This Pretty j Girl Saved j From Catarrh of the Lungs By i Pe-ru-na. ii MISS FLORENCE KENAH. Miss Florence E. Kenah. 434 Maria street. Ottawa, Ont., writes: “.4 few months ago I caught a severe cold, which settled on my lungs and re* main yd there so persistently that / became alarmed. I took medicine without benefit, until my digestive organs became upset, and my head and back began to ache severely and frequently. “/ was advised to try Peruna, and although I had little faith I felt so sick that I was ready to try anything. It brought me blessed relief at once, and I felt that I had the right medi ine at last. Within three weeks I was completely restored and have enjoyed perfect health since. “/ now have the greatest faith in Peruna. ” Florence E. Kenah. The cold wind and rain, glush and mud of win ter are especially conducive to ca tarrhal derangements. Few women escape. Upon the first symptoms of catching sold Peruna should be taken. It fortifies the system against colds and catarrh. Pe-ru-na for Colds and Catarrh. The following interesting letter gives one young womans experience with Peruna. Miss Rose Gerbing. a popular society woman of Crown Point. Ind.. writes: * “Recently I took a long drive in the country, and being too thinly clad 1 caught a bad cold which settled on my lungs, and which I could not seem to shake off. I had heard a great deal of Peruna for colds and catarrh ami I bought a bottle to try. 1 am pleased that I did. for it brought speedy relief. It only took about two bottles, and 1 jonsider this money well spent. “You have a firm friend in me, and I aot only advice its use to my friends, I WOMEN SHOULD BEWARE OF CONTRACTINU CATARRH. but have purchased several bottles to give to those without the means to buy, and have noticed without exception that it has brought about a speedy cure wiierever it has been used.,:—Hose Gerbing. Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics. One reason why Peruna has found permanent use in so many homes is that it contains no narcotic of any kind. Peruna is perfectly harmless. It can be used any length of time without ac quiring a drug habit. Peruna does not produce temporary results. It is perma nent in its effect. It has no bad effect upon the system, and gradually eliminates catarrh by re moving the cause of catarrh. There are a multitude of homes where Peruna has been used off and on for twenty years. Such a thing could not be possible if Peruna contained any drugs of a nar cotic nature. Address Hr. Hartman. President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. All correspondence held strictly con fidential. There are Mary Imitations of Baker’s Cocoa --and Baker’s Chocolate Don t be misled by them ^ Our trade-mark is on ev ery package of genuine goods. Under the decisions of sevxral United States Courts, no other chocolate or cocoa than Walter Baker Of Co.’s is en titled to be sold as “ Baker’s Look foe this Trade-Mark C>OCOd OF BtlKCT S llOCOldtC Our handsomely illustrated iecipe bock sent free. Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. Established 1780 Dorchester, Massachusetts 45 Highest Awards in Europe and America on DEFORMITIES AND PARALYSIS ■will be sent free, postpaid, npnn request. This book Is of a hundred pace*, handsomely Illus trated throughout and tellsof an experience of over thirty years in the treatment of I'rooked Feet, > Spinal Deformities. Infantile Paralysis. Hip Disease. Deformed Limbs and Joints, Etc. It tells of the only thoroughly equipped Sanitarium In this country devoted exclusively to the treatment Cf the-e conditions and h>w they may be cared without surgical operations, pla-ter parls or other setere treatment. Send for this book, and If dtrectlv Interested, mention character of the affliction and specla SSSaaSJiS.aurbSfc The L C. McLain Orthopedic Sanitarium, Free Furniture Catalogue No 32 Contains 475 faithful illustrations showing the best choice of patterns on sale in 1905. We offer an enormousand varied stock in strictly reliable furniture. We pay freight anywhere, guaranteeing safe arrival at your railroad station. Each and every piece is guaranteed to be ezactly as described or money refunded. Everything we sell is of the Keith quality, stand ard for more than 25 years aDd is sold on the Keith principle; an earnest conscientious effort to please and satisfy in all particulars. ROBERT KEITH Furniture and Carpet Company, Dept. 32, Kansas City, Mo. i 10,000Plants for 16c. ^ More garden* and farms are planted to ** k.Salzer’s Seeds tnan any otner in P America. There is reason for this. We own over 5, acres for the pro duction of our warranted seeds. In order to induce you to try them, *> e ' /a make you the foliowing unpre cedented offer For IB Cento romrpmia V KXKI Kiris. ■ rul L»l* tntobage*, IgOOO rtn* Jultj Turnip*, / iUttO HIjueMn* Celery. F aooo Hie* SuUyLeUar*, . 1000 Splendid Onion*, ) |WM> R*re LukIod, lUdhkH, 1000 8lork>**ly BrilUaat Fh>w*r*. Above seven packages contain rr.ffl cient see>l to if row l’i.OQO plants, fur nishing bushel* of brllllunt ‘ flowers and lotsantl lotsof choice vegetables, together with our great catalog, telling all about Flowers, Boses, Small Fruits, etc-, all for " * stamps —-* - E in stamps ana in» ouin-a Big 140-page catalog alone, 1c. JOHN A. SAIZER SEES CO, w.».u. La Crosaef wia*_ Alabastine.% Y our i Walls I Are you satisfied with the appear- * ance of your walls? Do they come g up to your ideas. Are you putting on ■ coat after coat of sticky, dirty wall * paper, making a sandwich with sour * paste between ? * Alabastine is clean, hygienic ® and wholesome and more than that, it ! is beautiful. The most artistic effects |i can be produced with Alabastine. ■ The Alabastine Co. will furnish, ■ without expense to you, color schemes ! and harmonies for your rooms. If you • are building or remodeling, simply ■ I ask for color schemes, giving size, J ! use and direction of light of rooms, g ! Buy your ALABASTINE ■ in original packages. Any dec- * orator can apply it, or you can put it J on yourself. Simply brush it on. It is i a permanent, durable, wall finish. > Outwears two walls done any other ! way. ; The best dealers sell it. If yours doesn’t, g send us your name and we will see that you g are supplied. ALABASTINE COMPANY ■ Grand Rapids. Mich. New York City g ’SINGLE Hff 1$, BINDER STWI6H15*CI6AR always reliable Your jobber or direct from Factory, Ptorli, IU. BEGGS’BLOOD PURIFIER CURES catarrh of the stomach. pm® Fertility and Fruit Growing. At a meeting of horticulturists, Pro fessor John Craig, of Cornell Universi ty, said: “Every modern system of cultivat ing fruits recognizes as a first prin ciple the right of the fruit tree to be considered a specific and sufficient crop under the soil, or at least to be regarded as a crop quite as exhaust ing in character as any grown by the farmer. Unless the fruit grower real izes and puts into practice the essen tial part of this principle he will fail as a cultivator of fruits. Experiments m orcharding conducted some years ago at the Cornell Experiment Station proved conclusively that it cost the soil more to produce twenty average crops of apples than twenty average crops of wheat. In other words, more fertility was extracted front the land in growing an acre of bearing apples for twenty years than in growing twenty con set utive crops of wheat. As a rule, the farmer recoguiezs the food needs of tlie wheat plant, but too often does he look upon the apple or fruit tree as a mere tenant of the soil, and one which is not to be regarded as a specific crop. Having recognized the principle, the particular method of or jeharding must be worked out by the fruit grower himself. This method will depend upon soil conditions and cli mate. Nevertheless, it is safe to say that in eight cases out of ten that method which employs clean tillage for at least part of the season will be most successful, u is also safe to say that all secondary crops in orchards are injurious.” Shaping and Heading Trees. Ideas and traditions with respect to methods of cultivation and manage ment, as well as varieties, were for , merly brought from the eastern states. ; where conditions are very different i from our own. The Horticultural So ! ciety began agitating the question of adapting methods of shaping fruit tiees and of pruning to our own local j conditions. Members of the society ! . began experimenting along this line ! and reporting their results at the meetings. Early copies of the reports . of this body show that for a series of | years attention was fastened largely upon the question of adopting low heads and a dense branching system i for their fruit trees. As a result a I new system of shaping the tree, better adapted to cur conditions, has been j developed. In the eastern states, with a maritime climate, trees were given high heads, so the ground under the tiees would warm up and so grasses, or other crops, could be harvested under their branches; the trees were given open tops, and were freely pruned, so as to admit sunlight and air to ripen and to color up the fruit. As opposed to this we have gradually adopted in the west, where our sun light is intense, low heads, to shade the trunk of the tree and the ground under it; we have adopted a straight, central truck, with dense lateral limbs as a protection to the tree and its truit. Earlier fruiting and closer planting have been adopted as better suited to our conditions.—Prof. J. C. Whitten. Apple Score Card. At the last meeting of the Wiscon sin Horticultural Society the follow ing score card for judging apples was adopted: 1. Uniformity . 25 2. Freedom from insects and fun gi injury . 20 3. Condition of the fruit. 15 4. Form and type. 10 5. Color . 10 6. Size . 10 7. Freedom from blemishes. 10 Exhibitor may be required to give an affidavit, if, in the judgment of the judges the fruit is not grown by him or if a protest is made. Inferior specimens should under no conditions be awarded a premium. Exhibitors should be allowed to cor rect the names of their specimens up to the time of judging, and, if possible the judge or judges should be present to aid the exhibitor in this work. The judges should throw out all specimens not true to name. Every association offering premiums should be required to furnish a com petent judge or judges. This card was devised by a com mittee consisting of E. P. Sandsten, A. J. Phillips and P. J. Coe. Blights are caused by minute plants called fungi. These are vegetable parasites, which sink their roots into the substance of the plants and draw nourishment therefrom. As long as the plants can supply more food than these parasites can use. the effects of the blight is not apparent. As soon as the parasites begin to use more food than their host plants supply, the die, or such parts of them as are af leaves or twigs, as the case may b$ fected by the blight. Strawberries on Low Land. Some farmers find it difficult to lo cate a strawberry bed except on low land and therefore do not locate it at all. Such land is good, provided it is well drained, but very often it is not well drained by natural means. Straw berries like moisture, provided it is only properly proportioned with air and soil, and on a low place the sup ply of water in a dry time is likely to be better than on a high place. Jersey Island Economies. Only one kind of cattle is kept cn the Island of Jersey, and that kinc. is of course the cow that has made the island famous. The cows are pastured, but are not allowed to run at will. They are tied in rows, and the whole row of cows is moved forward at once. The land must be carefully handled and highly fertilized to permit it to carry two cows to the acre, as it is Eaid to do. It should be remembered, however, that the cows are somewnat smaller than the Jersey cows in this country, as there has been a decided increase in size of the breed since coming to the United States. Sixteen Things in Good Butter. Some thinker has declared that six teen ounces in weight is not all there is in a pound of butter. He enumer ates sixteen other things needed as follows: (1) An ounce of wisdom in selecting materials; (2) an ounce of precaution in the preparation of the utensils; (3) an ounce of concentra tion, by which the whole mind shall be put on the work in hand; (4) an • uince of cleanliness, which needs to be exercised in the whole process oT buttermaking; (5) an ounce of deter mination. which will help to overcome all difficulties; (6) an ounce of pre vention, by which al! deleterious con ditions will be prevented from inter fering with the process of buttermak ifig; (7) an ounce of care, Vhich is needed at every stage: (8) an ounce j of forethought regarding the market | ai-d its demands, which vary as to , coloring, salting and flavor; (9) an I ounce of discrimination, which is need- j ed in choosing salt, color and pack- j ages; (10) an ounce of accuracy, ; winch moans the use of the scales to determine weights; (11) an ounce of judgment regarding the temperature at which to churn; (12) an ounce of common sense, which leads the churn er to stop the process when the but ter is in the granular form; (13) an ounce of patience in using the ther mometer, in draining the wash water from the butter and in giving the salt time to dissolve; (14) an ounce of ex perience, which alone can tell when the working of the butter should stop and thus prevent greasiness; (15) an ounce of neatness, which applies to both person and product, and also ap plies to the printing and wrapping of the butter; (lti) an ounce of honor, which keeps the butter up to standard, both in quality and weight. Licensing Buitermakers and Cheese- j makers. There is an agitation in some of the states to license the factory butter makers and theesemakers. The ob ject of this is to get a tetter class of manufacturers of dairy products. ! Factories cannot be inspected without money and money cannot be obtained i from most legislatures in sufficient quantities to make the work of inspec tion effective. This is a problem that is not new. The government of the United States long ago adopted the principle of taxing everything that had to be inspected so that it would pay for the governmental work put upon it. The placing of a license on the makers of butter and cheese it tha factory would > iold some revenue, \\1tich would go far towards doing the very work that needs to be done. Dairying in Indiana. In an address to Indiana dairymer D B. Johnson said: The increased productiveness ol \ our farms means better and more per j manent improvements, better fences better barns, better houses, bettei cows, wear better clothes, drive better horses, give our children a better edu cation, build better school houses and better churches, and in fact help to meet all the conditions to make Letter citizens. It is a fact that when you strike a dairy community the outward evidences of thrift are plain to be seen on every hand as I have indicated. We do not make as much butter and cheese as some states, but statis tics show that we are coming to the front. Over 90 per cent of the farms report, sales of dairy products. We have about 105 working creameries, i The value of the cows kept for milk is $18,285,000. The value of farm prop- : erty devoted to the dairy is $28,181,- i 000. The value of our dairy products amount to over $15,500,000 per year. ! Now the present standing of the dairy > interests is very good. We are making a lot of good butter; we are making a lot of tolerably good butter, and a very large per cent of i>oor butter. Are we going to be satisfied with the present conditions and let well enough alone? Or shall we strive to change these conditions so that our output will be a very large per cent of good butter and a very small per cent of the other two classes? In order to increase the dairy prod ucts that our dairy interests may grow not only in the number of pounds. Lnt in an increase in prices, it is absolute ly necessary to put upon the market a better quality. New Butter Making Scheme. New butter making schemes are continually coming to the surface, and each one in its turn claims to be the best and to be a decided improvement on all the schemes that have been previously tried. It is necessary to get the public into this frame of mind, else the men behind the scheme will never be able to induce anyone to let go of good money for the sake of trying it. One of the latest proc esses is to draw off the milk through blotting paper supported on towels, the butter-fat being left. This is then in such a hard state that it can be worked as butter, so the report says. Of course the milk has to be manip ulated while it is fresh. But what gain there is from any such process it is hard to imagine. The discoverer says that less labor is entailed in the separation, but that is a matter of small moment. There are churns in which, it is claimed, the work of separating can be done in five minutes or less. Well, what of it! Twenty minutes is the usual time of churning, and even if the cream could be churned in less than that time the gain would not be of importance. By the way, almost any old churn will bring the butter in from two to five minutes, if the temperature is up to about eighty degrees and the cream is in fairly good condition. The writer of this once got butter in two min utes in an ordinary dash churn; but the temperature was too high to' give the best quality of butter. Let the new butter making schemes alone. Height of Ears on Cornstalks. The lower the ear on the corn stalk the less likely is the stalk to be blow.* down by a high wind. Experiments are being made to breed low ears Seed from corn with low ears has been replanted enough times to produce a little variation in this regard English Names. It» a lint of candidates who were recently admitted to the bar in Eng land ther»> were men whose parents had given them such “Christian” j names as these: Elidvr. Amiend, Kax mishanker, Benaiah, Samson and Ar chimedes. Evidently they have no S. P. C. C. in England, or if there is one there it can’t be very watchful. Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces in a package. 10 cents. One-third more eta.vh for the same money. Men That Succeed. The men whom I have seen succeed best in life have always been cheer ful and hopeful men. who went about their business with a smile on their faces, and took the changes and chances of this mortal life like men. facing rough and smooth alike as it came.—Charles Kingsley. "T>r. Ttnvld Kennedy’s favorite Kennedy cared me of Bright > hlsease and ft ravel. Able phynkr'arss toiled.” ilra. L. l\ Mlrncr, BurjfLl.i. U- <1.00 a buttle. Swords in Japan. Although wearing swords has al most entirely ceased for twenty years in Japan, the old esteem and rever ence for the weapon and its use still exist among the gentlemen of the country, and many of the nobility have at their houses regular estab lishments for fencing. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrnp. For children teething, softens tne gurus, reduce* flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25ca battle. Turquoise a Lucky Stone. The Orientals have a proverb, "That a turquoise given by a loving hand carries with it happiness and good fortune”; and another, “That the tur quoise pales when the well-being of the giver is in danger.” Who, then would not be the possessor of a lucky turquoise? Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.—one full pound—while all other Cold Water j Starches are put up in %-pound pack ages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures “16 ozs.” Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick ing. Defiance never sticks. Sure Thing. What makes the merchant's busi ness hum—what makes his clerks per spire? Is it due to drummers bland. :>r to messages by wire? Can it be due to fine displays or to silly worn-1 Dut fads? Xo; the business boom is mostly due to bis large, attractive ads. How’9 This ? We offer One Hundred Hollers R»ward for any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Heir* Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHEN'ET * CO.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned. ha*e kn^wn F. .1. Cnetiey for the last 15 Year-. and bellere him perfectly hon orable tn all bus'ness tran-actions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waldiso, Kinnan rugclst«. Take Hail's Family Tills for constipation. Of course one-half the world knows what the other half is doing, because It lives next door. riTO permanently on red. No fits or nerrrasneifi afpjr f 11 w first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nt rve h«-«roi» er. Send for FBEK #2.00 trial b< tile and treatises Da. li. H. Klin e. Ltd., 831 Arch Street, Thlladeiphia, Ta Truth is as impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sun beam.—Milton. ALL SICK WOMEN SHOULD READ HRS. FOX'S LETTER In All Parte of the Unitod States Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Has Effected Similar Cures. Many wonderful cures of female ills are continually coming to light which have been brought about by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and yi/lrs. Fannie D.Fox through the advice of Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn. Mass., which is given to sick women absolutely free of charge Mrs Pinkham has for many years made a study of the ills of her sex ; she has consulted with and advised thousands of suffering women, who to-day owe not only their health but even life to her helpful advice. Mrs. Fannie D. Pox. of 7 Chestnut Street, Bradford, Pa., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham :— “ I suffered for a long time with womb trouble, and finally was told by my phvsician that I had a tumor on the womb. I did not want to submit to an operation, so wrote vou for advice. I received vour letter and did as you told me. aiyi to-day I am completely rured. My doctor says the tumor has disap peared, and I am once more a well woman. I believe Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com pound is the best medicine in the world for women.” The testimonials which we are con Btantlypublishingfrom grateful women establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound to conquer female diseases. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn. Mass. She asks nothing in return for her advice. It is absolutely free, and to thousands of women has proved to be more precious than gold. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES K»f more goods brighter and fatter color* than any oth< r dye. One 10c package colors silk, wool and cotton equally well and is guaranteed to give perfect resuite, dealer or wo will tend post paid at 10c a package. Wri* for free booklet- How to Dye. Bleach and Mis Colors. MOXHV* uxut, CO., r .. gr-trniN Tire You If bo, yon will have more or less of the following SYMPTOMS : Not unfrequently the complexion be comes pal" and sallow, there may he frequent attacks of bilious or sick head ache, bitter taste in the mouth, tongue coated white or covered with a brown fur, unnatural, dry, harsh, or scaly condition of the skin, or branny erup tions and pimples. There is likely to be “backache,” with tired feelings, lassitude and a sense of debility. There is depression of spirits with a decided tendency to he discouraged and de spondent. There is loss or irregularity of appetite, uneasiness in region of the stomach, oppression, sometimes sour stomach, “heart-burn,” nausea and “water-brash,” flatulency, and acrid eructations; the bowels become irregu lar, usualh constipated, and occasion ally subject to diarrhea, attended with colicky pains. The foregoing symp toms are not all present in any one case, nor are any two cases alike in every respect. The only way to help a disordered liver and cure biliousness is to treat it as it is —the great, organic, human filter of the human system. Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cleciek for three years, kidney and bladder trouble set In. which put me in a worse condition than 1 ever was lx fore. Did not take a step but it would hurt my stomach so that it would till with ga> and it would throw up my food to m.v throat. I kept getting worse, my stom ach blo tted badly, until there seemed no I Bilious ? mor*> "ootn It ft in my body to hold It. tfy tongue became coated and the inside of my month <0 sore that, although it tlitl not affect my voice itself very much, it caused uaiii in the tonsils when talking. In addition to ail this tii* urine Ixvame -o scalding that i be burning sensation caused me to scream when passing it. Oli.' tii*' suffering and the anguish of that week l will never forget. i could nc t lie down nor sit up straight. nor walk nor do any thine Was all doubled up and iiad t< he led from i>lace to place: but here I am to il ay. sound and well, all the thanks du** to Dr. Pierce’s medicines*. I used eight*** i :•*.*! ties of “Golden Medical Discovery. ’ three f "Favorite Proscription ’’ and eighteen vials of " Pell* ts." May you live long to draff many more poor sufferers from the slough of despair—such a- I had fallen into. Gratefully yours. Mi*-s Auuckta Raffi f 42* Findlay Ave., Big Rapids. Mi -Mean. “Golden Medical Discovery'’ con tains no alcohol, syrup, or sugar, yet keeps perfectly in any climate. Do Not Be Deceived.—It- is an in sult to your intelligence for a dealer to attempt to pahn oil upon you a substi tute for this world - famed medicine. You know what you want. It 's his busi ness to meet that want. When he urges some substitute he’s thinking of ;he larger profit he'll make—not of your welfare. Turn your hack on any dealer who offers you such treatment. Iu obstinate constipation the “ Dis covery” should be used in conjunction with Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, the most natural and thoroughly scientific laxative ever devised. The “P-dlets” regulate and invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. One is a gentle laxative; two act as a mild cathartic. If you require medical adtice write Dr. R. V. Pierce who will give you the best advice possible, free. Dr. Pierce's 1,000-page “ Medical Ad viser,” is the most useful “ doctor book ” published. A copy in «tiff pa per covers sent on receipt of ”1 one cent stamps to pay expense of rnailir g onl>/; in cloth binding ten -tamps extra. Address Dr. K. \ . Pierce, Buf falo, N. Y. Facfs Are Stobbc Uniform excellent quality for O century lias steadily increased the s The leader of all pad Lion Coffee is no'rc' used in millions of homes. Such popular success speaks for itself. It is a posilive prool that U0\ COFFEE has the Confidence of the people. The uniform quality of LION COFFEE survives all opposition. LION COFFEE keeps Its old friends and makes new ones every day. LION COFFEE eve„ more than its Strength, Flavor and Qual ity to commend it. On arrival from the plantation, it is carefully roast ed at our factories and securely packed in 1 lb. sealed packages, and not opened again until needed for use In the home. This precludes m Things /cr a cuarter of a lies of LION COFFEE, :age coffees. the possibility of adulteration or contact with germs, dirt, dust, insects or unclean hands. The absolute purity of LION COFFEE is therefore guaranteed to the consumer. Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-bead on every package. Save these Lion-beads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SFIOE CO.. Toledo, Oliio. QJ W. L. DOUGLAS K *3."° & *3.29 SHOES £ W. I— It'iuglao S'J.SO shoes arf the greatest sellers in the world because of t heir excellent style, ens> titling mill su|ie. rior wearing n'lalif ies. They are Just ns tuoil as those Unit cost fro.n to$?.Oil. The only difference is the price. IV. I.. It.Miglas !..'■<) shoes nut more to make, hold their shape better, wear lunger, an.I jtreiif greater value than any other £Li.,»0 shoe nu the market to-day. %V. (.. Douglas guar antees their value hy ■tamping his name iinil price on the bottom of each shoe. I.uuk lur it. lakr no substitute. U.I.. ■iouglus S.|..*,0 stioes ure sold through his own retail stores in the principal cities, anil hv shoe dealers every w here. \ o mat ter where you live, M.I.. noughts shoes are withiu your reuch. BETTER THA.Y OTHER MAKES AT AMY PRICE. M For the lastthree years I hare ream If. /- Douglas Jt*t. V3 shoe and found it not only as good, hut better than any shoe that / *rer h id. regardless of pnee.” (’has. L. Farrell, Asst. Cashier The Capital Motional Rani. Indianapolis. Ind. Boys wear W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes because they fit better, hold their shape, and wear longer than other makes. W.L.OOUGLAS $4.00 SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE. j W.L. Dougin* uses Ccrwii f'olfsbin in his tf.M? x lutes. Corona Coil is considered to be the finest patent feather produced. F\sr*iakes a*fVd sells lilen's SaBo-shoes tnan'any other rr^iuiufacturer in fie World. $10,000 K"«° * ^ any one w(»_ candkp/oVet)>isstateT>ent. ENTRANCING ..Tone Quality.. pure and mellow, distinguish our hand made “Mueller” pianos from the ordin ary makes. THE SOUNDING BOARD is built on the violin principle, allowing free vibration. Other items of interest in our new catalog, sent free for the asking. Address the Makers, SCHMOLLER