Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, October 09, 1913, Image 9
;
6IRIS! 6IRLS! TRY IT,
BEAUTIFY YOUR HRIR
Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxuriant
and Remove Dandruff?Real
Surprise for You.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy.
abundant and aDDears as soft, lus
trous and benutiful as a young girl's
after a "Danderine hair cleanse." Just
try this?moisten a cloth with a little
Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at once.
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invigorates
the scalp, forever stopping itching
and falling hair.
But what will plense you most will
be after a few weeks' use when you
will actually see new hair?fine and
downy at first?yes?but really newhair?growing
all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of it, surely get a L\r> cent bottle of
Knowlton's Danderine from any store
and just try it. Adv.
Carbines for Cavalry.
A proposition to convert the new
Springfield rltle into a carbine for the
use of the mounted service is being
considered by the ordnance officers of
the army. The plan is to shorten the
barrel of the riflo four inches, and by
so doing to reduce itB weight by two
pounds, thus making it much easier
to handle by the mounted troops. The
sights also are to be adjusted to moot
the shortening of the barrel.
The decrease in the muzzle velocity.
it is claimed, will not be so great
as to interfere with its effectiveness
up to a range to 1,500 yards. The
ordnance department had been asked
to make a report on the proposition,
and the cavalry board will take It up
and include It In its report on the reorganization
of the cavalry and on
the new equipment.
MRS. RIVERS
DISCLOSES SECRET
Matter Didn't Prove Experiment
After All, and She Now
Makes It Public.
Mineral Springs, Ark.?In a letter
from this place, .Mrs. J. M. Rivers says:
"If it had not been for Cardui, the
woman's tonic, no doubt 1 would have
been in my grave.
1 was sick all of the time for 10
years, and took medicines constantly.
1 suffered terribly. At last, 1 decided
I would just try Cardui on my own
hook, and kept it a secret. It wus-certainly
a God-send to me. Since taking
it, I have no pain whatever, feeling
good, and can wrestle with my 16-yearold
son. in fact. I don't feel over 16
myself. Am us happy as a lark. When
I began taking Cardui I only weighed
101 lbs. Now I weigh 117'^ lbs., and
am going to continue taking Cardui
until 1 weigh 135.
I just can't say enough for Cardui,
and I believe if all women who suffer
from womanly troubles would take it,
there, would be more happy homes."
Using Cardui is no experiment. It
has stood the most severe of all tests?
the test of time. Cardui has been i\i
UBe for over half a century, and in this
time has benefited more than a million
women. It is composed of purely vege
table ingredients, which have been
found to build up the vitality, tone up
the nerves, and strengthen the womanly
constitution.
That it has helped others is the best
of proof that it. will help you. Try
Cardui.
N. B.? Write to- Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
Ladies' Adviaory Dept . Chattanooga. Tenn.. for
Jtttfu.-tiont on your case and 64-page book,
clome Treatment for Women," sent in plain
Wrapper. Adv.
Turn About Is Fair Play.
"A famous tenor," said Giulio Gattl('asazza,
"was invited one night to
i dinner by a Chicago trust magnate.
The dinner was superb, but at its end
the trust magnate asked the tenor to
sing. This, of course, was as bad as
Inviting a doctor to dinner and then
asking for a free prescription. So
the tenor politely declined. The trust
magnate, however, insisted. After
five or t -n minutes of this, the tenor
said, with a laugh#
" 'Oh, well, every one to his trade. !
\et'\ me see you pick a pocket. Then
I'll sing ' "
"flit MM.ARIA, (11 II I.S. KKVKR
Corns and l.a (.Irippe take Klixir Itnlirk,
? u preventative and remedy.
"I have used 'Kllxlr llahek' for four
years for Malaria, and found It all that
is claimed f'-r it. Without it I would
be oblige 1 to change my residence, ns
I can not take quinine in any of its
forms."-?J. M iddh-tnn. Four-Mile Run.
Va. Kllxlr llnbrk T?0 rents, all druggists
or by Parcels Post prepaid from
Kloczewskl & Co.. Washington. D. C.
Alexandria.
Alexandria is Egypt's principal port
and commercial center According to
statistics taken In 1908, Alexandria
occupies third place among Mediter
ranean ports. Twenty-one ocean nav- '
igation companies maintain a regular
scheduled service at Alexandria.
noKS Yot.n hrad ariikr
Try Hiclcs* CAPUDINR. It's liquid? pleasant
to take -effect?tin mediate?kOihI to prrtrnt
Hick Headaches and Nervous Headaches also.
Your money back if not satisfied. 10c., 26o. and
>0c. at medicine stores. Vlv.
Important Ouestion.
'"Woman," growled the villain, "the
crime is on your own head."
"Ia It on straight?" anxiously demanded
the villainess
"BIG DITCH" NOW s
ALMOST COMPLETE :
" *"WW" WW-.-- ?? * ? (J
c
Removal of Gamboa Dike Means *
End of Work Is Near. 18
11
WATERS OF OCEANS MEET ;
| 11
Firat Steps Art Taken Toward De- P
struction of Big Embankment p
Which Holds-^Situn Lake Out R
of Culebra Cut. e
/
Colon, Panama, Oct. 1.?The climax t
if nine years of untiring work on the v
part of the men who have been build- v
Ing the Panama canal came today
when the waters of Gatun lake were
permitted to run for tho first time J
Into the Culebra cut. This simple
operation marked the virtual completion
of the great isthmian waterway.
The water was permitted to flow
into the cut today through four 26- '
Inch pipes extending through the
Gamboa dike, which lias held the
waters of the lake back front the cut. .
This was done in order that there
may be enough water In the cut* to
prevent any damage when the dike Is
finally removed.
The final destruction of the big dike
is scheduled for October 10, when
charges of dynamite placed in holes
already drilled in the dike will be ex- ;
ploded. The explosion of these
charges will not completely destroy
the dike, but will weaken it and loos- |
en the dirt so that the force of the
waters from Gatuan lake will carry It
away. Steam shovels will remove the
remnants of the dike, leaving an open
passageway from ocean to ocean.
Canal Really Complete Now.
Although the cnnal will not be officially
declared completed for some
unie, anu tne rornial opening of the I
waterway to the commerce of the 1
world more than a year distant, the I
canal engineers look upon the de- i
struction of the Gamboa dike as mark- t
lug the real completion of the canal. 1
I The hlg engineering feats have all t
been accomplished, the excavation I
work practically has been completed. I
i
*
jrfj
'lhia picture gives a view of the gi
filling tho Panama canal, which is alino:
ahips. To look at the picture one wou
Tho embankments that llank the chani
tho Miraflores locks in the distance are
ing of the canal takes place. This Is
tlie present time which shows the can
of the big waterway connecting the A
and the great locks have been con- ,
structed. Tho work that remains to j
be done is largely detail, and is but :
child's play as compared with that
which has been done. More dirt is
to be removed from the channel, but
this will be done with suction dredges
floating upon the waters of the canal.
There still remain somo finishing
touches to be placed upon the locks,
hut this work will take comparatively
little time and presents no engineering
difficulties such as have been en
countered In tho past..
The fact that the canal stands practically
complete morw than a year before
the time originally set as the
dato for its completion is one of the
remarkable features of the work
When Count do Pesseps, the great
French engineer, abandoned his efforts
to build the Panama canal after
eight years of labor, he had scarcely
made a beginning upon the gigantic
task. In nine years, tho American engineers.
starting almost at the same
point as do l^-sseps. for the latter's
work was of little value to the Americans,
have virtually completed tho ?
iitwhirtu Winif Wtltftfl Hit* u nrl/ v.'?u r
started tho world scoffed at the idea ?
that it could be completed within the t
time limit set. but hats are now off i
to the American army engineers who ] \
have more than kept their word, de- t
To Avoid Counterfeiting. ' (
In the production of their notes, t
the Hank of Kngland authorities' t
chief aim Is to issue a note which is f
impossible for anybody to counter- \
felt. Toward this end. all the parts \
of tho note?the paper, tho water- t
mark, the ink. the engraving, tho i
printing?are prepared and done in a
special, and", as far as possible, secret
manner. At tho mills whore the
pnper is manufactured the most strin- t
gent precautions are taken to pre- i
vent any or the paper being stolen i
A
plte unforeseen difficulties that bave
eset them at every hand.
Goethals to Make Final Test.
The first vessel to pass through the
anal probably will be a boat of the
sthmian canal commission. Col.
leorge \V. Goethals, chairman of the
ommission and chief engineer of the j
anal, and his principal assistants. :
"he final voyage through the canal is |
cheduled for some time during this j
lonth. Within another month it is ,
xpected the waters in Oatun lake j
rill have risen high enough to bring
lie waters in the entire canal up to i
he deep water level required for the
assage of the largest ships.
It 1b said that hb long ago as the ;
arly part of August, assurances were
i >i-ti ii nriini^iuil U111C111II) null 11 nil* i
mergency should arise, the entire :
itinntic battleship fleet covlld be put .
hrougli the canal into Pacific waters I
irithin GO days from that date. The
i-ork has been hurried with that end j
a view, it Is said, as no emergency
las existed, but tills assurance is an
ndication of the belief of the englleerh
that their work is now practicaly
finished.
Culebra Cut Caused Trouble.
The excavation of the Culebra cut.
nto which the water lias just been
urned, has been one of the engineertig
feats connected with the building
if the canal, and has caused the in;ineers
tnoro trouble than any oth r
portion of the big "ditch." To
"ol. 1>. 1). Gaillard, the engineer of
he cetnral division, is given the
redit for carrying this portion of the
vork through to a successful tormina
ion.
The disastrous slides in the cut
vero discouraging to the engineers,
lullifying in a few hours the work of
tiany weeks, but Colonel Gaillard and
lis assistants have kept untiringly at
heir work, and at last have comiuerm!
the treacherous banks of the deep
rut. The engineers believe that the
inngor of slides will he eliminated
now that the water lias been turned
nto the cut.
A little more than a month ago the
jiant steam shovels finished their
vork in the Culebra cut. Since that
lime the workmen have been busy
removing the shovels, the railroad
racks and other machinery used in
ho excavution work. There is still
tome dirt to be removed from the cut
before the channel is finished, hut
Lhis work will be done by suction
is
SS'' ~
?? i ?
0
reat expanse of water now gradually
ft ready for the admission of th<> hlg
Id think that tho canal was finished,
lei, the broad expanse of water and
Just as they will be when the openthe
only photograph received up to
al as it will appear at the opening
tlantic and Pacific oceans.
iredges floating on the waters of the
ianal. and will not Interfere with navgation
of the waterway by such boats
IS mnv tin nltnu.oil ? ........ ? ?
__ w jiiinn llirougU.
Immense Artificial Lake Created.
(latun lake, the waters of which are
tow flowing into the Culebra rut, 1b
he pivotal point ."Jiout which the enlire
canal systeifi revolves, and the
reation of this lake, together with the
construction of (latun dam, constiuted
another great engineering feat
u the construction of tho canal,
latun lake Is an artificial body of
water covering about 104 square miles
>f territory and was created by the
lulldlng of the Immense (latun dam
ind the impounding of the w ild wa- j
era of t'hngres river. Heneath the
voters ??f (latun lake lies what a few
nonths ag<tr was the valley of the
'hagres, dotted with native villages
ind plantations. The channel of the
anal passes through this lake for a
listance of 24 miles with a width varyng
from f>00 to 1,000 feet.
A ? ll.~ ?l
..I ..I.- nuiiiM-ni fiHi <ir tiio lake i
h the Clatun dam, which is In reality
in artificial ridge more than a mile
ind a half long. Figures alone give
in adequate Idea of the magnitude of
his dam. Nearly half a mile wide at
ts base, about 400 feet wide at the
vater surface, and 10b feet wide at
he top, the dike which many engi
)f course, there have been many at- I
empted robberies, but only once, in
he year ISf.2, were thieves successul
in obtaining any of tho paper.
,'ery shortly afterward forged notes
vere in circulation. The thieves did
lot enjoy the triumph long, for withn
a short time they were captured.
Reading Between the Lines.
To get the good of the library In
he school of life you must bring into
t something better than a mero book
sh taste. You must bring tho power
\
neer6 predicted would never withstand
the rush of the Chagres' waters.
is admitted now to De so strong
that nothing short of an earthquake
such as has never been known in the
Central American region can harm
it. The Gatun dam. Gatun lake and
the Culebra cut, so gigantic are the
proportions of each, dwarf the other
engineering works of the canal that |
in themselves have challenged the ad- I
miration of the world.
World Gives Goethals Credit.
To Col. George Goethals. chairman
of the Isthmian canal commission. !
chief engineer of the commission and
governor of the canal zone, the world I
will give the credit for the successful
completion of the Panama canal. Colonel
(Jocthals could not have accomplished
his task without the assistance
of such men as Col. H. F.
Hodges. Lieut. Col. David Du B. Balllard
and Lieut. Col. William L. Sibert.
army engineers, who have had charge
of various phases of the work, but
Colonel Goethals Is recognized as the
real builder of the canal.
Cnder Colonel Goethals the greater
pnrt of the $.176,000,000 which the
canal will have cost when it is completed
has been spent. It has been by
far the costliest engineering project
I In the world. Nearly three-fifths of a
I billion dollars has been spent in digging
a 40-mile "ditch." This means
. that the Panama canal has cost the
I I'nlted States $10,000,000 a mile.
Over $16,000,000 of the total amount
spent has been used to make the canal
zone habitable and sanitary. It has
been suggested that this Is an enormous
amount of money to spend 1n
cleaning tip a plnce in which few people
will reside permanently, but the
engineers say that the sanitation of
the canal zone was the chief factor in
making the canal a reality. The failure
of the French has been attributed
to a large extent to the fact that
the workmen could not survive in the
fever and pest ridden country.
The building of the great locks
which raise a vessel to a height of 87
feet above sea level at one end of
the canal and lower it the same distance
at the other end. has been in
charge of two of Colonel Goethals' |
assistants. Colonel Hodges and Lieutenant
Colonel Sibert. Colonel Hodge's
work In installing the immense lockgates
that form so important a part
| of the operating machinery of the
' canal, and Ills abilitv to overcome nil
' obstacles had lt d Colonel Gnethuls to
call hint n genius. The building, poising
and operation of the lock gates
constitute one of the delicate problems
of lock canal construction, and
the proper handling of this problem
j has been Colonel Hedge's contribution
to the work of construction of
' the canal
Lieutenant Colonel Sibert has had
| charge of the building of the great
| dam and locks at Gatun, in addition
to other duties. Ho saw long, active
service in the Philippines, and
; he is known in the army as a lighter
as well as an engineer. His tighting
qualities have enabled him to
1 carry through the great work of
which lie lias had charge 111 the
j canal zone.
Realize Dream of Centuries.
Through the work of these men?all
J of them members of Uncle Sam's
; lighting body the United States bus
been able to attain what has been in
trutli the dream of centuries, in nine
years these men have carried through
an undertaking that was lirst thought
of several hundreds of years ago.
There is evidence that the idea of an
isthmian canal was born as early as
' the sixteenth century, for history records
the fact that the Inquisition
declared such a project to alter the
face of the earth to be impious and
further discussion of the matter was
forbidden by Philip II. of Spain, whose
reign began in l&bti. More than a century
later a Scotchman named Patterson
revived the scheme, established u
colony on the shores of the isthmus,
and made a crude survey of the route. '
The United States government first
took definite action looking toward
the construction of an isthmian canal
in 1S24, when the senate voted for
the building of a Nicaraguan canal.
An expedition was sent to Nicaragua
to make an investigation, and reported
that the canal could be constructed
for $25,000,000, hardly one twentieth
of the amount that the Panama
canal will have cost when completed.
De Lesseps First to Dig.
I The matter rested until after the
i Civil war. when negotiations for a
i canal commission were entered into
| by the United States government Mefore
anything had been accomplished
j the concession for a Panama canal
I had been given to laiclen Napoleon
Manaparte Wyse, a Frenchman. He
! organized a company, which sold out
later to the financiers associated with
Ferdinand de lesseps. The company
organized with de Is'sseps at iti, head
was the first one to actually begin operations
on the isthmus. For eight
years de Lesseps struggled manfully .
against the greatest odds that man
ever was called upe;i to face.
Such was the h'.story of the isthmian
canal project for some 200 or
ten years, until the day in 1 !?04 when
Uncle Sam undertook the task.
In nine years the dream of the centuries
has been realized.
to read between the linos, behind the
words, beyond the horizon of the
printed page Philip's question to tho
chamberlain of Ethiopia was crucial:
"Knderstandest thou what thou read?st?"
1 want hooks not to pass the i
time, but to fill it with beautiful !
thoughts and images, to enlarge my
world, to give me new friends in the
spirit, to purify my Ideals and make
them clear, to show me the local color
of unknown regions and the bright
stars ot universal trutb Henry Van
Dyke.
I
LOSING APPETITE FOR NUTS
Writer Bemoan* the Passing of the
Ancient Fondness That Made
Winter Evenings a Joy.
The old butternut, a very rich and
fragrant nut of the olden time, has almost
disappeared. Very few people of
the present generation have ever tasted
a butternut. The black walnut Is
becoming fewer, and in a generation
hence it will hardly be known. And
yet it Is a precious nut, full of goodness
and rare taste. Those old panB
of cracked walnuts, in the long winter
evenings, made up a family Joy
that has never been surpassed. The
hickory nuts, especially the good old
shellbarks, figured prominently in
those nutty days, and the chestnuts,
too, including the hazel nuts and
beech nuts; but they are all growing
scarcer and have sadly strayed away
from the human heart.
Thrt twkoa w to 1?" ????
- ? v> pvvwu 10 WW 111 IlifC, lilt" ^ I cai
American nut. There are thousands
of trees cultivated In the south, and
the nut has become commercially Important.
Trees aro reported bearing
$200 to $.100 worth of nuts per acre
It is a rich nut, but quite too hard for
the novice to pick out the kernels.
There are. however, machines that do
the work perfectly. Hut, after all, for
rich, well-flavored and grand mouthfuls
of nut, give us the English walnut
Ohio State Journal.
All to the Good.
Over a cigarette and an iced drink
at the Knickerbocker club in NewYork
a certain clubman said to a
friend the other day:
"Well, where did you spend the
summer?"
"Had Nauheiui," was the reply.
"And you?"
"Naughty Newport," he answered.
Kor St'MMKn TIISADACHES
TMeks' CAl'tMtlNK In the best remedy?
in? matter what causes them?whether
from the bent, sitting In draughts, feverish
condition, etc. 10o.. 2Th- and M)e per
bottle ut medicine stores. Adv.
It Is.
"lie has money, health, position, influence?ah.
his should be a full life."
"Very, he does tank up considerable."
Urn.Wlnalon's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces intlammatiua.ullays
pain,cures wlud colic?>o a UitllcJW*
Some men never borrow trouble;
they buy it outright.
WHENEVER y_0U NEE
Amine
The Old Standard Grove's T
Valuable as a General Tonic
Drives Out Malaria, Enrich
the Whole System. For G
You know what you are taking when
as the lormula is printed on every label
tonic properties of yUININK and IRQ!
tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It has
Weakness, general debility and loss of i
Mothers and Hale, Sickly Children.
Relieves nervous depression and low s
purifies the blood. A True Tonic and
No family should be without it. (,uaran
W/JVCfi
The Model 1912 Wind
and handsomest repeatini
M weighs only about 5-}? pot
M because its metal parts throug
H It is a two-part Take down, v
K operate and the action works
I unknown in guns of other mal
Rj Send to WincktMltr kiptating Arms
1 THE EIGHT WRJCirr wr
VW.
L. DOl
*3ifi *4:
?\ gff?4.B? AND *5=?;
Mmh shoes
*VW FOR MEN AND WOMEf
auu-rsot*/; BEST BOYS SHOES In the WORLL
9'J-OO. t2 6Q and $3 00.
/V The Urgoit makers ol
t Men'? >3-50 and $4 OC
flit ' shoes in the world
' VS A*U your dooler to show ;
VtL W. I., lloiiglus 93.M), SM.O
MtM"5 \i. \jli 04.BO Shoes. Just ?* kiio<I I
OUTham It and wear n? other mol
Ak ~<yS^v. ?tho only difference Is
ai ujip'sv leather*. styles and nIi
f ' ""vk iJi If you cnoid visit IV.
f rles at ft roe k toil, Man
v.' ' how rnrofullv W. I.. I>
' 4s you unnlil then iiiidcrstnm
1).^, l4*l ?? look better, li
'*1 i Vr-'- ?> 4Wk longer thou any other in;
^>!n Vt " w- l~ I V'liR'ts shoes are not
"^Pt V.. direct from the factory unit
? Nhoes for nrcry tnemhorof
I'srcel iv.s, ooslnirr free. 1
ITAKC NO "It WlTl .how T'
I AKt NO 1 " untl why you paii uv?i ui
SUBSTITUTE W, f. notlOl.AW .
IV.rlifi Hookkcohtnjf, Shorthand nml (ho l uoiinurr
enrod U'nrhi r> I inn of (ho oldnit tDd mo. I relit
Urrriuhoro, Nui'Ui Cttrolliu., fur lofurotAUoi
li^^JWALARIAl
on receipt of price. Arthur
WOMAN A
GREAT SUFFERER
Tells How She Was Restored
To Health by Lydia E.
Pinkh&m's Yegeta>>
ble Compound.
Grayville, I1L?"I was a great sufferer
of female complaints for a year
f>H.:i}iiSjg;;||||}uiJHat;inilHi;ill!BTf and I got nothing
that helped me un;
| til I began taking
Ijijlf ii Lydia E. Pinkham's
I Vegetable ComjjfXsr
iii p011"^- *was i"*sj
| 1jjl! ular and had cramps
ijiiliv Mm is ij 80 bad that I had to
Ij ji go to bed- Now I
1b?ve better health
' rf I ? f Iff than I have had for
I V I J \ f V years * cannot
J 1?1 speak too highly of
your medicine."?Mrs. Jessie Schaak,
413 Main St., Grayville, 111.
Case of Mrs. Tully.
Chicago, 111.?"I toko pleasure in
writing to thank you for what Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has
done for me. I suffered with such awful
periodic pains, and had a displacement,
and received no benefit from the
j doctors. 1 was advisod to take Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and
am now as well as ever."?Mrs. WitI
ham TULL.Y, 2062 Ogden Avenue
I Chicago, I1L
If you have the slightest, doubt
that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound will help you, write
to Lv<lia e.PinkhftmMwllplni>riL
(confidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice.
Your letter will be opened,
rend and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
1 Foley Kidney Pills Relieve
promptly the suffering due to weak, in!
active kiilueys and painful bladder action.
! They offer a powerful help to nature
in building up the true excreting kidney
tissue, in restoring normal action
and in regulating bladder irregularities.
! Try them
^?sTH0MPS0H,8<t:^:^u7rJ3
<3?eye water if-raacw:
JOHN LTIlOMrKON 80N8ACO.,Troy.X.Y.
0
IN!G - TAKE GROVE'S
asteless chill Tonic is Equally
because it Acts on the Liver,
ics the Blood and Builds up
irrown People and Children.
you take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic"
showing that it contains the well knows
S. It is as strong as the strongest bitter
no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever,
appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing
Removes Biliousness without purging,
pirits. Arouses the liver to action and
sure appetizer. A Complete Strengthener.
teed by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c.
WCTVZ)
GAUGE ^
in plating Shotgun I
tester is the lightest, strongest I
g shotgun on the market. It H
inds. yet it has great strength, I
;hout are made of nickel steel. I
/ithout loose parts, is simple to H
with an ease and smoothness I
ices. See one at your dealer's or I
Co., Hetp Haven, Coon., for circular. jfl
CKICL &TEEI, REPEATER. J
coming; ttft.OO U> 97 f><"< jj
lie price. Shoe* In nil j(|BP'S^5|f
inpea to unit fvrrylKMly./???r^^Ry
I.. I ion ^ live laige f?c|ii.M?y|l'^Py A
?., and nee for yournclfl#'^^
oiiglnH ihora arc until c, ^^ffSKrJgk
I trh.v they are warrantnl f&fC'
?lil flieir atiapn und we#r
ike for the price.
for *Mlr in your rlclnlty. order I af| t'.'J^WOMDrt
r?rr ilm middleman'* profit, f/5* . jkllin.eioa
the fnnillr. at all |.rtee?, by riimnf
Yrilefor IllaatrateU
>11 bow to order by mall, # ,' .WJs'a, ,
one, on your footwear.
- HrorUlon, Maaa. on the bottom.
In'. Kmticbea. Oouraaa by mall. Able nnd experlible
arboola In I be (tale. Write the Hrhnol at
t before uUuf a boalnaaa eoarae. Mo racial loan.
^TO^C^lJS n
will be sent b^^Psreels Post Mmjl