BEaP/
Knowledge and Culture.
High marks In examinations def?d
upot a trained memory and a
power of acquiring irrelevant information.
Culture, on the contrary, is a
sympathetic assimilation of the best
|n the realm of thought and achievement.
Cohere is a slower process and a
i deeper, and its reward strikes fur|
tber In. Assimilation of the best tbat
has been thought and accomplished
affects not merely the brain, but the
i character?the whole spirit of a man
Culture Implies a soil ploughed and
fertilised, where whatever peed falls
has the better chance for growth.
Information even in vast quantities.
Bo long as it remains mere information,
used for purposes of passing e?;
nmlnaticns, need not affect the manners
nor the morals of a man; botn
I may remain hopelessly lax in an en1
cyclopedlan mine of facts. But cul1
tore affect* primarily the manners
! and the morals. A cultured gentleman
haji external -methods of eettlnir on
witih his kind; he has the true sens?
of relationship, the feeling that all
be can learn to feel or to, be Is not
for himself, but for service; he knows
himself lb a network of human interatolatVons.
In the end, the test of
I knowledge is not examination marks
/ ti la llvlnjj.?Hamper's Weekly.
Old Chinatown Gone For^yer.
No qnarter of the whole town Is
more strangely altered than what was
once the congested pioturesqueness of
Chinatown. Where the wooden buildings
have mei<..!d into ash a stout
j?roperty line of heavy wire, rein
tforced b.v an armed guard, has been
?t retched across to prevent any
tfurther looting of the heathen by the
Christian hordes. To one who has
loved this Chinese quarter, which exercised
upon some minds a fascination
undiniraed by familiarity, the destruction
of Chinatown is the most
poignant loss of the San Francisco
dh*e. The faults of dirty, smelly, delightful
old Chinatown will prevent
ita ever being what it has been. As I
juit on a little embankment, where a
bazaar had stood, amid the hoi ashes
of Chinatown, a tiugl|pg in the throat
Crom the acrid smoke that curled up
tfroro the burrowing little Area about
are, 1 could Ihiuk of 110 ni^re joyful
r.onsolatlou than that Robert l^ottls
strength or ilie already exhausted
patlc-.it, anil building up wasted energy
with wimple but powerful nourish
moot.
"Five yeura ago." writes a doctor,
"1 commsnrcj to use Postum in my
own family instead of coffee. I ?.-ar.
so well pleased wjth the results that
1 had two grocers plg.ee It in stock,
guaranteeing Its sale.
"I then commenced to recommend
It to my patients In place of coffe'e,
as a nutritious beverage. The consequence
lt>. every store in town is
now selling it. as it has become a
household necessity in many homes.
"I'm sure 1 prescribe Postum as
often as auy one remedy in the Materia
Medics?in almost every case
of indigestion and nervousness I
traat, and with the best results.
"When 1 once introduce it into a
family, It Is quita sure to remain. 1
shall continue to use it and prescribe
It la families where I practice.
"In convalescence from pneumonia,
typhoid fever and other eases, I give
ft aa a liquid, easily absorbed diet.
?Tea may uaa my lettor aa a refer?os
any way you see fit." Name
glean by Postum Co., Battle Creek,
-flfleh. Rend "The Road to WellvfUe"
la pkfs. "There's a reason."
I *
Stevenson hail not lived to feel the
pang of this desolation, .lust below
me the shaken house where he had
* lived and the little golden galleon of
bis monument outlived the ruin of the
* quarter that he had loved.?Ffrom
3joulse llerrlck Wall's "Heroic San
franelsco" in the Century.
Seemed a Long Time,
Jim was ten years of age and of an
adventurous spirit. Instead of going
to school, he Started out to Join a
band of buccaneers, leaving a letter
of farewell fcr his mother, lie had
4&oe pretty far afield when he was
naught In the rain. Crowing miserable
and hungry, the young adventurer
then gave up his Idea of a piratical
career and came home very late at
night. He met with n chilling reception.
The clock licked, his father's
newspaper crackled, and his sisteu otd
not look up from her book. Even
Ibis mother did not seem to care
whethei' he had returned or not. The
cat, however, not being In the conspiracy
of silence, came and rubbed
against his leg. Jim stooped and pettod
it, and then In a desperate attempt
nnon un thn onnvatvii Inn ha 1*0.
mucked plaintively: "Is (his the same
old rat you had when 1 went away?"
?Tattle.
News Items.
(Jovernor Swntisnti lias concluded
to to Radford Satuiday to introduce
Mr. Bryan.
A movement is on foot in Yiririnin
(U- elect tin* members of the State
Corporation (\tnimission by j?opulur
vote.
Mrs. William Muse, of Roanoke,
was uresteil in Richmond in connection
with the munler of C. I', Henderson.
.
Wards the woniesi use arc seldom
idle.' So. 38- '00.
WKIX CEOI'LIC TOO
Wise Doctor (lives Dostum to Convalescents.
A wise doctor tries to r,ivo nature
St? hesl rhiince hv savtnu the little
w'; ' * !
- f ' V;
/' 'fM v' V * *
<*' ' '
. /v: x?lh?&
south am nm.ro
Occurrences of Interest From
All Over South Carolina
MANY ITEMS OF STATE NEWS
A. Batch of Live Paragraphs Covering
a Wide Range?What is Going
On in Oar State. t
Columbia Cotton Market.
The cotton market was >teady. New
crop cotton:
Low middling 7 l-'J
Strict Low middling 3
Middling 1- 81-2
Good middling 9
General Cotton Market.
(lalveston. firm 9 ."i-lti
New Orleans, linn 9 .">-1(5
Mobile, steady 9 l-S
Savannah, stenty 9 l-S
Charleston, firm v 'J
Wilmington, steady 9 S-8
I.. * n-a
A^vriivirv, nVCUU V . * . . . a . . f *>"0
Bai'iniore, steady !) 5-8
New York, quiet 0.80
Boston, quid 9.80
Philadelphia, ateady 10.05
Houston, steady 0 5-10
Augusta, steady 0 5-8
Memphis, quiet 01-10
St. Louis, quiet 0 5-8
Louisville, tinn 101-2
Charlotte Produce Market.
Chickens Spring 12(a'25
Hens?l'er Head 35
[>ueks 25
Kggs 241 a. 22
Rye 80
Corn 73(0175
Cotton Seeil 18
Oats?^Feed 47(aAO
I Oats- Seed 50(o>55
Baltimore Produce.
Flour dull, unchanged. Wheat
steadier; spot contract OS 1-2 to t?S54(
Southern 45 to 03.
Corn firmer; spot 54 to 54 1-3;
Southern white 65 to 501-2; do yellow
52 1-2 to 54 1-2. Oats tinner; No.
2, mixed 34 1-2 to 35.
Rye steady; No. 2. Western til to
I 05. Better *4c.k1y and unehniured:
1 fancy imitation 20 to 24; do creamery
2."? lo 20; do ladle IS to 20; stove
packed ' ? to 17.
Kegs atcndy 24. Cheese active and
unchanged l.'l to 131-4. Sugar steady
and tinclinugred.
Young Man Drowned at Lock hart
Mills.
Union, Special.- A special to Progress
from Lockhaft says thab ('.
McMillan, employed by tlie General
Fire extinguisher company, headquarters
at Charlotte, was drowned in
Broad river while bathing with soiue
companions. It appears he was seized
with cramp and before any ?>no
realized bis condition be sank and
when the body was recovered it was
too late J'or him to be revived.
Guilty of Murder.
Columbia, Special.?For tbe lirst
time in more than 40 years a
woman, in fact two women, were convicted
of murder in this county. Thcv
were Nellie Broks and her sister. Annie
Workman, the two young negro
women who on July 14th scalded
to death the infant of the Brooks
woman in a negro tenement house on
Plain street, in this eitv. They were
recommended to the mercy of tin
court.
Speegle Acquitted.
Greenville. Special.- Arthur Speegle,
charged with receiving money
from the county under false pretense,
during the administration of his father,
now deceased, while supervisor,
was acquitted in common please
court.
Another New Concern.
(Sulnmiiin Rivioint i..i.' -?
- I" ? " ll.MWH. 11.13
nnotlx r wholesale business. Mr. I*.
!?. Conner, one of tlio pioneer wholesale
grocery men of inner South Carolina,
litis m>M liis interest in tlit- linn
vl Xonis-( 'noiier Co. and litis taken
charge ?f the Coluinhiti drain ami
Provision Company til 71 (Jcrvnis
street, of v.hieh lie :s scle proprietor.
Due West Onens.
Due West. Spec lal.?Krskins snd
line Wr-l Female ( i-'leces opened
under most propit ious ?ireumsinnces,
liming enrolled n large number of
student*; from tiltnosl every Southern
f>tiite. A < otiservnlive estimute, bused
<>ii the number of students already
present and those expected t<? eoiee
places the enrollment in both colleges
e.pial to. and possibly ;,v.atritium
thai of any in the history ol'
the institution.
Tragedy in Wilmington.
Wilmington. Special.? In the tenderloin
here early Friday morning W.
L. (Pete) Williams, ft well-known
traveling man, was shot and mortally
wounded in a general row in the bailroom
by Lonnie Sniper, connected
with one of the local breweries. Snii*es
van, but a special officer in the room
followed liini and in a pistol duel in
i the Htreet Snipqp was dangerously
1 wounded in the stomach.
I
"p
Mrs. Partington In Court.
"I took my knitting-work and wont
bo into the gallery." said Mrs. Partington.
the day after visiting one of
the oily courts; "I went up into the
gallery, and after <1 had adjusted my
specs, 1 looked down intu the room,
but 1 couldn't see any courting going
on. An old gentleman seemed to be
asking a good many impertinent
questions?just like some old folks?
and people were sitting around maklug
minutes of the conversation. I
don't see. how they made out what
was said, for they all told different
stories. How much easier it would
be to get along if they were all made
to tell the same story! The case, as
they calY it, was given to the jury, but
I couldn't see it, and a gentleman
with a long pole was made to swear
that he'd keep an eye on 'em, and see
that they didn't run away with it.
Bimeby til they came again, and they
said somebody was guilty of something,
who had Just said he was innocent.
and didn't Know nothing about ?t
no more than the little baby that had
never subsistence. 1 came away soon
afterward; but I couldn't help thinking
how trying it must be to sit there
all day, shut out from the blessed
air!"
BEANS WITH BEEF.
Beans to be boiled with beef should
bo put into a kettle of cold water
with a quarter teaspoonful of baking
soda. They should be brought to a
good boiling temperature and be kept
boiling briskly all the while they are
cooking. Boil, or rather, parboil them
until the skin cracVa and rolls back
when the br?>th is blown over a few
held In a teaspoon. Be sure to have
a teakettle full of lulling water to
fill up with as the water brils away.
The meat, beef or pctrk, should be
put into n separate kgttle and cook
Just enough so that it will have plenty
of time to finish cooking and become
e.nder after being put with the beuns
after they have been drained. Case
must be taken that the beans do not
cuak too long in the first water for
if they do they will cook to pieces before
the meat is quite done. Beana
cooked this way for a change ar#
quite agreeable?the pork being too
rich to have as ohen as deeirabl#
even in winter. Remember though, af
ter beans start tio cook tney anouiu
be brought to a good boil as speedily
as possible and keep them boiling.
Right, here lies the secret of cooking
beans soft. If cold water poured
over them or they are allowed bo stop
boiling they will invariably lie hard
no matter how luug they are cooked.
Season well with valt and pepper
. soon after the meat and beans are
put into the same kettle; when dona,
serve hot.?V. Leah Relieving.
SALT FOR CHOIJERA.
At a meeting of the Kansas Poultry
Association Mr. E. Har-\igton said:
"This fall Mrs. Harrington discovered
that the cholera had uipeared among
her chickens. I had h^?rd somewhere
that there is nothing ?? beat salt as
a disinfectant. I had.' he hired man
clean the henhouse as clean a?$ he
could, wash it out thoconiUb} with
just us strong brine as he could make,
and fill every crack and crevice with
the brine. Me did so. and we haten't
lost a hen since. I i rled the same
thing on my hogs when the cholera
broke out among them, and 1 am satisfied
that 1 saved a lot of thein and
prevented a farther spread of the disease."
Reflections of a Bachelor.
Shaking hands may signify friendship,
and then again it may indicate
a lockout.
A man would have to have a lot
ot money to feel there was any that
could lie spared for people who
haven't any.
Hot tempers eoo] off love belter
limn refrigerators.
11funny tbnt n girl always promises
to marry a man when she is doing
the whole tiling anyway.
Some people look on home as a
sort of coaling station.
Many a man gels behind because
he looks too far ahead.
A woman loves to pretend to hate
the 141 an she really loves.
It's a waste of time to make rules
for other people to live In.
The prick of a pin is enough te
make an empire insipid for a time.?
From the French.
A telegram from Athens states that
tin' expedition sent from tJeitba and
Leghorn to explore the bottom of tin
sea off" tin* eity of Athens for re
ma to of ancient Roman galleys ha?
already met with success. The diver?
have found a galev containing exceedingly
elegant umphorasof lift I
century work. The constructi<Ki ol
I kc ? * 111 v lvi'Avnnli: I ? ?
^ ,? | ? *nv.?ir? I fill III f>
of special interest, notably a hit hert t
unknown system of pins or bolts.
Suffer
in
I Silenct
57/ < I : ***: "j >
Diplomacy.
..Diplomacy la a matter of business j
though a polite business, hedged about |
by etiquette and forme and adorned j
with a few frills. Get bebtud the ling- |
erle and the lingo and go t? the heart i
Df the thing and you will llnd it very ,
much like the practice of law. The :
man with the best case ought to win, J
and when he doesn't and the man
with the poorer case does w in it Is because
he is the better man and knows
better how to present his case and
how to handle it. There is another
popular notion that the American diplomatic
establishment is weak because
cur representatives abroad contend
with men trained all their lives
in the diplomatic school. We have
no permanent diplomatic establishment.
Our ambassadors and ministers
abroad are picked from law offices,
editorial rooms and even counting
rooms. Usually they had no previous
acquaintance with diplomatic work.
Yet nine times out of ten they are
| more than a match for the men they
: have to deal with abroad. Breadth and
! strength of character, knowledge of
i human nature and experience Rained I
I in the rough and tumble of life count '
, for quite as much as the other fei- r
' low's dileilaute culture. It is the I
. Judgment of the best observers
1 throughout the world as the other felj
ful American lawyers and editors
easily hold their own against their
; competitor*.?Walter Wellniaa, in
| Success.
FAT>E1> TO A SHADOW. .
Worn Down by Five Years of Suffne
iag From Kidney Complaint.
Mrs Remethe Myers, of 180 Boutk
Tenth 9t., lronton, O., says: "1 have
i worked bard in my tiino and have
been exposed again
and again to changes
-]B of-1 weather. 'It is no
J ^|MI wonder my kidneys
Rave out and 1 went
!&. all to pieces at. last,
iff For Ave yeoio 1 was
fading away and
W Anally so weak that
I for six months 1 could not get out of
i the house. 1 vas nervous, restless
and sleepless at night, aud larae and
sore in the morning. Sometimes everything
would whirl aud bliir before
me. i bloated so badly 1 could not
wear .tight clothing, ana had to put
on shoes two sizes larger thun usual.
( The urine was disordered and pas- |
: ..... . - "
rourn ?em uieauiuny irequeut. I I
pot help from the first box of Dotn .t !
l?Ulnoy Pills, however, and by the !
time I had taken four boxes the pain '
aud bloating were pone. I bnve been i
In pood health ever Bince."
Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a
box. Fosler-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
N. Y.
Tli? Psultrf lard '
Is a Monthly Magazine published in
| the interest of Poultry. You should |
j have it. Send 2.">o to The Poultry j
^ nrd, ('hurlotte, N. P., for a whole |
year'* subscription.
| 1
A great man must he happy is a j
j state of slavery as well as in a state |
| of freedom.?Plato.
I FITS,St.Vitn&'DancerNervoun Diseases per- j
munently cured by Dr. Kline's (treat Nerve ,
Restorer. RJ trial l?ottle and treatise free.
1 Dr. H. R. Kline. IaL.tttl ArehSt.. Pliilu.. Pa. !
HIS REASONT.
Soloracn explained bis maple carpet, j
"It doesu't show if 1 forget to wipe j
| my feet," he announced.
Considering the number of Mrs. S.'s,
this was indeed an advantage.? Harper's
Bazar.
STILL ALEUT.
It was In tjungle restaurant.
' Hie leopard had been drinking and
; the waller was trying to take advau;
iage of that circumstance.
None of that Mr. Monk!" yelled
I the feline vigorously. "The leopard
may not be able to change Ids spots,
but let me tell you that he Is fully
j competent to spot his change."?Lou!
ri?r Journal.
So. 38- 06.
| "WIN CHE.
J REPEATING SHC
arc strong shooters, strong
so inexpensive that you w
| to use one in any kind
ft They are made 10, 12 ai
I A FAVORITE OF AMERiCA^
$ Sold Evorywher
suffer every month In si
pair. The ailments pe<
should receive prompt I
Irregular functions, fallin)
follow the example of th
ands of women who 1
been relieved or cured,
^ take Wine of Cardut.
i s 1
I
j..-JLiu.! iilUWjffi'lf1 j'I'l" '' rapfr"
k
?#
A LOCAL MANAGER WANTED.
An Independent Iifcome Assured.
We are g%lng to place at once a local
manager In every town or county
In 'he United States. We want men
and women ot character, tact and
perseverance to represent us. The
reward le complete independence and
a remuneration most generous. Our
proposition is without exception the
most liberal and best paying one ever
offered capable, ambitious men or
women. You can secure at once a
steady and assured income. Previous
experience is not necessary. All you
need is confidence in your ability-.
We have a straight, clean-cut moneymaker.
It Is the kind of a moneymaker
that you have been looking
for. There is no limit to the income
that you can make. We want to
hear from every man or woman who
desires to secure a regular income
ana are willing to make money. Wo
have just what you want and can
start you at once. Write us to-day
before others secure your district.
Address CIRCF L. ATT ON. No. 1S2
Main street, Buffalo, N. Y.
From saying to doing is a long way
- From tlie Itul an.
worsTform of eczema
Klnck Splotches All Oeer ! "?< r? Afl'celcd
rtrla NowH Inr as Kt*r? Cured l?y
the Cut Intra Knnfdlri.
"About tour year# ago 1 wai ntilicted
with black aplotches all over my (ncc aud
a few covering my body, which produced
a severe itching irritatiou, and which
caused me a great deal ot a .novanre and
suffering, to so:h an ekient that 1 visa
forced to call in two ot the .eading phy iciana
ot my town. Atter .. thorough examination
of the dreaded complaint they
announced it to be skin eczema in ita
worst form. Ahey treated in* for the
same for :dd lea-.h ot cnc yen?, but the
treatment did me np good. Firally roy
husban . purchased a stt of **.,e Calient a
Pifmrdisi, snd after u*,n, the contents ot
the tirst bottle of Cnticura ltesolvent in
connection wiih tie Cuticura h'osp and
Ointment, j,be breaking out entirely
stopped. 1 continued the use of .he Cuticura
Remedies f-r six mo..ths, and after
that every spietrb *. a* entirely gone aud
the affected partes were Icit av clear as
ever. The l?ncur* Remedies not only
cured me ol that ccadful dise-sc, eczema,
hut other c^mp-'-cate-* tr tbles as well,
i.ixzie K. Sledge. 540 Tones Ave.. Selma.
Ala. Jot. 1905."
A woman's i'aitb in a mini is often
?iue to his lack of faith in himself.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
t eethiug. softens thogumH, riHluovsintlamnuttion,
allnys pain,cures wind colic, -'Rett bottle
Hardly anything costs less than
good manners, hut there is mighty
little t;? he had.?New York Pres.
CAPUDiNE
it acta imni?dHu.iy?
I .11 fcf ?ou foal Ita affes'ta In It
mintuaa. Van don't
INDIGESTION and
APiniTV waak to know luaood It-ursa
AUIUI11 atAD tcait ai.no t?
ranofiag tka cauaa. It cant*.
HOLD UP?]
andcorwirferj j
</l( pommel b
\ brandJSJLICKEH, S
lntE ALL w
^ V ^V^S^waterproofI
CLOTHING.!
'\Jf Is madr of thr btst B
Jn\ vl milfriib.inKttkir/tllovi H
r\ if kitty fluawntftitrd 10M fe> H
^ j rrlit&fdfaStrs r,rr/whfrtg
H V *" iTICHTXJTHE ^
' 3IGN0FTHEn5HK
W. *SH IttW TOWW OWUlin( o.'tia AJTOWH c* H
_ life I MONARCH STUMP
Pi)LLE?sr?:v
A?> (Jj IVrl Ib UlHuirlrr.
^W'r ? J <Iu?r?nl? *<! for IJ nilni'iii*
log* I'toc.. aU'r*. Monarch rui.tx r Cu.l^ino I rrr.i*.
C.IRll For Yottr Home. Form. '1't mi boo
l.undi or BailDfu If rnu wxtqi-lc* min?r,
ll?l your proparlv wiihnia Ciw#p-r?UoB ilo.^Mlowork.
1 have dt ll'ablo Homo**' <! I 1 .And* f..r
f o. Addrraa S J*.SIt AWKl.l. U-at P.ltllc Bl.ro. N C.
55F3Thompson's Eye Water i
mWm
yrcuNS MM
y\y made and ftfs'vB
on't be afraid jf
of weather.
ad 16 gauge.
I SPORTSMEN
i??mm\i'pii ii imir1""?bir ^
mmammmmmmmammhh
isands of W
Hence, tortures that would drive
Millar to women are not only p
treatment before they grow worse
j feelings, headache, side ache, d
: WINE OI
l OF U
*
t
\ f,~
1 ; ifaME
j
- ^ V
WOMEN'S NIOIJCT
i ii I
SUFFERINGTHESUN6PENALTY
Health Thus Lost Is RiStOSStl by LydlsK.
Plnkham's VegrtsWt Oomyonad.
Bow many women do 70a know who*
aro perfectly well and itronft We
hear every day the same story over and
over again. " I do nob feel well; 1 am
o tired all the time ! "
More than likely you speak the snuiw
wonlsyourself, and no doubt you feel
far from well. The cause may bo easily
traced to some derangement of the female
organs which manifests itself in
depression of spirits, reluctance to go
anywhere or do anything1, backache,
bearing-down pains, flatulenov, nerv- 1
onsnesH, sleeplessness, or other fe- 1
male weakness. 1
These symptoms are hut warning* 1
that there is danger ahead, aud untrsa 1
heeded a life of suffering or u sorioua I
operation is the inevitable result. I
The never-failing remedy forall theae I
symptoms is Lydia K. Finkham'a Vcg- 1
etabie Compound. 1
Mlsa Kate McDonald of Woodbridge, 1
N. J., writes : |
Dear Mrs. Pinkhauv \
" Restored health has meant so much to iu? 1
that i cannot help from telling about it for I
the Sake of other suffering women. I
" For a long tirue I suffered untold taosy (
with a female trouble and irregulari&ie*. I
which made me a physical wreck, and no one 1
thought I would lecover, but Lydia R Pink- I
haul's Vegetable Compound lias entirely g
cured me. and made me well and strong, and
1 feel it ray dut v to tell other suffering womea
what a apiendid medicine it ia."
For twenty-five years Mrs. Pinkhsni,
daughter-in-law of Lydia E Pinkham,
iiaa under her direction, aud since her
decease, been advising sick women free
of charge. Her advice is free and
always helpful. Address, Lynn, Mata.
^
Ih K AAA BANK DEPOSIT
vlj vJa vF R.R. FarePnld. HotaiTikse
7 500 FREE COfJR^ES
wmmmmmmmmm RoarH *? rn?? M/
GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSIMESS COLLEGE, Macon. Cfc
W. L. DOUGLAS
*3.50 ?Sl*3.00 Shoes
EST IN THE WORLD
W.LDouglas $4 Gilt Edge
cannotbe equalledatany prlf*e /f,
W. I. Doii|(ln?' Jol>- / wi \
MnK Moms 1* the most I Rfr/ * " |
coiupleiv in lhl< country I Ifc, t JM 1
Snad/or Utttakiy I _ I
SHOES FOI^VEH^MJYAT ALL PSICEi
Man's Shoes. $6 to 81 BO. Jloys' Shoes. $3
totl.US. Women's Shoos. 84.OO to 81.63.
M.?.' ' 6c Children's Shoes. $8.26 to vl.OO.
Try IV. I.. 1>?ii|{Inh Women's, Mlaiwo .iu4
Child run's sIiooh ; for style, fit and iiv*r
1 hoy excel other mnlics.
If 1 could take you Into my large
factories at Brockton, Mass..and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold lliclr shape, fit belter.
wear longer, ana arc or greatc* *aiue
than any other make.
Whecucf you live, .vow can obtain VV. I..
Douglas ?hoe'v. Mis name and price is sinopni
on the bottom, which protects you agulobt bi|[h
price* and interior shoe*. 'Takn no tubsti'
tute. A*k >onr dealer tor W. L. l)out' nMiot*
and imhl upon having them.
Fast C.'/i.r Curlrt used; theij will not witur < <ty.
Write tor (llutt: ruled Catalog :>t Fall St?!< .*.
W. I.. DOUOLAS, Dept. t5. Brockton. Mn*!.
You Cannot
I all Inflamed, uK crated and catarrhal t on'
ditionsof the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused
| by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by aitnply
dosing the stomach.
But vou surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
????? ????? j
w hich destroys the disease germs,'checks
} discharges, stops pain, anil heals the
I inflammation and soreness.
I i'axtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills evrr
j produced. Thousands of women testify
' to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
j Send for Free Trial Bex
1 THE K. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mu*.
vruu^ju ?
a man to the edge of des- I
>ainful but dangerous and I
i. If you suffer from pain, I
lizziness, tired feeling, etc., I