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BROOKLYN DIVINES SUN
the SERMON.
PAY 4
Sahject: “The Oarsmen Defeated."
Tvrr “The men rowed hard to bring
it to the land, but they could not, where
cried unto “ a Lord.”—Jonah
for* t hey
i i’ Vavieatk® w- 14 - in the Meditteranean Seaal
I l perilous, especially in early
I-a propelled partly so by
I V>«ie ls were sail
I I l -ably by oar. When, by reason of great
of weather, it was necessary to reef
I thBcanvss or haul it in, then the vessel was
1 I lately r«ntror‘ dependent hirt of upon tbem the oars, either sometimes side
Y on of
I iLgnr ,he vessel- harbor You with would such a not oraft venture outside
■Lie as my text
Jonah sailing in. bnt be had not mueh
Kjjoice KLg the of Lord, vessels. and when He was a running Is running away
man
Kfffty from had the told Lord Jonah be to has to to run Nineveh very fast.
Qod go to
rresch about the destruction of that city.
Jonah disobeyed. That always makes rough
•wider, whether in the Mediterranean, or the
a Atlantic, or the Pacific, or the Caspian Sea.
Efpisa very them, hard when thing%to the brow scare of sailors. the vessel I
haveseen under water, and they
W n« almost wero
talking the deck knee deep in the surf, and
the small boats by the side of the vessel had
been crushed as small ns kindling wood,
whistling as though nothing had happened,
hut the Bible says that these marinersof
vhom I speak were frightened.
That which sailors call “a lump of n sea”
has become a mad blinding, wind deafening, swampfng
furv. How the can get at the
miter, and the water can get at the wind,
von do not know unless you have been
spectators. I have In my house a piece of
the sail oi a. That ship, no larger than the palm of
my band. piece of canvas was all that
■was leit ofthe largest sail of theshlp Greece,
that went into the storm 200 miles off New¬
foundland. Oh, what a night that was! I
suppose it was in some such storm as this
that Jonah was caught.
He knew that the tempest was on his ac¬
count. and he asked the sailors to throw him.
overboard. Sailors are a generous hearted
race, and they resolved'to make their es¬
cape. il possible, without resorting to such
extreme measures. The sails are of no use,
and so they lay hold on their oars. I* see
the long bank of shining blades on either
side tho vessel. Ob, bow they did pull, the
bronzed But seamen, rowing as they the lay back into the
oars! on sea to very differ¬
ent from rowing the upon skip a river, the and aa the ves¬
sel hoists oars wave and miss
the stroke, and the tempest laughs to soora
the flying paddles. It that to of no use, no use.
There oomes a wave orashes the last,
most and sweeps the oarsmen from their
glares and tumbles everything in the con
naion of impending shipwreok, or, as my
text has it, “The men rowed hard to bring
it to the land, but they oould not, wherefore
they cried unto the Lord.”
This scene to very suggestive to me, and I
pray God I may have grace and strength
enough to represent it intelligently to you.
Years ago I preached a sermon on another
phase of this very subject, and I got a letter
from Houston, Tex., the writer saying that
the reading of that And sermon I in London had
led him to God. received another let¬
ter from South Australia, saying that the
reading of that sermon Christ. in Australia had
brought several souls to And then, I
thought why not now take another phase of
the same subject, in for perhaps which that is God who
can raise power that sown if
weakness may now, through another phase
of the same who subject, bring salvation to the
people shall hear and salvation to the
people know who shall read. Men and women who
how to pray, lay hold of the Lord God
Almighty, and wrestle for the blessing.
Bishop Latimer would stop sometimes in
his sermon, in the midst of Hs argument,
and say, “Now, I will tell von a fable,” and
to-day I would like to bring the soene of the
text as an illustration of a most Important re¬
ligious truth. As those Mediterranean oars¬
men trying I tobring Jonah ashore were dis¬
comfited, have to tell you that they were
wot the only men who have broken down on
their the paddles Lord for and help. have I been obliged to , call
on want to say that the
unavailing efforts of those Mediterranean
oarsmen have a counterpart in the efforts we
an making and to their bring souls to the shore of
safety set feet on the Book of Agee.
You have a father or mother or husband or
wire or child or near friend who is not a
Christian. Then have been times when yon
have been in agony about their salvation.
A mlnisterot Christ, whose wife was dying
without any hands, hope in Jeeus, walked the floor,
wrung his cried bitterly and said, “I
believe I shall go insane, for I know she is
not prepared to meet God.” And then, may
have been days of tooknese in your house¬
hold, when you feared it woald be a fatal
sickness, face of the and doctor how closely he you examined In and the
as came sera
tinised the patient and felt the pulse, and
you followed him Into the next room and
said “Then isn’t any danger, is there, doc¬
tor?*' Aad the hesitation and the unoer
tainty of the reply made two eternities flash
before your vision. And then you went and
talked to the sick one about the (treat tuture.
Oh, there Are thoee here who have tried
to bring their friends to God! They
have been unable to bring them to the shore
of safety. They are no nearer that point
than they were twenty years ego. You think
you have got them almost to the shore, when
you are swept book again. What shall you
do? Put down but the I oar? do Oh, advise no, I do not
•dvtoe that, that you
appeal to that God to whom the Mediterra¬
nean ■tonne earsorea appealed—the and Gol whe oould
the tempest bring the ship in
Saf that el y there to the tms port! 1 be tell you. deal my friends,
got to a good of pray¬
ing before ouf families ate brought to Christ.
Ah, It is an awftil thing to have half a lease¬
hold oh oaoflde tho the line and the other part
of the houshold on other side of the fine!
Two veseels pact oa the ocean Af eternity,
dsnssihg to rhwtfght an 1 tho other to the
left—farther apart and farther apart—until
to be recognise! and there
two specks on the horizon, and then
they ore lost to sight forever!
that tho mnawsUlog eft
have a
mart in the efforts of are
Aing'to There bring our children to the shore of
ety- awrer.wer people so many tampta
as for young are now.
a literary aad the social tag sooth.
be against their spiritual entirety Into Christ
|ps to be driv. a almost from tho
tool and the pleasurable oon coarse, yet
Uhl Ws cannot think of going into
even without them. We do not went
tores this Bib wMfo they are tossing
l the waves of which temptation of them and away
m God. From could
, consent to ha eternally repented?
ouM it be the sou? Would it he the
Mbteii' Would h be the eldest? Would
ithe youngest? Would It be the
to veil and stout or tbs one that Is
Oh, I hear acme parent saying bring to
: “I have tried my beet to my
n to Christ. I have laid hold of the
and I have
the heat,
spalled lor
the of the text and cry
God. We
for ehfldrm,
he had tried US
six to
d^utire. Thre beret
Sstsw? i pnren tad ftftl<! r “O God, tsso
Load startHngly
id in a few weeks
I O*.
There are parents who are almost discour¬
aged about their children.- Where is your
son to-night? He has wondered off perhaps
to the ends of the earth. It seems as if he
.
cannot get far enough away from your
Christian counsel. What does he care about
the furrows that come to yoar brow, about
the quick whitening of the hair, about the
fact that your back begins to stoop with the
burdens? Why, he would not care much if
he heard yon were dead! The black-edged
letter that brought the tidings he would put
in the same package with other letters tell¬
ing the story of his shame. What
are you going to do? Both
paddles broken at the middle of
the blade, how can you pull him ashore? I
throw you one oar now with which t believe
you can bring him Into harbor. It Is the
glorious promise, “I wili be a Sod to thee
and to thy seed niter thee.” Ob, broken¬
hearted father and mother, you have tried
everything else: now make an appeal for
the help and omnipotence of the covenant
keeping God. and perhaps at your next
Day. family gathering—perhaps on Thanksgiving
perhaps next Christmas Day—the
prodigal may be home, and if von crowd
on his plate more luxuries than ou any
brothers other plate- will at the table jealous, I am sore the
not be but they
will wake up all the music in the house,
“because the dead is alive again and because
the lost is found.” Perhaps your prayers
have been answered already. The vessel
may this be coming homeward, and by the light
of night’s stars that absent son may be
pacing the deck of the ship, anxious for the
time to oome when he can throw his arm
around your neck and ask for forgiveness
for that he has been wr inging your old heart
so long. Glorious reunion, that will be too
saered for outsiders to look upon, but I
would just like to look through the window
wnen you have all got together again and
are seated at the banquet.
Though parents may in covenant ba
And have t'leir heaven W view,
They are not ha^py till they aeo
Tnls chil ren hapoy 100.
Again. I remark that the unavailing effort
of the Mediterranean oarsmen has a coun¬
terpart In the effort which we are making to
bring this world back to God, His pardon
and safety. If this world, couid have been
saved by human effort, it would have been
done long ago. John Howard took hold of
one oar. and Carey Judson took hold of another oar.
and Adoniram took hold of another
oar, and Luther took hold of another oar,
and John Knoxtook hold of another oar and
they pulled until they fell back dead from
the exhaustion. Some dropped in the ashes
of martyrdom, some on tho scalping
knives of savages and some into the
plague struck room of the lazaretto,
and still the chains are not broken,
and still the despotisms are not demolished,
and still the world Is unsaved. What then?
Put down the oars and make no effort? I
do not advise that. But I want you. Chris¬
tian brethren, to understand that the ehuroh,
and the school and the only college, and the mis¬
sionary society this are the instrumentali¬ ail
ties, and dolt, if and work He will is ever do done It In at God
must answer to
onr land, prayer. “They could rowed hard wherefore to bring they It to
the but they not,
cried unto the Lord.”
Again, the unavailing effort of those Medi¬
terranean oarsmen has a counterpart in
every man that Is trying to row his own soul
Into safety. When the eternal spirit flashes
upon us our condition, we try to save our¬
selves. We say, “Give me a stout oar for my
right hand, give me a stout oar for my left
h'and,andlwill pull and myseit dashes into safety.’’ No.
A wave of sin comes you one way,
and a wave of temptation comes and dashes
you tn another way, and there are plenty of
rocks on which to founder, but seemingly no
harbor into which to sail. Sin must be thrown
overboard, or we tried must perish. become There
are men who have for years to
Christians. They believe alt I sav in regard
to a future world. They believe that re¬
ligion is the first, the last, the infinite ne¬
cessity. They do everything but trust in
Christ. They make sixty strokes In a min¬
ute. They bend forward with all earnest¬
ness. and they lie back until tho muscles are
distended, and vet they have not made one
inch in ten years toward heaven. What is
the reason? That is not the way to go to
work. Ton might as well take a frail
skiff and put It down at the foot of Ni¬
agara and then head it up toward the
churning thunderbolt of waters and ex¬
pect to work your way up through the
lightning of the foam into calm Lake Erie
as for you ter try to pull yourself hope through pardon
the surf of your sin into the and
and placidity that of the Sin gospel. is You rough cannot and do
It in way. a gondola sea,
longboat, yawl, pinnace and go
down unless the Lord deliver, but if you
will cry to Christ and lay hold of divine
mercy you are as safe from eternal con¬
demnation as though you had been twenty
years in heaven.
But glory be to God that Jesus Christ is
able to take us up out of our shipwrecked shoul¬
and dying condition and put us on the
der of His strength, and by the omnipotence all the
of His gospel bear us on through through the
journey of this life and at last
opening gates of heaven 1 He is mighty to
save. Though your sin be long and black
and Inexcusable and outrageous, the very
moment you believe I unconditional, will proclaim pardon
—quick, promising. full, UilmUlble, grand, infinite. Oh, the uncom¬
grace
of God! I am overwhelmed when I come to
think of it. Give me a thousand ladders, lash¬
ed fast to each other, that I may scale the
height. Let the 'line run out with the an¬
chor until all the cables of the earth are ex¬
hausted, that we may touch the depth. Let
the archangel fir in circuit of eternal ages in
trying to sweep around this theme. Ob, the
graoe of God 1 It is so high. It is so broad.
It is so deep. Glory be to my God. that
where man’s oar gives out God’s arm begins!
Why will re carry your sins and your sor¬
rows any longer when Christ offers to take
them? Why will you wrestle down your
fears when this moment you might give up
and be eased ? Do you not know that every¬
thing la ready ?.
the feast. Jesus . has the
Plenty of room at
ring of His love all ready to put upon your
hand. Come now and sit down, ye hungry
ones, at the banquet. Ye who are in rags
of sin. take the robe of Christ. Ye who are
swamped by the breakers aroun l you. cry
to Corist to pilot you into smooth, still
waters. On account of the peculiar phase
of the snojeot I hare drawn my present
’illustrations, yon see, chiefly iron the
water. I re mem tier that a vessel went to
pieces on the Bermudas a great many boar! years
ago. It had a vast treasure on
But, the vessel being sunk, no effort was
made to raise it. After many yaaw had
a company or adventurers went
but from England, and after a loag vessel voy
age they said reached have the sunk. place They where got the into a
was to Then
■ mull boat and hovered over the place. broke
the divers went down, and they
through what looked like a limestone cover
lag, and the treasures rolled out—want was
found afterward to be, in American money,
worth $ 1 800 000 , and the* foundation of a
, , the
great fail finer nouse. At that time
whole world rejoiced over what was called
toe look of these adventurers. O, ye who
hat* rowing toward the shore
and have sot to rwdi
it, I want to toil you to-aight that your boat
hovers over infinite trees arc! All the riehas
of mod ace m four feet—treasures dim.
fall and drowns that never grow Who
Who will £’ r and seek thorn?
will dive of great price? Who
wfil be i _ lor life, for death, foe
o loag eternity? toward See two
stretched out ail thy
soul “Oome unto me, y»
heavy laden, and l Will
A*
“Wen,” si moody philoao
i’t anything but
fleeting riunr, . §t
Officially reported,
r after elaborate com¬
ft petitive tests qjade
under authority of
r 1 Congress by the
m Chief Chemist of the
United States Agri¬
HIM cultural Department,
Superior to ail
o other Baking Pow¬
absolutely ders in Leaven¬
PURE. ing Strength.
The most Careful Housev/ife
will use no other.
ROYAL BAKIN® POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Made It Unanimous.
A gentleman had been np in a bal¬
loon and had taken his little girl with
him.
„ “How did you feel,” asked a friend.
“Why,” said he, “when we were np
but a shOTt distance my little girl
looked over the edge of the basket car
and cried: ’Mamma!’and I felt that
way, too.”
Go out of doors errand. at least once a day
oh some fixed The change
broadens the mind—the fresh air in¬
vigorates the body. To no one is the
advice more neoessary than the hoase
wife.
Deafness Cannot be Cared
by local applications, as they can not r<*ach the
diseased portion of tne ear. There is only one
way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitu¬
tional remedies. Deafness to oauseii by an in¬
flamed condition of the When mucous this tube lining of the In¬
Eustachian Tube. sound gets impei
flamed you have a rumbling to entirely or closed
fect hearing, the and when it
Deafness is result, and unless this the Inflam¬
mation can be taken out and tube re¬
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are
cansed by catarrh, which is nothing but an In¬
flamed condition of the muoons surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (paused by catarrh) that can¬
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Care. Send for
circulars, free. J. Toledo, O.
F. Ohiwict & Co.,
|3?“Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Karl’s Clover Root, the great blood the complex¬ purifier,
gives ion freshness and clearness to 50 $1.
and cures constipation, 25 ot«., cts.,
DONT TOBACCO SPIT AND SMOKE &
A/|
YOUR LIFE AWAY.
Ah! what a warning this should be to millions of America’s men who are dally tearing down their fj
naturally strong physical and nervouB system. Do you smile when we say that the use of tobacco /Iff.
is not a “habit’’but a disease? Stopa moment! Did you not educate yourself to use tobaoeo? Did not •l
take to it naturally? Well no! And now you want it— why? Because tobacco tastes good? No, but fLti A\
to gratify a desire hard to explain, and only satisfied by nicotine, * $®*0-BAl I A HI
■ urc ICCFC wnWlk CUOPTI I a The that use of have tobacco not tbs makes time, It much shorter. less the We inclination, want to say right to preach here 4
w we if be doesn't know that it hurts him. We want FS fTWtW fcy
printed sermons for the sake of making a tobacco man quit spitting tobacco, and smoking his life who wants to stop 4 it
to talk to the man who realizes that he is away; of 8g\
and can't. Do you ever stop and think that tobacco produces a diseased condition the nervous mrs
tom—so much so, that you are compelled from time to time, to feed the never ceasing d em a nd s with V Jmm
tobacco, and that you may have, luce millions of other men,
A TOBACCO HEART ? A» m V ■
Us active baalneaw Alea ■laughter Ibu MMealyaalMNMiMMd, The aad eund the lOatMtoM pulpit •t t*
popular vice, goes sod on. those who pram uot hy
pants to the are seem ■
VITALITY NICOTINIZED! rK.lTc^
ear f]
of tobaoeo upon the vital forces, that makes strong men 1MVOTENT and destroys their manhood.
YOU ASK FOR PROOF ? JSftSSggsSursdrSJBS 7
tobacco, eliminates the nicotine, steadies the nerves, Hundreds increases of letters the weight, from aged makes the testify Mood V
pure and rich and tingling with new life and energy. men to
years of tobacco slavery, and tell how No-to-buc destroyed tobacco’s power aad brought back
feelings long since dead, while sensations of a younger existence once mors warmed the cockles .v
of the old man’s heart. Gloomy days were gone, the sunshine was brighter; the warbles \ *
of the little birds ail spoke of love; the old man made young again and—happy. 1 A -
IT IS TRUE, NO-TO-BAC DOESN’T What’s the of teU- is I
CURE EVERYONE. nee
lng a lie to get caught at t I
it? You know and so do we, that the claim “a ever fails to emrT is a quack lie, and fraud's W
talk. We do business with the good American people, appreciate their patronage, and give
value received. Our guarantee is clean cut aim to the point. Bead it. We would rather rv
have tho good will of the occasional failure than his money. We talk about this fop ymr 4 u Nr
sake and to protect yoa from frauds sad thieves—the meanest kind of thieves, who would rob you >
within the pale of the law. They go lustier enough in the imitation of No-to-bpC to prac¬ if
tice a fraud on yon and escape prosecution. Beware of the man who says, just as nod as NO-TO- w*
BAC, for it stands alone, backs* hf men who of also national is ready business in^prse reputation and integrity, personally WSead >■ iy
known to the publisher of this paper, to our guarantee. r
for our beautifully illustrated work entitled “King No-To-Bae—Hi* Work in America,” and
read of the not only cured of the tobacco habit, You but made strong, No-to-tac vigorous aad * . p
manly in strength, weight and refunded. vitality onoe again. run no risk. is
guaranteed to cure or money
of thousands of truthful testimon • 1
Have been received from esthusfcutic users «# NO-TO-BAC. Ws print a few to show how NO-TO-BAC doss the work. We do mot
doubted, lor they are trut h - p ee rs and simple. Wo know it and propose to back them up by offering a reward of gj/wo to anyone who can prove that any
published is false, or that we here knowingly and wflUngly caused to bo printed testimonials that do not, so far as tb^ honest opinio
the
TwoKrrrss WH~Feh. JR
tbnm ft
ft
e^l
■si
OUR C
asm- iNfthdtoprWni
aa RiiMMi wkp zsa*am&- **•
V 1
_
Squinting in Children.
Squinting, especially in children,
may often be cured by blindfolding
the sound eye for a considerable part of
each day and thus gradually foroing
the affectod eye into use and obedience
to the will. -The surgical operation
for the same purpose is extremely sim¬
ple and in the hands of a properly
qualified practitioner is not attended
with the least danger,
A Red-Handed Murderer.
Tetterine kills the germs of Tetter,
Eczema, Salt-Rheum, Ringworm and
other skin diseases. Most of these are
oansed by the existence of infinitesi¬
mal animalouiae. Tetterine murders
them at once and stops th) agonizing
itch, then it soothes and heals the
skin. Just 60 cents a box. Drug
stores, or by mail from J. T. Shnp
trine, Savannah, Ga.
\1
CABLED FIELD AND HOD FENCE.
CebM roeltrr raw, Steel Web Picket Fesee, Steel Oetee,
Port., Halle, Tree, Flower end Tomato Onerdt, Wire Feaee Dowd,
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70
Mention this paper when you write.
IMQ them Mo-Ts
!"t rs «£;r, Ks i ES KetiESto JSK
&»&SU e 2££S;3
Some of Napoleon’s Sayings.
Disdain, hatreds! bear both sides,
and delay judgment until reason has
had time to resume her sway.
Great men are like meteors, which
shine and consume themselves to en¬
lighten the earth.
» Historians are like the sheep of
Pannrge; they copy that which their
predecessors have written,so that their
opinions and interest are not opposed
to it, without troubling themselves to
enquire into* truth or probabilities. leaders
Indecision and anarchy in
lead to weakness and anarchy in re¬
sults.
Independence, like honor, is a rocky
island without a beach.
Uncertainty is painful for all na¬
tions and for all men.
When we have drunk the eup of
pleasure to the dregs, all we want is
rest.
Judgment in extreme eases should
be guided by precedent. arbitrari¬
We can only escape the
ness of the judge by placing ourselves
under the despotism of tho lav?. To
really understand a man we must
judge him in misfortune.
Liberty and equality are gaogical
words,
The only enoouragement for litera¬
ture is to give the poet a position in
the state.
The praises of an enemy are suspi¬
cions; they cannot flatter a man of
honor until after a cessation of hostil
ities.
Fibst Lawteb—W hat are. yon going
to do now that your client, has oon
fessed?
Second Lawyer—Put in a a plea of
insanity. A man who will make a
confession when he has me to defend
him must surely be insano.— Indiana¬
polis Journal. t
Smith& Wes son | j Mg*
m
RAMONS LIVER
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||1** -AND
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TREATMENT MiTSE
St si) stores, or hr msii too. doubts box s I Teri double boles
•1.00. BROWN i*IF»G CO.. New City.
SHOPPING
with oar- A Judgment. No commissions. Mrs- Anna
Stuart Wroe, 16 E Lexington Street, Baltimore. Md
A. N. U Forty-two, D4.
^72' wl
an t Mom
WHERE TO BUT
OR ORDER ■
NO-TO-BAC.
THE
ML
assist natt.
g little now and
in removing offend*
via? f putter matter from the
stomach itnach and aad bowels
and you
avoid a m
of distressing de
rangemente and di»
eases, and will have
less frequent need
|X . of your doctor’s
\ \ .service. Of all iriiown
Hrpose, ,1 agents Dr. for this Pierce’s ptir
pleasant Pellets are
the best. Op«e
used, they are al¬
ways in
Their is secondary keep the ef
\ feet bowels to and
open fur¬
regular, ther constipate, not to
as
is the case with
with other sufferers pills. Hence, from habitual their great constipation, popularity
piles and their attendant discomfort and
manifold derangements. The ’'Pellets”
are purely vegetable and perfectly harmless
in any condition of the system. No care la
required while using them: they do not
interfere and with produce the diet, pain, habits griping or occupa¬ shock
tion, They no in mild, or and
to natural the system. act a easy
way and there is no reaction after¬
ward. Their help lasts.
The Pellets cure biliousness, sick and
bilious headache, dizziness, costiveness, of appetite, or
constipation, sour stomach, loss
Avindy coated belchings, tongue, indigestion, “heartburn,” or dyspepsia, and
and kindred pain derange
distress of after the eating, eating, stomach stomach and kindred and and derange¬ bowels. bowels.
ments liver. liver,
■ In proof of their superior excellence, it can
be adopted truthfully household said, that remedy they are after always the
as a
first trial. ‘ Put up in sealed, glass vials,
therefore always fresh and reliable. One
little "Pellet” is a laxative, two are uiildy
cathartic. As a “dinner pill," to promote
digestion, or to relieve distress from over¬
tiny, eating, sugar-coated take one after granules; dinner. any child They Will are
readily take them. .... be
Accept no substitute that may recom¬
mended to be “just as good.” of paying It may him be
better for the dealer , because
a better profit, but he is not the one who
needs help.
W. $3 L. SHOE Douclas
IS THE BEST.
NOMUEAKINO.
yLsnsetub H.’WFIffiCAlfSkMMB
*3.WP0UCE,3Som.
<2.I!7_*8ctSct-0l5M£S.
iH^^pIrw^’DOuauiA. BROCKTON, MAM.
Yen can save money $3.00 by wearing State. tbq
W. L, Douglas
Because, wo ore the largest manufacturers ot
this grade of shoes in the world, and aad guaraotes price their tht
value by stamping the name on sod
bottom, which protect you against shoe* high equal prices custom
the middleman’s proms. Our
work la style, sold easy fitting and wearing qaslttV*.
We have them everywhere at lower prices for
the value given than any other make. Tako no sub¬
stitute. U your dealer cannot eupply you, weoea.
,
a: ‘-VT2 i AM ^
Ift
ST** Ii t±tL