General Demand of the W ! Informed of the World ha always I > -n for a simple , pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value , u laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com ponent parts are known to them to be whaloscir.t nnd truly beneficial in effect , acceptable to the system and gentle , yet prompt. ! n action. In M : ; vying ! that demand with its ex cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna , th' ' California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the- merits of the laxative for its remark able r.icw.s. That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Fig ? and Elixir of Senna is given. the f vVn nee by the "Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the generic- manufactured by the .Cali fornia Tig Syrup Co. , only , and for sale b } ' all loading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle. SuperI ; : < us hair may he permanently removed by amputating the limb upon Which it appears. Some ladies have found that a judi cious use < " .f powder will cause a criti cal husband to entirely cease remark- tag ujvp. thrir alleged homeliness. JThc powder. It might be explained , was di- tected at the raid husbands. Nitrogiycerin in .sufficient quantity will simpiy kiun'k the spots off a freckle-faced girl. A simple and health ful addition lr. the daily hath is a couple of gallons Of oil of roses. This can he procunr : ! at any drug si ore at tiie nominal price of f > c nirifir liv"- - ' " > ! , . ( ] > Blade. RAISED PROM SICK BED A f tor AI Hope llnil V Mrs. J. II. Bennett. 59 Fountain St. . Gardiner. Me. , says : "My bj.ck : used tn tr < > " < - jj. ( . so severely that at last I had to give up. I took to my bed and stayed there four months , suf fering intense pain. dizziness , headache and inflammation of the bladder. Though without - out hope , I began using - ing Doan's Kidney l'ills and in thro ° months was ' complete- iy cured. The trouble has never returned. " S < ! , by nil dealers. .10 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co. . Buffalo. X. Y. V/er.thor Tips Kroiu "Wire * . The attention of many persons has often Icv-n directed to- the bumming of telegraph and telephone wires , but it Las i.r.-y been recently that a connec tion has been found between this phe- noii"iion and weather conditions. Professc F. Bock of Babenhausen. Hess. . h.for.r.d. . after a study of the Bubjo - : , that it is possible to forecast local wcat'aer conditions by observing this Ivirnuiug and that prophecies hold ing : r < > ( .d for several days may be made If certain ruls are followed. The plan is t. ob.-erve the humming twice or three tlii daily , jircfc'rably at about- II a. in. and 0 p. ni. , and the best re- sul's for ! < : ' . ! forecasts are obtained whci , * ! " phrr.ffineiia are interpreted in ; ! , . ' ] r of the official forecast for ft rg. dlsTirt. , K > hunr.Ing ; is. of course , inllu- Al-y the strength ptfthe wind , the tension of the wire and various causes , wliich : n turn are affected by tempera ture and other atmospheric conditions. It is s.j'rl that the local forecasts blsed on thf huniniiig : wires have proved quite > ' . : . --essful ! and the interest of jneteornl-'g'sts lias been aroused in Herr n- method of observation. Har ; er' R 11 IvifctiiiRaiahcd Precedent. "I fine you. " said the police justice , " 530 an.l COSTS. " "Y'r loior : , " protested TufTold Knutt , tvho I.been ! hauled up for vagrancy , "all : ! p-ojty ; * I've got in the world is pJu S' ! u'rkel. aa'me clo'es an' they 'hain't wjth mon-'n about two bits. That fine's on ren ioiaMe. It's con fist ication. an' . it wo : ; ' : ' ! " . T stand the test o * the fed'rul tourts. { shall ti- : : < > an appeal , y'r bonor. " -Ciienn ; TT ' JTJ > . NO GUSHER el Rut Tell * Fncta A'boiit INi.itum. isdi ish "We have used Postum for the past di eight years. " writes a Wis. , lady , "and 1.a . drink it three times a day. We never a tire of it. lo "For several years I could scarcely ai eat anything on account of dyspepsia , tl bloating after meals- palpitation , sick headache in fact , was in such misery and distress I tried living on hot water be beb ; and toast for nearly a year. b "I had quit coffee , the cause of my PI 'trouble , and was using hot water , but itM t M this was not nourishing. tr , "Hearing of Postum I began drinking in it ami my ailments disappeared , and inm now I can eat anything I want without ni trouble. "My parent and husband had about tli th'- same experience. Mother would ru ofien suffer after eating , while yet sli drinking coffee. My husband was a \ CO great coffee ill-inker and suffered from j pnv Indigestion and headache. I v "After lie stopped coffee and began ] Posrum both ailments left him. .Ho will i not drink anything else now and we } ve havc.lt three times a day. I could write * eel 1 'mnr > . ' but am no gusher only -slate | fa , plain facts. " ' | jo , Name given by Postum Co. , Battle \ m ; 'Creek. ' Mich. Kead. "The Road to Well- j no esi ; N-iHe. " in pkgs. "There's a Reason. " j ca Ever read the above letter ? A new { po one appears from time to time. an { They arc genuine , true , and full of { its interest. \ dc : FROA1 THE CO/VIMOINER IVIR. BRYAIM'S RARER j T.Vliy Hill Felt Enwy. i Last fall when all my work was done | I thought I'd take some well earned fun ; Just thought I'd spend about a week | A visitin'my friend. Bill Peek i With whom I ustcr fight an' play . Bill lives down Oklahoma way So down I went , as free from care ' As anybodv anvwhcre. ! , "How's tricks , o ! ' man ? " says If ill t' me. "O. bully. Bill. I'm up in G. " I An' then I told him of success ' That 1 had earned through storm and j stress. "Some years wore fat an' some were lank , j But I got money in th' bank : ' An' now I guess as how I will ' Quit workin' hard. " says 1 t' Bill. i , r That niglit along * bout S o clock ' 1 got a mighty sudden shock A message from my wife that said : "Our bank is broke ! " An' home I sped , j In l ss than one short half a day I1 saw my savin's fade away. The bank was broke 'tween me an' you T' date I ain't got nary sou. This fall Bill came t' visit me An' found me workin' hard , b'goe ! But we went visitin' aroun' An * spent some leisure time in town. Says Bill t * me : "In that there wreck It seems you got it in tli * neck. " "Correct. " says I , "you stated facts Right where th' chicken got th'ax. . " That night Bill read his bank had closed , An * 1 jus' uacberly supposed He'd bike f'r home a feelin' blue , Jus' like I bad an'so would you. But Bill be laughed an * said : "I guess That ain't a-.soin" t' make distress. " "But all your money. Bill ? " I said. "Guaranteed. " said Bill : "let's 'o t' bed. " W. M. M. Ti : i Xnt.tlicll. The leaders of the Republican party have boon mixed up with Standard Oil and other trusts and corporations created contenting himself with the. assertion that some system of bank insurance r.as need ed. It seems that , the bankers opposed guarantee becaur.e they did not want it , and those who were not bankers , prefer red to let the bankers have their way rather tban take a stand in opposition to the action of the national convention , al though they realize that a vast majority of the people who are bank patrons in stead of bank managers demand a guaran tee that their deposits shall be safe. "Why Dirt IJoVnit ? Mr. Roosevelt begins bis letter : "In view of Mr. Hearst's disclosures about Foraker , I make public the following let ter , etc. . etc. " Then , Mr. Roosevelt , would you have made public this letter if Mr. Hearst bad made no disclosures ? You join with Mr. Hearst in denouncing Mr. Foraker. You would have accepted Mr. Foraker's sup port for your fat boy if Hearst bad not secured a bundle of Standard Oil letters , would you ? Why did you not play David to Fora ker's Goliath months ago , and not leave the David job to Hearst ? Now you are playing a Jonathan role to Hearst's David and you.and Hearst are doing a Salome dance with Foraker's bead on a Standard Oil charger. THKODORK ROOSEVELT IS MAK ING A VIRTUE OF A NECESSITY. One member of the high Republican sanhedrim has been caught with the goods on and Mr. Roosevelt is standing up be side Mr. Hearst and crying to the Amer ican people. "We done it ! Vote for Taft ! " Memphis Commercial-Appeal. : \o Scare. ; : Tlii.s Ycrir. The New York correspondent for tlic Indianapolis News , speaking of what Mr. Taft oucht to talk about on his western trip , said : "It .will simply be folly , to go through the west trying to create a scare. The people want to hear the tariff discussed ; liiev want to know about campaign con- whicli h nV-ai-"s ! for Mr. Bryan. In that > tror Mr. Oluey says : "Finally , every into't pnt voter must recognize the great t vils resulting from the inordinately Jong continuance in pow er of one political party. Compared with thorn , any possibly injurious consequences of a change of administration are insig nificant. The Republican party has now .been in power almost uninterruptedly for nearly fifty years during that whole pe riod the. Democratic party has been in complete control of the government for but two years. The inevitable has o course happened much misgovcrnment and maladministration have from time to time come lo light , much is iu plain sight and much more unquestionably under cover while its leaders , intoxicated with the phenomenal record of past successes , are disposed to believe and to act as if any uprising against the party by the people ple were unthinkable. " An 33Ji < : l li. It is amazing , it is pitiful , it is humil iating. Their sins , indeed , have found them out at Mast. Scandals to right of them ; scandals to left of them : defeat in front of them ; only the Taf.L-Sinton millions between : Cannon clinging to "Sunny Jim" Aldricb falling upon the neck of son-in- law Rockefeller Ihe thieving tariff exud ing fat no longer , but making quagmires for the robber trusts the people disgust ed on the one band or indignant on the other the grand old party of graft and fraud is , in truth , a sight to see. Yet a little longer and then t/he boneyard. leav ing only a stench behind , and this in scription : Whilst it lived it lived in clover ; When it died , it died all over. Henry Watterson in the Courier Jour nal. The sugar trust has just lacked ten cents per hundred to the price of that commodity , presumably on the belief that it was included among the schedules that need revising upwards. Time was when Mr. Roosevelt believed that it was no credit to the Rciiblican party that "Uncle Joe" Cannon was one of its leaders in Congress. Nojv Mr. Roosevelt is warmly supporting Mr. Can non and Mr. Cannon's proxy. "Wonder bow many times Bryan's name appears in the new Democratic cam- tt THK CALAMITY HOWLER" THE ELECTION Or TH DEMOCRATIC TICKET WILL s Not Very Convincing to These Men h b f ! rti ti tie ) .v the tariff since tiie tariff began to rob .lie American people. The trusts and tar- ff live because of the Republican party Taft's party bis master's party. Standard Oil and the trusts and the ari.T will fatten and flourish if Taft is 'loclod just as cli .v fattened and flour- shed as they never did before in their listory during the administration of Tbeo- lore Roosevelt , in spite of the fact that ic ran up and down rbe country bellowing .gain-'t ! them like a roaring lion. Ho bel- owed but be never bit. If W. J. Bryan is elected , the trusts nd tariff will nol have as easy sailing as beyhave bad under Roosevelt. You wan' : the proof of this assertion. Carnegie is for Taft. Carnegie lias cen made a half-billionaire through and y the tariff and bis future millions de- eud greatly upon the tariff standing as is. And Rockefeller , and Arcbbold , and lorgan , nnd Ryan , and Gary of the steel rust , and" Schwab of the protected iron idustry. and Jlarriman , and all the other ion who take toll from boMi the producer nd the consumer are for Taft. And in JhN you will find the issue of n's campaign. It is : Shall the people ule through Bryan and Democracy , or hall the Standard Oil and other trusts intinuo to rule through the Republican arty and Taft ? Memphis Commercial ppeal. O ] > I > ctMil Itmlc The Nebraska Republican platform con- nlion. held in Lincoln Sept. 22. defcat- by an overwhelming vote a resolution Lvoring guarantee of deposits. A ma- irity : of the resolutions committee was lade up of bankers , and a working mi- jrily of the delegates present are inter- ted in banks. Gov. Sheldon , who is a indidate : for re-election , vigorously sup- rted a minority report favoring guar- iteed deposits , but was unable to secure adoption. But the Governor had no finite policy of his own to announce , tributious : they are greatly interested in the bank deposits guaranty issue and wan ! to bear Mr. Taft on the subject : they want some assurance that the trusts are not backing the Republican campaign , etc. It would bo foolish to deceive our selves into believjiig that Bryan's speeches have not mad" a deep impression. Mr. Taft must answer them , not content him self by declaring that Bryan is a menace to prosperity that will not go at all. Bryan lias revealed tilie kernel to that sort of campaign by saying : 'You cannot seai-o a man wlio is sleeping on the floor by telling him he is about to lose his bed. ' " I.pt Him Siienk fur Himself. Complaining that MY. Taft is not strengthened by having it appear that it is necessary for Mr. Roosevelt to continu ally speak for him. ( be New York Times , a Taft organ , says : "But would it not help Mr. Tafl more , not only in rhc West but , in the East , if such tilings were done not for him. but by him ? Would be not impress himself uiioii the country much more forcibly if be spoke for himself instead of having Mr. Roosevelt continually speak for him ? Consider for a moment t.he situation and the behavior of the two candidates respec tively. Mr. Bryan is in the West , in the East , everywhere , and everywhere seen and board. If there is something to be said be says it. lie is the most active and aggressive candidate for the presiden cy who ever appeared before the people. Emphatically he is Jiis own campaign. He dominates the scene. Behind his conspic uous figure one only dimly and now and then perceives a few minor and negligible Democrat ic personages. " Uielinnl Oliiey. Richard Olncy , former Secretary of State under Mr. Cleveland , has written for the New York World a letter in' ' paten text book ? " queries the Milwaukee bt Si'iitinel. Haven't counted , bat not oftener - of er than Roosvelt's ! name appears in the oi Republican campaign text book. ih The panic of 1ST" came when a Re ; publican high protective tariff law was av in full force and effect and the adminis ty tration solidly Republican. ' Same thing th in ISO. , . Same tiling in 1007. And no amount of Republican sophistry can re move the facts. faHi Hi gl A dollar voluntarily contributed to the im Democratic campaign fund now may re po sult in making it impossible for the trusts ha ham to make you unwillingly cough up ten or m fifteen times that amount to the Republi do can fund in future campaigns. is > tin The spectacle of trusts being busted by fo the official collector of the g. o. p. cam tis paign committee four years ago. the only Republican Senator who openly opposed fro the rale bill and the bead of the powder trust , would be worth going many miles to see. Twenly-five cents in silver or stamps , sent to the "Chairman Text Book Com mittee , National Democratic Committee. Auditorium Annex. Chicago. " will bring you a copy of the Democratic campaign text book , which should be in the hands of every Democrat. Gov. Hughes says he is advocating the election of the Republican national ticket because be "desires to get' rid of every I- vestige of special privilege at the expense of public interests. " By carefully looking the other way Gov. Hughes managed to miss seeing the slow and deliberate lower ing of Hon. James Sherman's left eye lid. FARMING IN WESTERN CANADA ' 's'v. . . ' ' . / ' * ' . ; * ; ? ' ' ' " ' ' ' - < - " . . - ? - -fc A WESTERN CANADA WHEAT FIELD. Canadian correspondence : "What are the settlers of Western Canada and most of all the farmers who have emigrated from the United States- doing this year ? " I was asked by the editor of one of our big American maga zines a short time ago , by which I was assigned to travel thVoiigh the great wheat provinces of the Dominion West to dis cover just what the conditions were there , and how the many thousands of Ameri can farmers in this "Eldorado of Wheat" were prospering. ' Tin's was my fourth journey through Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta. I followed close upon the (10,000 ( good Amer ican farmers who left the Slates to make new homes for themselves in these prov inces last year and in different words , this was how I answered the question of the editor quoted above : Imagine first of all. a train of forty-ton cars 1i. { miles in - : length a train , in otliT words , which would reach from New York City to Denver , or from the Canadian border through the States of North and South Dakota. Nebraska. Kan sas , Oklahoma and Texas , and for 2. 0 miles down into old Mexico , and you will have some idea of this year's production of grain in th three great provinces of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta. In other words , it will take more than 200.(00 ( cars to carry the grain production of th se provinces alone this autumn. If a person were standing at one point , and tin's "grain train" passed him at the rate of twenty miles an hour , he would have to remain in that one spot for just THRESHING WHEAT IN SOUTIIKHN ALBERTA. hree days and three nights to see the ; nd of it. It would carry past him more than IOO.000.OijO bushels of the best wheat in b < - world. i'JO.OOO.OOO bushels of oats and ! 0,0 < JO.OOO bushels of barley , for those igures , according to very best estimates hat can be given at the present time , bow what the settlers of Western Canada tave raised tbis year in the way of grain. Never in the history of any country las there been a more prosperous year or farmers than the present one in the ) ominion West. So enormous has been he grain production that nearly 2. ,000.- 00 pounds of binder twine were required or the crops. Oats this season ave gone as high as one hundred usbels to the acre , while over large areas f country the average has been as high as i.ubty : and ninety bushels. The wheat ield lias been as high as fifty bushels to lie acre , and from figures already in it believed that the total will show an err.go yield of between twenty and twen- i'-ib-e bushels lo the acre throughout the iree provinces. It is difficult for one to understand ist what Western Canada moans to the inner until be takes at least one trip irough that country. As yet the vast I'ain lands of the three western prov- icr . with an area large enough to sup- art the population of a nation , have irdly been scratched. In other words , it lay truthfully be said that the tremon- us production of these provinces to-day that of a few pioneers. Last year : ty thousand of the best fanners in le United Stares took up now homes ir : themselves there , and from the sta- fics of the past two or three years each je of these settlers will be harvesting om . " ( K ) to ± 000 bushels of grain next year. Under ordinary conditions the nevr settler makes a living during his first year. He builds himself a cabin or a rude board borne , and if be lias not much capital of bis own be works a part of his time for bis neighbors , for work is always plenty and wages good.- The second year , bow- ever , be has in bis own grain. It is a common saying throughout Manitoba. Sas katchewan and Alberta that "the settler makes a good living the first year , builds himself a good home the second , and is independent the third. " Until I bad become thoroughly acquaint ed with these thousands of my people who have emigrated to Western Canada , and with the conditions now existing among them , I was inclined to believe with other hundreds of thousands of Americans that Canada's wheat lands were considerably overestimated. There are a large num ber of land companies in the United States whose promoters very much dis like to see good American farmers taking up land in Canada when they have vast tracts of their own to dispose of. Ono of the "stories" frequently seen in Amer ican papers is that the good homestead land , or free land , of the Dominion is al ready taken up. Millions of acres of the best land in the world are now open to American settlers in Manitoba. Saskatche wan and Alberta , and these acres are of fered to them absolutely free , with taxes so low. after they have gained possession , that they may almost be count ed as nothing. To-day three great railroads stretch across Western Canada , and within a few miles on each side of these roads th < J great part of the population of settlers live. Beyond these narrow belts are millions of acres of the best laud in the world and it is safe to say that within ten years it will be almost entirely taken up and American farmers will occupy a great portion of it. No fanner in this country lias to carry bis crops far , for every few miles along the railroads towns or stations are laid out , and at every place there is a huge elevator , and some- limes several of them , each holding from JO.OOO to 00,000 bushels. A few paragraphs back , I made tha statement that many American land com panies are trying to give the impression that the free homestead lands of the Do minion are about gone. To show bow ridiculous this is , I will give the figures which have boon secured through W. J. Kennedy , of the Department of Immigra tion.vbo lias made an exhaustive inves tigation of this subject. . According to the results of bis investigation there ara at the present time more tban 100- , 000 free homesteads already surveyed and awaiting se'ttlers. and in addi tion to those there are vast tracts of the best land in the world which have not yet been surveyed , and which will ba homosteaded. And from my long experience in the * Dominion West. I confidently believe that during the next two years nearly all o * those 'homesteads wil have boon taken up by good American farmers the farmers from our own States who are making Western Canada what it is to-day. Years a-jo the best advice in the world was , "Younir man , go West. " To-day it has changed in a small way. Now it is : "Younz man. go to Western Canada. " L.vi'-MALKING SCENE ON THE CANADIAN NORTHERN RAILWAY. .