. Koehne. 371
VSwr&eld Avenue, Chicago, 111., writes:
"* I hart used Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetablo
Oanpuand for years in my family and it
KTiT ditappointe ; so when I felt tnat I was
twauring Ji* change of life I commenced tn at
tarn); with it. 1 took in all about six liottles
*ni it ?liii me a groat deal of good. It
4GCM/fiw? my diizy si Kills, paitt in niy hark
**? Mfefttemiuiihrs with wliiclij had suffered
R>r jvainiir- before taking tho Compound. I
fcadtiwr .f ithod notltoen for this groat medJfewcfcrwmnuii
that I should not nave boon
tali-n* t?-dav. It is splendid for women, old or
and will suroi^ euro all female disorXr*.
Ftakh&m, of Lynn, Mass., inwhaen.
all stick and ailing women to write
hurr Swr advice. Ilor groat experience
is ait tvhrir service, free of cost.
Q?tf* Trait -JLfgZUZ
?tf _ c<,l to Montana with
*bxt* a rtsn Brants ?fish brand
rr i co t Sticker, used for
JrtMXtmdolicker an overcoat when
cold, a wind coat
adau windy, a vain coat when it rained,
: ant 9m a cover at night if we got to bed,
rand. I win nay that I have gotten mora
eaaadort out of your slicker than any other
aa aniii h that I ever owned."
J&Stwa vtamo ?tu1 dddrfii of tho writer of this
<iawftoii?4 *#urr uiaj bo hsd on ap|ilicdUen.)
> Wrt Weather Garments for Ridlr.g, Walking,
Working or Sporting.
W6MEST AWARD WORLD'S FAIR, 1904.
Tha Slxu ot run
co- tswnas.
| TOWER CANADIAN
CO, lLimited - ? ? "
l^TaumC. (liHiM
H cTVIozley's ||
jP Lemon Elixir. 9
Is a sure cure for all M
Liver Troubles ||1
Hg| and a preventivo of g|j
W4 Typhoid fei
W0 and other fevers.
*' ( Grandparent Pi
Good for | Parent P^|
El Ask Your Neighbor ?-ja
Sra 5?r.. and $1.00 per bottle Rd
at Drtig Stores.
W1 fLXTf"" n AddreMM of <1J pereonM OT
14 I* I b II"" l'?rt ImiUn blood who ?r*
"I' I fc. W no I living with nny trllie,
'*}?/ n.rn who wci* drifted In Kentucky,
i'l# of mother* of nolcllorn wlio h?v* l>een
hrwiM vriiMlon o?i recount of their .re*
tretrrlnire. (4) of men who Merred in theFedT*!
army, or (6) the nenre*t kin of Mich
-vddler* or wilier*. now <lrr<'a*ed.
2t 1TI1A N HICK KO If It. Attorney,
IV uniting (on, I>. C.
So. 41.
iNVJ YVUiNUJiK.
Grjj?Terrible storm we had last
' ewutsiiK. wasn't it? Thundered loud
to wake the dead.
3mlih?So? I didn't hear It.
Coy?Didn't hear It! Why, man,
whmrm were you?
Sa&ifth?A.t home. An old school*
mans <oT my wife that she hadn't seen
ttoc :?mss spent the ovening at our
faraat&fc.?Chicago Nows.
GRATIFYING PRAISE.
rrom Marcus Mayer, th? Great
fatrnn of Music and Drama.
Maims It. Mayer, who brought to
Axar^u Mine. Pattl, Duse, Sulvlnl,
? . _ Coquelin and other
famous singers and
7it z$k\\ actors, writes:
Gentlemen: I wish
vSSffu aa many suffering
v.* men and women as 1
|('d|can reach to know
tl>e excellence of
Donn's Kidney Tills,
il' * was S>roat'y bene^J
P7 S&/A fited by this remedy
A4 and know it cured
?vfrd who had kidney trouble so badVy
* hey wore agonized with pain in the
hwrSa. head and loins, rheumatic at*
Wrelwr *nd urinary disorders. I am
stScol t\? recommend such a deserving
omwdt **-6?wed>
MARCUS R. MAYER,
by all dealers. SO cents n box.
*"cjfcer-Mlll>uru Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
,
: SOUTHERN
< -ft. <5
f ? . TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTt
IV- ??
Treatment For an Alfalfa.
G. .W. II., Bedford City, writes: 4,I
have one and two-thirds acres in alfalfa
which *"was sown last October.
Four hundred, pounds of high grude
phosphate were used at the time of
sowing. Four hundred pounds of rich
alfalfa soil were also broadcasted over
the Held. The stand was very scant
this spring, so about April 20 we
sowed HOO pounds of prepared lime
broadcast, cultivated and harrowed it
three times and sowed one bushel of
inoculated seed and again harrowed
two times. The seed came up and did
Hue until the Hrst part of June, when
it began to turn yellow. On June 22 I
sowed 20O pounds of laud plaster over
it broadcast. Do you think it is all
right or what had I better to to help
it';"
Answer: From the description con- ,
tabled in your letter you have treated
your alfalfa generously, and you
should be able to hold the stand, provided,
of course, the subsoil is not too
tenacious. No doubt you realize the
importance of alfalfa making a Hue
root development. The trouble you
experience at the present time should
hardly be due to an acid soil, though
you might test it with litmus paper
and then 3*011 would know definitely.
Get a nickel's worth of blue litmus
paper at au>* drug store; take a handful
of the soil an inch or two below
the surface, moisten well with rain
water and insert a piece of the litmus
paper. If the paper turn red the soil ,
is undoubted^* acid, and lime should j
In, nnnlliul if M?
bushels per acre. You should flrst clip j j
the alfalfa and tJxoii broadcast the lime ^
nnd work in well with a harrow. The t
fact that a large number of nodules ,
have not developed may be duo to an r
nchl condition of the soil, and though t
you applied 300 pounds of prepared {
lime, it may not have been sufficient ,
for the purpose." j
When alfalfa turns yellow it is often ?
due to one of two things?either an (
attack of the leaf spot or rust or the ^
need of nitrogen. Judging from your
letter you did not apply any nitrogen ?
In the form of fertilizer and it is likely
that your land is low in humus or ^
vegetable matter. It would be almost j
impossible to apply humus to the soil ^
in a satisfactory manner now. How- i
ever you might clip the alfalfa and r
apply a top dressing of farmyard ma- ^
inrre at the rate of ten to lifteen tons j
per acre, and an application of nitrate v
of soda will also probably prove of- t
fective, say 100 pounds per acre, put on a
as a top dressing. It should be put on *{
when the dew is off or else it may lire
the leaves.
The leaf spot or rust which often attacks
alfalfa, particularly in the East,
can generally he overcome by repeated '
clippings during the lirst season of *
growth. Under any circumstances you '
should clip the alfalfn frequently this *
year and not attempt to get any hay, c
and that will tend to throw the
strength of the plants back In the *
roots and insure their making a more *
substantial growth. If you can only '
get the alfalfa deeply rooted and well
no^hllolm.l *1.- r.~tl ??- -V. 1 -1 ?-- \
COlUMilOUVU lit IIIL* ?VIII Jf iiu Minimi III" ?'
able to maintain it provided you feed
It liberally. Alfalfa must have plentiful
supplies of nitrogen, which it must
obtain through the bacteria living in
association with the nodules on its
roots or directly from the soil, and If
the nodules do not appear in large
numbers you can hardly hope to maintain
the alfalfa.
If you follow persistent clipping and
the suggestions made above and do not
get satisfactory results, plow up the
land this fall, top dress heavily with
farmyard manure, subsoil and rescod.
In my judgment farmers who attempt
to grow alfalfa and fail to get satisfactory
results the first year or two
should not give up. The bacteria do
not take kindly to all soils, nor do they
develop as rapidly as many people imagine,
but I believe persistency for
several years will give satisfactory results.?Andrew
M. Soule.
will it r?rt
A writer in the Southern Cultivator
asks this question and then proceeds
to answer it. We certainly agree with
his conclusions. In this climate it pays
iu rut.ie vmcKPiiH wueuever you 01111 gel ]
good ferrtlle eggs to put under the hens
or into the incubator: 1
Will it pay?does It pay?do fall 1
chickens pay? Will it pay to raise i
them? Has it ever paid any one to i
raise them? This is the silent query i
in many n mind nt this season?it is <
an open question In many a household, i
it is much more -worth trying and? :
it is something worth knowing, and
solving for one's own knowledge and
satisfaction.
In mathematics it is a question so
simple that it answers itself. We say
simple, because we have only to compare
n hen and an egg to settle the
question?only to ask ourselves, which |
is the most valuable?from which one
we may In the future obtain the most
value.
Nuggets from Geogia.
Poverty throws the door wide, and
sleeps without fear of thieves that
break in and steal.
After we've run the race for Happiness
we look hack and wonder why
we didn't know him when we met him
in the road.
Mighty few wise men came out of
the oast of old, and those who arc
of the west are all in the dime muscums
and can't break away. 1
ARM *fiOTES. j
1*1?c?. '
;r. stockman and truck grower. i
???? i How*
simple the question Is, and
how easy to decide. There Is the hen
and here is the egg. The hen Is worth
a quarter in any market and the egg
one cent. Twenty-live to one is their
comparative value. Now, then, shall
we sacrifice the egg at.the nominal
price of one cent, or shall we convert
it into the higher value by increasing
its worth twenty-live hundred per
cent.? It has a life-giving principle
within it?a germ that will germinate
and grow* under favorable conditions.
Better and more practical to set it
and convert it into a chicken that six
months hence will be an egg-machine
in a sense worth as much as the hen
that laid it. Or, if we should elect to
attain an earlier success and a quicker
dividend Ave may sell the chicken from
It as soon as it is old enough to eat,
nnd In this latter way increase the revenue
from the egg at least fifteen
hundred per cent.
Some may contend that the fall
chicken is out of season, and not as
[leslrable as the spring hatched bird.
Rranted, in part, but not wholly. The
fall hatched chicken is naturally a
part of the fall growing season, and
svery one who knows anything about
lie country knows that there are many
things that may be brought to successful
maturity after midsummer. Fall
hickens for market may be raised as
successfully as at any other time of
lie year?Ave having need only to observe
the maxim that the most profitible
time to sell a chicken is as soon as
t is large enough to cat. Any one enn
;row chickens to that age either with
ions or with incubator and brooder in
iio autumn and early fall. Likewise
my one hatching chickens of this c lass
nay. by soiling the young roosters only,
aise to maturity a number of pullets
hat will lay before the frost is out of
he ground the following spring time,
md thus he a continuous source of
irofit to their owner. These are such
is reach the maximum of value in the
comparison between the egg and the
1311.
The autumn and early fall season is
tlso favorable to the hatching and
crowing of pure-bred poultry, either
villi the fancier and experienced
ireeder. or the now beginner. Indeed,
he desire is n; st pressing. Action
aken now will be just so much time
tallied?so much advancement made
irlor to tlio regular batching and growng
season next spring. It means the
itility of time that is valuable, and the
aking of a stop that inaugurates now
i cherished plan, or purpose, Instead
>f postponing It until a later season.
ImproYlnsr Henry K?d Clny I.ninl.
,T. T. It., Atlanta, Gn.. writes: I linve
00 acres of heavy red land which I
lave sown in cowpeas and intend sowng
the land In wheat and grass this
all. Will it be best to take the vines
iff for hay or plow them under? What
s the best grass for permanent pnsure,
on liigli and wet land? Kindly
tive me your opinion of subsoiling
leavy red land
If your land is a heavy red clny and
'on wish to improve its texture, plow
aider the cowpeas. You may regard
liis as a great sacrifice, hut humus is
>iu> oi xue essential elements 01 me
toil. Humus is of more importance
han some of the forms of commercial
ertillzers which are so generally used,
localise it changes the entire inechancal
condition of the soil, allowing air
ind moisture to penetrate readily so
hat tlie plants may breathe and the
process of fermentation go forward
,vlth rapidity, which is quite as important
as a large available supply of
plant food. You have ofteip observed
hat a low. swampy soil will often not
;ro\v crops until it has been well
irained, simply because the air can not
penetrate into tlie soil. The value of
mmus is not generally recognized, or
here would be less hesitation in plowng
under green crops. At the same
dine, when it is possible, it is always
idvisable to cut the pea vines or anj
>ther green crops and make into liay.
feed to live stock and reapply in tlie
rorm of farmyard manure. Where
dock is not kept 011 the farm green
manure must lie resorted to and will
lie found profitable if Judiciously
bandied.
One of the very best grasses to sow
ror permanent pasture 011 high uplands
Is tall ont grass, and you will not make
fi mistake in using It. It will furnish
nuouc as niucn grazing in proportion ??
any other grass you can grow, and It Is
eaten with relish by all classes of live
stock. It is hardy and stands tramping.
but has one objection In that it is
Inclined to grow in tussocks and does
not make a smooth and even sod. For
low, wet lands, there is nothing better
than red top, which makes good grazing
and a fair quality of hay. These
grasses may be sown spring or fall, according
to the season and soil conditions.
Subsoillng ib advisable on heavy
red clay lands. It is best done in the
fall, as it is then not so likely to puddle
the land.?Knoxvllle Journal.
Pointed Paragraphs.
Some jokers are as artless as their
jokes are pointless.
Ixits of people suddenly become
deaf when duty calls.
It takes a lot of will power to enable
a man to save himself from himself.
When a woman really has more
sense than a man she is too clever
to lot him know it.
BABY ONE SOLID SORE
C?nU Mot Bhnt Hot Byos to M??p Forty
Bolls on Hood?Spent BlOO on Doctors
? Bsby Grew Worse?Cured It;
Cutleam For tS.
"A scab formed on my baby's face,
spreading until it completely covered her
from heed to foot, followed by boils, having
forty on her iiead at one lime, ami
more ou her body. Then her akin started
to dry up and it became so bad she could
not shut her eyes to sleep. Due inontn's
treatment with Cuticura .Soap and Ointment
made a complete cure. Doctors and
medicines had cost over $11)0, with baby
growiug worse. Then wc spent less than
9J lor Culicura ami cured her. (.Signed;
.Mis. G. 11. Tucker, Jr., 333 Grceutield
Aw Mil?r?..L-~. u;:., "
, ">
A ccrk tree is fifty years old before it
produces hark of a commercial value.
Taylor's Cherokee llomody of Kweot Gum
an<l Slullen is Nature's groat remedy?Cures
Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption,
and all throat and lung troubles. At druggists,
25c., 50o. and $1.00 per bottle.
A married man lias great self-control
when he always acts as if he was
glad of it.
Advancing the Farmers* Interests.
Traveling agents and salesmea are
now sent from the home offices of the
Chicago packers into all South American
and Asiatic countries. They are
going into every laiul, no matter what
language may be spoken or what
money be used. They will exchange
their goods for cowries or elephant
tusks?anything to sell the product
and get something in return convertible
into money. It may seem odd to
some folks, but traveling men. carrying
eases with samples of American
meat products, can be seen In the
desert of Sahara, the sands of Zanzibar
or in Brazil. "where the nuts come
from." flroat is the enterprise of the
Yankee merchant. The greater the
market, the greater the price and stability
of the price of the product and
ail that goes to make it in its various
stages.
The Japanese have bought thirty-seven
steam turbines with electric generators.
Piso's Curo for Consumption is an infallible
medi'dno for coug.ia and colds ?N. \V
Sakukl. OcoaaOrovo, N. J.. Fob. i7, 130)
Japanese publications are full of American
articles on all kinds of subjects.
FTTH perm anon tlyou rod. No fltsor norvonsnessaftor
llrst (lav'suse of Dr. Kline's Great
Norvoltestorer,5,2trial hottloand treatise free
ur.n. 11. ni.iM', litu.. :>:11 Arcli St., Fblln^Pu
The Tokio Street Railway Company
serves a population of 1,500,(KX).
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Ohllilron
teething, softens t hokums, reduces in (lnmmatlon,allays
pain,euros wind colic,25c. a bottle
The University of California operates a
dairy school.
Avoid Yellow Kcvcr,
Use the great antiseptic preventative.
Sloan's Liniment. Six drops of Sloan's
Liniment on a tcuKpoonful of sugar will
kill yellow fever and malaria genus.
For the Housewife.
Ever since our Colonial ancestors
instituted Thanksgiving Day, it has
been n day of rejoicing, and the good
old-fashioned dinner plays the allimportant
part therein. A detailed
and an interesting account of a
Thanksgiving dinner, as it will be served
by the young housewife who has
folowed the story of 44The Making
of a Housewife" in The Delineator,
is given by Isabel (tordon Curtis in
the November number. 4'Thanksgiving
Day Novelties" illustrate many
seasonable dishes, from the traditional
pumpkin pie, to a choicely nranged
harvest cenirepieee. Other articles
on 4'Nut Novelties" and 44 Maple
Dainties" can he made to advantage
at this season of the year, and will
add a novelty to the family menu.
A Natural Conclusion.
A little New York girl, whoso brief
experience of life was confined to
existence in an apartment house, was
visiting in Philadelphia not long ago.
One afternoon, to amr.s* the child,
her cousin showed her a number of
photographs and views, meanwhile explaining
and answering questions concerning
them. One of them was a
picture of Windsor Castle, which, she
was told, was the residence of the
late Queen Victoria. After looking
at it a moment she innocently inquired,
"What tloor did she live on?"
?October Lippineott's.
There is something wrong with the
woman who will cry over a pathetic
baby story, then spank her own children
because they make so much noise
she can't read.
"GOLD COLD"
'Cood,*' lie Sny*, "Itut Comfort ltetter.*'
"Pood that fits is better than a gold
mine," says a grateful man.
iterore i commenced to use tirnpoNuts
food no man on earth ever had a
worse infliction from catarrh of the
stomach than I had for years.
"I could oat nothing hut the very
^glitest food and even that gave me
great distress.
"I went through the catalogue of prepared
foods but found them all (except
Grape-Nuts) more or less Indigestible,
generating gas in the stomach (which
in turn produced headache and various
other pains and aches), and otherwise
unavailable for my use.
"Grape-Nuts food 1 have found easily
digested and assimilated, and it has renewed
my health and vigor and made
me a well man again. The catarrh of
the stomach hiu disappeared entirely
with all its attendant ills, thanks to
Grape-Nuts, which now is my almost
sole food. I want no other." Name
given by I'ostum Vo., Battle Creek,
Mich.
Ten days' trial tells the story.
There's a reason.
t
I At Last?D<
A CUR
Stomact
Science declarer
A .New Method. By ?
FR
2DO YOU
Iav mraus ? uiHtm*u oionuirn.
Gas. Sour Eructations. Heart Pair
ing Pains nnd TiCad Weight in Pit
tended Abdomen. Dizziness. Colic,
plexion, HAD BREATH or Any '
LET US SEND YOU ,
| Mull's Anti I
0 FREE TO CONVINCE
Nothing else like it known. It's
sorption. Harmless. No drugs, f
otherwise?so savs Medical Science
the Stomach and make you worse.
We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wi
know it, hence this offer.
SPECIAL OFFER.?The regular
is 50c. for a full sized box. but to in
we will send two (2) boxes upon r<
ment, err we will send you * sample
I OI 48. COI
THIS IS GOOD F
Send thin n4, with ronr nnnc and a
who doc? NOT sell ll for m FltKK *nrtii
Ml'LL'H liltAPK TONIC CO., 32N Th
RiUrranaid write plainly. Write to-di
WILI) AT DltCM STilKRM, ftO cento p
TtftNCH
REPEAT! N
No matter how big the bird, no
Rf \ you can bring it to ba
H V) \JnL Bfj V/inchcster Repeating Shotgun
W Vn/jl give the best results in field,
Lrjjl jKU reach of everybody's pocVctbool
J name and ctLlrta c
^ J' ^ ^ ^1JARAW*
aaa BANK ^DEPOSIT
Vl^v3?) vJr Va R>R-Fare Paid. Notos Taken
7 500 FREK COURSES
BBE39B2HBHfflHfi?B Dear JatCcit. Wr!t/? QuicA
SEORGIA-ALABAUA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon. Sa.
[Antiseptic]
I Remedy
|| For Family and Farm!
jF " "kills^aVn. I
Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, & ;
CfS Albany Street, Boston, Maes. I
UNSEEN IN A SAW
Tber~ ar-unseen things about this Saw. You
cannot B th~ <e test urn of tho Steel; takes
u .sharp, cutting edge itml hi Ids it lunger than
any other Saw. You cannot see tho toughness
or ii'^ra; bends without a break or a kink.
SILVER STERL, tha finest crucible stool in
the world, is ntudj on tho Atkins formula,
tempers 1 and h.irdo-ed liy the Atkins secret
process, a. . used y lu Atkins Saws. You
cannot son the perfectly graduated taper of
the blade; runs easily, without ickling.
Hut t <11 can see tho Atkins trade-mark and
it is your protect i' i when you buy a Saw. Wo
are saw-makers and our trade-mark on a Saw
means that it is ^ur own make and that we
i are justly proud of I". We make all types
and sizes of Saws f r al. purposes.
Atkins Saws, Com Knives, I?erfe<'t!oti Floor |
Scrapers, t-lc., are sold by all good hardware
dealers. Catalogue ou re<{ucsL
E.. C. ATKINS CF1 CO.. Inc.
Largest Saw Viaauf*<.:urcrs in the World
Factory and Executive Offices, lodianapoiia. IndianallKANrilWl
New York, Chicago, MlnneopoHn,
l'ortlarxl < Oregon t, H,. lc, San rVanctsco,
Memphis, Atlanta anil Toronto, i(VuiaAa).
J Accept no SuUtititte?laoU on the Alkiiu Brand I
A "c m r\ nv rr?Af\ nc *t mc r-* ?.' ?? ?
Uovn-O/ ui ww IXXLLK3 t.VHMYVW1LWL I]
FOR WOMEN
then sex, used as a douche is msrvelousTy successful.
Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inUummation and local
soreness, cures lencorrhcea and nasal catarrh.
1'axtine is in powder lorm to be dissolved in pure
rater, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal
and economical than liquid antiseptics for ail
TOILirr AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, GO cents a bos.
Trial Box and Book of Instructions I-roe.
Thk ft. Paxton Company Coston. Ma?.
So. 41.
iS Brepsy.i
. jr Removes all swelling in Stoao
T?' / rlays; effects a pcriiinnent cure
A in 30 to today*. Trial treatment
ifSVN. /at\ given free. Nothingcan be faire*
Write Or. H. H. Graaa'a Lone, '
Mp?r,*TO!' Saaclsllita. Baa AlltnU.il |
P . " r "
.J*:
>n't Miss It.
E FOR
i Trouble
) it the only way.
Absorption. No Drugs.
3E53E5 Z
BEUOn 7
ire you afflicted with Short Breath,
is, Iruligcption, Dvspciwia, I5urnt.
of Stomach. Acid Stomach. Pin
. Sick Headache, Pimples, Dud
Other Stomach Torture*
A SAMPLE BOX OF
Selch Wafers
YOU THAT IT CURES.
sure and pleasant. Cure* by nb?toinnch
Trouble can't be cured
2. Drugs won't do?they eat up
lfers cure and we want you to
price of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers
troducc it to thousands of sufferers
fceipt of 75c. and this advertisefree
for this coupon.
UPON 127.
OR A FREE BOX. 1
idriroaa, and the nnmr ??f a drnaarlnt
lie box of ."Hull's Anti Urlt-b H atrrn to I
trd Ave., ltock Inland. 111. (IWt full
ay n.o thto oflcr nay not utpear n^alo.
er box.
'SSTSR
IG SHOTGUNS
matter how heavy Its plumage or swift Its
g with a long, strong, straight shooting
Results arc what count. They always
fowl or trap shooting, and are sold within
c.
in a ,-ojic/ card for our large illustrated catalogs*.
S KEPBATtNG ARM? CO.. NEW HAVEN. tPNU.
W- LB Douglas
*3-J? & *3= SHOES .
W. L. Douglas 54.OO Cilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
1 irt?ou?^<^i II
KstaMilhed^555**^^Sj
IB ||j JulyB, 1878.
^ W.L.DOUOLAS MAKES A NO SELLS
Z MORE MEN'S $3. BO SHOES THAM
AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER.
4.1 fl nnn REWARD to anyone who can
V I UjUUU diiprovs this statement.
W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by tbeir excellent
style, ensy fitting, and superior wearing
qualities, achieved tile largest sale of any $3.50
shoe In the wurld. They are Just as good as
those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00?the only
difference Is the price. If I could take you Into
my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest la
the world under one roof making men's fin*
shoes, and show von the care with which every
pair of Douglns shoes is made, yau would realign
why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shots are the best
shoes produced In the world.
If I could show you the difference between tbn
shoes made In my factory and those of other
makes, you would understand why Douglas
$3.SO shoes cost more to muke, wliy they hold
tliclr shape, fit better, wear lunger, and are of
greater intrinsic v aiue than any other $3.SO
shoe on the market to-day.
ML,L. Douglas Strong Ma do Shooa torn'
Men. $2. BO, 92.OO. Ktoya' Softool A
Dream Shoea.S2.SO, S3, $t.7B.S1.BO
CAUTION.?Insist upon having W.li.Dongla#?
sliofM. Tak? no substitute. Nuns genuine ?
without his naino and prieo stamped on bottom.
WANTKD, A shoe dealer in every town wber*
W. L. Douglas Shoos are not sold. Full line of
Samples sunt freti for inspection upon request.
Fast Color Eyelets used; thoy will not wear brassy.
Writ* for Illustrated Catalog of Fail Stylos.
V/. I? CODOLjIS. ftroekton. Mass
CONCENTRATED
Crab
Orchard
Water...
A SPECIFIC FOR
DYSPEPSIA, rr
SICK HEADACHE, <
CONSTIPATION.
T?? *k. Itl-M iL-* ?
i nr vmr? ill* initT ITiaK0 1110 A DUTtlWl.
Nnturo'a gr??At rvtnody. In uso for ulmoat
a century. Hold by all druggists.
CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO..
I.oulnvtllo, Ky. i
TT*! PP D A PHY sh,,rt'>tnd and Bookkropln*.
ILLuUlllirni A thorough buatnes* conraa.
Kntlri.it.i m in.tinting. Ourgraduatox eovar the.
Hoiiih : portltlont guarantor: catnloguc frao.
A M K1CI CAN T I- I.KOfl A I'll AND COMMKIU
I AI. COLLKtiE, MllledgevllU, Ua.
CURES WHlttt AIL IU? fAHS. , KJ
Boat Cough Bjrip. Tantm Uao r"|
in time. Bold b> dru<gl*ci. Ml
K3EEBII..)d ? 1*7? lHygl
MONEY$$$
La Croaac, AVla.'