) 3OQOO0OO0OOOCT I LUMBAGO SCIATICA ST. JACOI OIL Penetrates to the Spot Right on the dot. Price 23c and SOe ceoooocoeoo2C9soccccc A Positive p I Ely's Cream Balm It quickly absorbed. Civet Relief at Once. It cleanses, soothe i heals and protect . the diseased mem. brane. It enres Ca tarrh and drive away a Cold in the Head quickly. Re-tJAV CFlfm tores the Senses of HH I W las V &M Taste and Smell. Full si ze 50 cts. , at Dm gists or by mail ; Trial Size 10 cti. by mail. Ely Brothers, DO Warren Stree. Now York. smL L me I 8 K3 sji a. m tin u FARMS FOR RENT iT . MtltBALL, SIOUX tlTI. IWVtA. California harvests nbont T.IO.OOO tons of grapes a year, worth $15,000,01)0. THE PROGRESS OF THE DIAN WEST. CANA- Nearly 200,000 of an Increaae la Canadian lmiiilnrai'lon In 100U. The progress of a new country cnunt be better ascertained than by noting the Increase of railroad mileage In its transportation system, and Judged by this standard, the Canudlau West leads ell the countries in the world during the current year. Thirty years' ago there was not one- hundred miles ot railroad west of the Great Lakes, und very little prospect of a transconti nental route for many years to come, but by the end of 1SS5 the Canadian Pacific Railway was within measurable distance of completion, and last year, twenty years later, fully tS.000 miles of Otnilrnnil traversed the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alierta. In the past year the work of rrilroad construction has been vigorously prose cuted, and by the end of 1000, some 5,000 miles of completed railroad has been added, making n total of fully 11,000 miles In the three great grain producing provinces of Canada. Such an Increase in the transportation facili ties of the country is bound to make good times not only in the districts where the railroads are being built, but throughout the entire west. Allow ing $20,000 a mile for construction, the 6um of $100,000,000 will be put in cir culation, and this In Itself should cause good times to prevail In a land where work is plentiful, wages are high, and the cost of living is moderate. But the building of new railroads through Western Canada means a greater benetit to the country than merely the money put in circulation by the cost of construction. Additional railway building means the opening of new agricultural districts and an addi tional area under crop, a largely In creased output of grain to foreign mar kets with consequent financial returns; the erection of elevators and the growth of villages, towns and cities ; and every- tiling else that mirkes Tor the progress of national life and the opening up of additional thousands of free home steads so extensively advertised by the .Canadian government agent, whose ad Jdress appears elsowhere. X.It was stated on the floor ot the Canadian Parliament recently by a prominent representative '.hat ten years from now would see the bulk of tUe population of Canada residing west of the Great Lakes, and if the work of railway building during the present year Is any criterion, the prophecy it made by the Canadian statesman may ' be easily fulfilled Inside of tlie time stated. During the present year no less than 180,004 persons have found lomes In the Canadian West, of whom M.T'JU were Americans who have seen the great possibilities of this new West, and have decided to cast In taelr lot with It Certainly, our neighbor north of the 49th parallel Is making 1 great record, and deserves the succesj that appears to be coming its way. Yod Bet! Stranger I don't like your weather. It la too fluctuating and uncertain. Mr. Olds-Port Why, great Scott t That' its charm. I've already made $2, ' ' 000 this year by betting on it. ELEVEN YEARS OF ECZEMA. Band Cracked and ' Bleeding; Nail Came Off of Klaarer Cntlcnra Hem. edlea Brouarnt Prompt Hellef. "I had eczema on my hands for about eleven years. The hands crack " ed open In many places and bled. One of my lingers was bo had that the nail came off. I had often heard of cures by the Cutlcura Remedies, but had no confidence In them as I nJ tried so many remedies, and they all had failed to cure me. I had seen three doctors, but got no relief. Finally my hnfhaud aald that we would try the Cutlcura .itemed iei, ao we got a cake of Cutlcura (rfoap, a box of Cutlcura Ointment, und two bottles of Cutlcura Resolvent rills. Of course I keep Cutlcura Soap mend them to all suffering with ecze ma. Mrs. Eliza A. Wiley. R. V. D. No. t, Liacomb, Iowa, Oct. 18, 190a." all the time for mv hands, but the one M cake of Soap and half a box of Cutl Clcura Ointment cured them. It is ture 11 ly a blessing for me to have ray hands j well, and I am very proud of having f tried Cutlcura Remedies, and recom wrmon,) 8 ztcrjPJ . Christian Sinners. Had temper mid uncontrolled nrger are not sins of worldlings, but are also the sins of thousands of professing Christians. Rev. I). It. Rabbit, KpUeopallan, ltrook lyn. ' Conversion. Conversion doe not mean the development of ono's mind, nor an Increase In culture, it does not mean reformation, but re-creation. Rev. J. L. Campbell, lhipttst. New York City. Forgetting. If Tti forget In ordet to mend, hd forgets, ton; If yon for get in order to persist, then you may forget, but Ood remembers. Rev. Frank ' Crane, Unitarian, Worcester, Mass. Win' Men to Christ. We should do all we can to win men to Christ for the transformation Christianity would bring to the world, civic and political. Rev. (!. It. Voshurgli, Kpiscopallan, Ienver. Jealousy. Jealousy is always un kind. If not cruel and murderous. En courage jenlomy and remove its re straints and it will trample under foot the laws of man nnd God. Rev. George Adams, Methodist, Brooklyn. The Greatest P.ook. The Bible Is still the greatest book of religion that we possess. ' The work of our great scholars, as our own experiences, is making this more apparent continually. Rev. ('. K. Jones, Unitarian, Los An geles. labor. Fellowship Is born of labor. The desire and ability to work to be come an active factor in the world's onward sweep Is to do one of the command.-) of God and measureably will In the royal .battle of life. Rev. T. E. 1'otterlon, Episcopalian, Brooklyn. Divorce Marriage Is a relation which Is indissoluble except for one rea son. If it is a civil relation a divorce can and may be grauted. If it Is or dnined by God no court has any right to Interfere nnd sever the bonds. Rev. E. L. Powell, Disciple, Louisville. The Present Religion. The only re- llgon that faces the present with n mes sage of warning to the sinner and a prophecy of hope to the penitent. The plea of the present is worth more to us than the pyrotechnics of the pat riotic past.--Rev. M. E. Harlan, Dis ciple, Brooklyn. To Save Humanity. With hands full of helpful charity, with a word in sea son to him that is weary, with n heart nt leisure from itself to soothe and sympathize, we are sent to bring our selves Into contact with humanity at the point of need. Rev. T. J. Yillers, Baptist, Indianapolis, Joy. Joy Is n vital nnd worthy ele ment in every life. Our rugged and rushing age Is so serlous-mimled that we have almost forgotten to be merry nnd ring out hearty perils of laughter. Yet no one is nt his best until deeply nnd divinely happy. Rev. W. P. Fer guson, Methodist, Los Angeles. Real Manhood. When men cease to be for sale when they have decency enough to refuse to be bribed, common honesty enough to be true to their vows, and courage enough to do their duty, then can we say that men are more precious than gold then shall they take on real manhood. Rev. N. W. Strouh, Methodist, Cleveland. Purity. Be pure let not prostitu tion .or profligacy or obscenity or friv olity, however alluring, deceive you Into giving to the Impure a place in your life. Our God is the holy God, und demands purity In the Inward parts. He is no Christian who har bors in his soul the volcanic elements of an impure life. Rev. C. R. McXally, Baptist, Brooklyn. Life. The diversity of life and yet its unity; the brevity of life and yet its continuity; the Insignificance of life and yet its potentialities. Surely we have abundant proof that the life of the Individual Is not disconnected from the past and the future, but that it Is on integral part of all that life has been and will be. Rev. P. S. Alton, Episco palian, Greene, X. Y. Ritualism. It does not mutter what length of time u minister has been connected with one creed If in after years he becomes fully convinced that some of the foundatory principles of that creed are not In accordance with the rituals of true religion. I believe it is his duty to himself, to his God, and to his parishioners to change. Rev. F. C. Sherman, Methodist. America Needs Leaders. America to-day In its political and social life needs leaders with well trained con sciences, whose moral Judgment Is ac curate and vigorous and whose wills have been trained to choose and do the right because it is right It needs those who love righteousness vastly ( more than they love iiopularlty. Rev. II. M. Shicum, Episcopalian, Colorado Springs. . Superior Man. The planets cannot help being led blindly to their appoint ed course, lint aitiu has been made not lifeless, not a jlod of earth, but en dowed with the freedom of resisting or accepting tho highest guidance, aud can place, if he chooses, a barrier be tween himself and his ideal, though only to be the final annihilation of body and soul. Rev. H. N. Pfeiffur, Congregatlonallst, Howells, N. Y. The I'anul Tulnyr. "When I saw Jlgley yesterday he had come home from a hunting trip." "Yes? Did ho bring home a big bag?" "Well, no ; but he brought home a bbj brag, as usual." Philadelphia Press. Popped lr the I.I ant of the Ilooa, Wigg Say, do you believe that the moon Influences the tide? Wagg I don't know about the tide) but It Influences the going to-be-tlL Boston Transcript .Ti' A close pen Is a bad place for pigs, when they mlght.be out getting mot of their living for themselves. Bran, malt, oats, hay, carrots and gveen grass or clover are suitable or sick or convalescent animals. A farmer needs a nlco house that will keep out tho cold and he needs an Ice house that will keep out the heat Next to a shredder an old thrashlug machine will put fodder in a ge,od con dition, to feed. In fact some farmers claim that It Is even better. An agricultural axiom was written as early as the year 1758, as follows: "The finer the earth Is made by tillage, the more It U enriched by rain, dew and air." The man who "hnd better stock and farm products at home,' than those exhibited at the fair was there. He usually shows up, but he seldom ex hibits any of the results of his labor. It pays to fertilize crops. If twenty loads of manure on an acre only In creases the crop five bushels of corn, there Is a gain by it, for that fertility will be evident on that acre for many years. A dnrk soil absorbs the rays of the sun faster than the light soil nnd thus makes It warmer. This difference In temperature affects tho germination and growth of plants. In the spring when the corn is coming up the rowb are usually seen first In the dark soil While It may be desirable for the poultry keeper to know the points In the standard for pure-bred fo,wls, and to be able to detect a bad feather or a fault at a glance, for practical purposes ite had better know the symptoms of disease and he able to detect a sick bird when he visits the yards. Carrots, parsnips nnd salsify will keep safely in the ground where grown unless the winter be very severe. It is always well, however, to pull and store some of these roots in sand in the cellar so that they may be available for the table should the ground become too hard frozen to permit of digging or pulling them. The advantage of moderately low headed, open-center trees are best ap predated when one la engaged in spraying, thinning and picking the fruit This Is a problem and good or- cUardists are studying a deal to-day, and It Is very generally admitted that It requires the greatest good Judgment to pruno Just enough to produce the de sired effect A barbed-wire fence was heard to make tho remark: "I've been in the cattle and horse business for many years, and I have observed that I al ways got more horses nnd cnttle when I was down and out of repair. I may have to retire, however, as my neigh bor, the woven wire, Is expnudlne hit domain." It is getting to be a question whether a farmer who raises good horses can afford to have a barbed wire fence. Professor W. J. Green says: "Apples will thrive on a great variety of soil, will color better on high laud, but will hang to the trees better and ripen later on lowground, but there Is more In the management than In the soil With spraying and cultivation they can be successfully grown where they formerly would not succeed. Thor ough drainage Is important tiling pre ferred. Mulching has produced good results, but when commenced must be continued. It may be employed where cultivation Is not practicable." Did you ever try to drive a ninety pound shoat thro.ugh a Blxteen-foot gate? Of course you have, and you have bad him stm before reaching the gate, turn about meditate, hesitate, cogitate and finally the combined efforts of hired man and a dog can't put him through that gate. Then you have had the same pig approach the same gate when he was not wanted and you have 6llpied up along the fence In an at tempt to, head him off and and well of course he got through first. It Is presumed that the average hog Is pos sessed of the spirit of divination. He can foretell what Is going to happen a good deal better than his owner. Bare Montr In Fertlllaer. It Is possible to obtain more plant food for a g'ven expenditure of monoy If unmixed chemical fertilizers are purchased rather than the ordinary mixed fertilizers, says Farming. In niost cases, the same amount of plant food as Is contained in a ton of nilxet' fertilizers can be purchased In tho form of unmixed chemicals at a cost of about $0 to $3 less. The labor of mixing will not cost nearly enough to offset this difference. Many farmers wll say, however, that they do not un derstand the principles which should govern in the selection and compound tng of the different chemical fertilis ers. This may often be the case, and I cannot attempt to cover the ground In the short space of one artldo. wUh, however, to say that If you do sire advice and assistance In this mat ter, It will be gladly given If you wi apply to your State Experimental Sta tion. Bavaloet war to Start Celery. On of the most difficult tblnra to ralM la the garden Is celery, because 3& 7 &2zrsttr&snB of Its being bard to start the plants. A very suet-essful way, however, Is t irenare the around where you want the plants, sow good fresh seed quite thick In the row, but uott i cover witn d!t. Next cover with bur'an. laylnc something on the edges to prevent tne wind from blowing It away, and sprin kle with water every day on top et the burlap. In from one to two wewks the seed will sprout nnd as It leglrs to grow raise the burlap gradually and llnully remove. Plants grown In this way will be very hardy nnd may le thinned out and transplanted, leav ing the plants attout five Inches apart In the row. The blenching may no done as one chooses, with dirt or tra mulching or bonrils. To Manatee SI lira and Ilnnka, In a lecture before the students of the Agricultural Department of the University of Missouri, T. E. Orr, sec retary of the American Poultry Asi- ciatlon, told of methods of combating mites and chicken hawks, that might easily be used by every Missouri house wife. Mites, he says, may be gotten rid of bv spraying the chicken bouse wlt!i a mixture of one part crude car bolic add nnd eight parts carliou oil. Th's mixture he reeonimeuds In pref erence to mite exterminators, sold by traveling agents. Hawks may lie kept oui of the poultry yard by attaching brfcht pieces of tin. six by ten Inches, to the trees nnd poles surrounding tho quarters, by strings two feet long so that the wind will make the bright metal dance In the sunlight. Choice of Orrbnrd I.ocillon. In a bulletin on the renewal of the peach industry lu New Jersey, a bulle- In Issued by the experiment statli.n of that State has the following to say re garding the selection of a Held: It Is best to choose a Meld at some distance from an old orchard, so as to avoid as far as possible the passage of Insects and diseases. But it the cjd orchard is not Infested with yellows, root-lice or borers, a young orchard may be planted near It. So far as the scale is con cerned, the trees must be sprayed every year; therefore It can be controlled near an old orchard, but It Is easier to manage If not near un Infected o.ue. It Is, of course, to be preferred that the field elKiseu he one that has not grown peaches for several years. It is some time said that the soils In parts of the State will no longer grow peaches, but the noils that were once go.od peach soils are still so If they are properly treated. PurlOln KtllUr Milk. The unsightly and unsanitary condi tion of many of our dairies nud milk herds is a reproach to owners. In most instances the owners cannot see tho dirt and filth, the had drinking water and the smeared cows. He Is too much accustomed to them. He Is "letting well enough nloue" at his place. Cow3 drinking from iouds with green scum over the surface cannot give pure milk. The cow should be clean outwardly. also, before the milker sits down to his work. Has the milker clean hands? Then he Is one among ten thousand. Has he clean clothes? Then indeed Is he a rare bird among milkers of klne. Thousands of cow owners believe In the bottom of their hearts that clothing ad bauds cannot be kept clean for milking. These people think that milk Is of necessity, In the nature of the case, n tolerably filthy article, which may lie purified more or less by strain Ing or possibly by the separator. How vain this hope is has been shown many times by miscroscoplc examination of milk once dirty. "Once dirty, always filthy," Is the rule for milk, as ordinar ily handled. But one Is almost sure to waste time talking to people 'about what the microscope will reveal when they are unable to see common black dirt nnd worse In the bottom of every pail when It Is emptied. The only safe ami snnltnry plan known to the dairy world is to keep tho milk pure from In side to outside, from start to finish. Farm nnd Ranch. Increasing Kkk Production. In these days no one can afford to kefp dendheads on the fiirm. All farm animals must pay for their keep and muke a good profit In addition. It Is an astonishing fact, therefore, that tuily a small proportion of ioultrymen actu ally know whether a particulur ben U laying or not. Some men can Judge more or less accurately by the color of the couib, by the cheery song, and other well known signs. A much more accur ate method consists In the use of trap nests by means of which each hen Is marked by a ring, or otherwise, every time she lays an egg. It requires a little time and patience, of course, to operate trap nests mo as to separate the layers from the non-layers, but It pays well in tho end. When the test has been applied tq a flock of hens, some are found to be laying 150 to 190 eggs a year, while others of equally vigor ous appearance and happy disposition lay not a-n egg. But the non-layers cat, and are, therefore, expensive Iuiurier to kfoi about the farm. The chief value of auy reliable sys tem for (ticking o.ut the best layers Is found in the fact that they may ho used ns breeding stock to Improve tho egg production of the whole flock to come. In a careful series of tests In Maine, Utnh and elsewhere It hns been defi nitely shown that tiie hen transmits her laying qualities to her offsirrlng. With this fact well established the poultry man should use no rooster for breeding purposes unless he comes from a 200 egg hen, and should Incubate no eggs ex cept those which come from a hen with a record of 200 eggs a year. It Is thus possible tq build up a flock of hens each of which will lay 200 to 250 eggs a year. Thla Is fully double the yield of the average flock. Not only may the number of eggs be Increased by breed, lng, but a rrat uniformity In the sits; shape aud color of the eggs la secured. tl Sonaded I'narratrral. A frugal and Industrious shoemaker tins two daughters, of whom he Is very proud. He provides a good home for them, dresses them well, nnd Is giving them a good Education. Not long ngo be drew on bis modest bank account for a sum sufficient to purchase a new piano for them. What followed may be described in his own words. "Oh, ye" he confided to a neighbor, they were grateful enough for It, of course, and It's a great comfort to bear 'em play aud slug, but what do you supposewas the first thing the girls learned on It?" "I'm sure I. don't know," snld the nelghlwr. "'Everybody Works but Father.'" Rraaon Bioncn, "Why are you late for breakfast sir?" asked Bobby's father, ai the boy slid quietly Into his chair. "Well, you see," expla'aed Bobby, "when you cnlled me I wis having a mighty funny dream and I Just slept a few minutes longer to finish It." Tuck. Found lllm Bo.. Ubett The Idea of Slikker claiming to be a hard working man is the richest thing I've heard of Intely. Konmnnn Well, he Is, l-y Gporge! lie's the hardest mnn 1 ev.;r tried to work. TORTURED WITH GRAVEL. Since Ualne; Doaa'a Kidney Pllla Not a Slnarle Stone Una Formed. Capt S. L. Crute. Adjt Wm. Watts Camp, U. C. V Roanoke, Va., says: "I suffered a long, long time with my back, and felt draggy aud listless aud tired all the time. I lost from my usual weight. 225, to 170. Urinary passages were too frequent nnd I have had to get up of ten at nluht. I hnd headaches and dizzy spells also, but my worst suffer ing was from renal colic. Arter I began using Doan's Kidney Pills I passed a gravel stone as big as a beau. Since then I have never hnd an attack of gravel, and have picked up to my j former health and weight. 1 am a , well man, and give Doan's Klduey rills credit for It" Sold by all dealers. GO cents a box. Foster-Mllhuru Co., Buffalo, N. Y. One of (he Two. Ruffon Wrnta (laboriously trying to read fragment of newspaper) What is a "calumny?" Goodman Gonrong It's either a graju ate of a college or It's the attiff they put In these bnkin' powders. Wot about it I Keep Yoor niooil Pnre. No one can be happy, light-hen.rted and healthy with a body full of blood that cannot do Its duty to every part because of ita impurity; therefore, the first and most important work in hand is to purify the blood ho that every organ will get the full benefit of a benlthy circulation. There la no remedy wj know of so good as that old family remedy, ltrandreth'a Pills. Each pill contains one grain of the solid extract of tarsapnrllln blended with two grains of a combination of pure and mild vegetable products, making it a blood purifier unexcelled in character. One or two taken every night for awhile will pro duce aurpriaing rr.su Ita. ltrandreth'a Pilla have been In use for over a century and are sold in every drug and medlciue store, plain or sugar-coated. Locked That Way. "Come, Willie," said his mother, "don't be so seiflsh. Let your little brother play with your marbles a little while." i "But," protested Willie, "ho means to have them always." "Oh, I guess not" "I guess yes, 'causo he's swallowed em." St Louis Post-Dispatch. r PUTNAM Cesar awra saa kriaatar' fastaf eslan aasa aay awwai svai ranaaj aaaru ajravt far rrae pit JSt Iwm Hi mm mm II.-' trZtmm rn a Ik-. aaW if .mm -'. - III . . J".- saiiJit I nMr XVfrCclable Prepatatiortfor As- almUaUng thcFoodandBcgula- ung me btomoctts ana lwwcis or rromolcs Digcslion.Cbrcrrur' nessandRest.Contalns neither Otniun.Morphiue norlGucral. WOT & All C OTIC . TaW&4fAlsi abaaf JfMisWTMf r Mfnafr Apcrfecl Remedy forConstipa Hon, Sour Stowach.ninrrhoon Worms .Convulsions .Fcverish nrss and Loss or Sleep. Facsimile Signnlurt of NEW YORK. ; ww ,.. EXACT COPY or WRARPCR. jBfaafJMaBaftjeae Sale Ten Million S&BUgA TNI FAMILY'S FAVOIIITB MBDIOINB Jk CANDT CATHARTIC BEST FOR THE BOWELS Important Dnatnraa, "Mistah Snow," anid the rallev, twirling bin hat In an embarrassed way, "Is yo ve'y busy this evenin'?" "Not particularly, Kpliraim," responded the Itev. Dr. Snow. "la there anything I can do for you?" : "Yea, anh. I'd like to have yo' come i ovah to Mis' Wnlkah'a and pull olT a little weddiu' fo' me, aub." Chicago Tribune. If the heart of a man is depressed with cares, the mist is dispelled when a woman appears. Gray. Thla Will Interest Mother. Mother Gray'a Sweet Powdera for Chil dren, used by Mother tiray, a nurae In Chli dren'a Home, New York, cure Constipation, Keverlabnesa, Teething Dlaordera, Slomai'li Troublea and Ietroy Worma: .HO.OO0 teatl monlala ot cures. All drugglsta, i!ftc. Ham pi Fred. Addreaa Allen 8. Olulsted, La Uoy, N. X. Spare I' a Thla. "I was Just wondering whnt on earth would happen," murmured the timid elti ceu, "if some contractor should begin It" "Itegin what?" "Making frenzied disclosures In the magazines." Philadelphia Bulletin. There are two classes of remedies: tlioso of known qual ity and which are perruaucutly beneficial in effect, aetinar gently, in harmony with nature, when nature, needs assist ance; and another class, composed of preparations of unknown, uncertain and inferior character, acting tempo rarily, hut injuriously, as a result of forcing tho natural functions unueccswarily. One of tho most exceptional of the remedies of known qnality and excellence is the. ever pleasant Syrup of Fij?s, manufactured by tho California Fiir Syrup Co., which represents the active principles of plants, known to act most beneficially, in a pleasant syrup, . in which tho wholesome Californian blue s are used to con tribute their rich, yet delicate, fruity flavor. It is tho r-emedy of all remedies to sweeten and refresh and cleanse the eystcm !, gently and naturally, and to as.sist ono in ovcrcoinlntr constl- pation and the many ills resulting1 therefrom. Its active princl l pies and quality are known to physicians generally, and tho ( remedy has therefore met with their approval, as well as with the favor of many millions of well informed persons who know of their own personal knowledge and from actual experience that it is a most excellent laxative remedy. Wo do not claim that it w ill cure all manner of 111m, but recommend it for what It really represents, a laxative reiuedy of known quality and excellence, containing nothing of an objectionable or injurious character. There are two classes of purchasers; those who are informed as to tho quality of what they buy nnd tho rcaBons for the excellence of articles of exceptional merit, and who do not lack, courage to go elsewhere when a dealer olfers an imitation of any well known article; but, unfortunately, there nro gome peoplo who do not know, and who allow themselves to bo imposed upon. They cannot expect its beneficial effects If they do not get tho genuine remedy. To tho credit of the druggists of that nearly all of them valao their integrity and tho good win or their Imitations of tho Genuine Syrop of Fig&2 manufactured by tho California buy the genuine article and to only to note, when purchasing, the full name of the ContyalKJV California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed ou tho front ht 0tJ, poinu&u. a i tic, yvu uviiw, FADELESS tkr Ti rr n z?v vrii For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature In Use For Over Thirty Years rva eitrmua tamm, new oa orrr. Boxes aYear. The Canadian West is (he mm WZM&m R. Weft . YMSUsmi 'I ho testimony ot tent ot thousands durlnf the pnst year is that the Canadian West is the beat west. Year by year Hie agricultural returca have iiicrrused in volume and in value, and still the Canadian (iovrrnmont otters 160 acrea free to every bona fide settler. Some of the Advantages The phenomenal Increase in railway mileage , main lines and branches has pat almost averr portion of the country within easy reach at churches, schools, markets, cheap fuel and very modern convenience. The NINETY MILLION BUSHEL WHEAT? CROP of this year means Jocooo.ouo to the larmera of Western Canada, apart trom the) results of other graiua and cattle. ror advKe and Information addreaa the Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, er the authorised Canadian (iovernaaaDt ngac W. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottsws, Canada, or E. T. Holmes, )( Jackson St., St. Paul, Minn, and J. M. MacLachlan, Boa iro, wateriown, so. uaaota. Autnoriaea uor Bieni Agents, f 1mm hi whsra rnm mm this adverUMatsas. HSimil Ctt List S. C. X. u. No. 1 1907. MKMTION THIS PAPER mm n wunu tho United States be it Ba!L rcputat'on for professional ' A customers too highly to offO" Ot Fig Syrup Co., and In rAy to get its beneficial effects, jtno fcas vuo eiio uuiy. . Ad u mm ?- 'M .1. s?..oJ"-V Vi 1 am 4S 0 Aw. A ' a. fy t M 4 V A at. .A m At A I " A, v9 n . . , 10c rUa ealeri til Vkm. Taay Sv ci wata, totter ttOtimtmwy V -kW. m aVN, m-U a. H Caaart. HON 0 1 X VC COniAHJJ ( VWa VV a. Tjt" 4V.