jf Q ! I ; _ - t , ' @ t : . , hr ! ' ( { J . TiON- I .J\'lL [ . / ' tH1 J ti " ' ! : ' . v..J era \j" au S-Q I \ - tl i 1 V@ E 4 S : . ' PAYPALL l i Munyon's Paw- q . : + r. . , Paw Tills arc un- ---'Ii . hke al ! other laxa - ' . ' . " . t "f tives or cathartics. ' ; ; ' They coax the liver : j ! -.r. , , ! : r i'.to activity : by .K ' . - ' _ . r . * . - , gentle methods. f : - They do not scour ; they do net gripe ; they da : 11 . t w . .ak- ' . ( : J J cn ; but thcv do t , start all the tecre- . r , A tions of the liver a J eta d i1 1 anJ s'omach in a [ 1 way that : soon puts d ' ' nc , these orcans in a " hca'thy condition . . and corrects consti- pation. In my opinion constipation ! s is responsible for nio.-t ailments. There < i arc thirty-two icet of I'uman bowels ' , ; , ) -which IK really a sewer pip ! : . When this pipe becomes clogged ! : , the whole tystcm 1 becomes poisoned , causing biliousness : , in . digestion and impure blood , which often produces rheumastism and kidney ail , j ments. No woman who suffers with con + stipation or any liver complaint can ex pect to have a clear complexion \ : , or enjoy 1 I good health. ! M nyon's Paw-Paw Pills are a Ionic "r - - ' , to the - stomach , livor and nerves. They ' invigorate instead of weakening ; they c enrich the blood instead of impoverish I ing it ; they enable the stomach to get i ) ' all the nourishment from food that is put into it. These pills contain no calomel , no dope , they are soothing , healing and stimu latin . They school the bowels to act t without physic. Price 25 cents. r--- , .x ' Uncle Allen nml the Primaries. "You may saj what you please about 'em , " remarked Uncle Allen - . Span1 . - . . ' " ' ' it's i "They're all righ ror beginners , but r pretty tough on us old graduates of the school of politics to ( have to go 'back to the primary department again. " - Chicago Tribune. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications , as they cannot reacli the diseased portion of the ear. There is only : one way to cure deafness , and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness' Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mu cous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing , and when it is entirely closed. Deafness is the result , and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condi tion , hearing will be destroyed forever ; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh , which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness ( caused by Catarrh ) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. 'Send for circulars free. P. J. CHENEY & CO. , Toledo , 0. Sold by Druggists. THc. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Eelunl to It. . Intimate Ji'ri'ud-Dil1u't you feel ter- „ /i flustered when you and Rodney stood up before the preacher ? . ' Bri c-l\Ie' ? I never felt more self-pos- tessed and - - er - determined in all my life. 1f f Breaking ? Up Colds. A cold may be stopped at ne start by a : ' couple of Lane's Pleasant Tablets. Even in cases where a cold has seemed to gain EO _ strong a hold that nothing could break It ; these tablets have done it in an hour t or two. All druggists and dealers sell them at 25 cents a box. If you cannot get them send to the proprietor. Orator I ! ' . ' l Woodward , Le Roy , X. Y. Sample free. i Not Quite. Upgardson - You bought those shares of Disintegrated ] Copper to oblige some . friend , I suppose ? f Atom-No , blame him ! I bought 'em ; . ' - " ' to get rid of mm. " . t J Mrs. : Winslow's Soothing Syrup for chl1 - ren teething , softens the ums. reduces in- .flamraation. allays : pain cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. A camel is able to carry a load three times greater than the horse is capable ] .of. I If Yon Have Common Sore Eyes , if lines blur or run together , you need PETTIT'S EYE SALVE , 25c. All drug gists or Howard Bros. , Buffalo , N. Y. China , n Collection of Nations. China is not a nation in the sense in which we ordinarily use the word. If we picture to ourselves the countries of Europe , with their different lan ' guages and different customs , drawn to gether into a loose confederation under the government of a conquering race , we shall have some small conception " " is. , of what this , Chinese "nation" really The peoples of these different European ' countries are all Caucasians ; the dif ferent peoples of China are all : Mon golians. These Chinese peoples speak eighteen or twenty distinct languages , each divided into almost innumerable dialects and sub-dialects. ! : \ They are governed by Manchu , or Tartar , con I querors who spring from a different . stock , wear different costumes , and speak among themselves a language 1 .wholly : different from any of the . eighteen or twenty different native tongues.-Su'l' )1:1:1zinp. : : : : \ : \ \ oS 18 o , , f\\XWoj : Se\\\\O- QLeIsy 3f\ . omy Qe OW@\S ; c\eCl\\Se' ' 'he S 5 e.jJec\\\C\\\y ; xss\s\s \\\ovetcom\\\ \ u \ \ \ : ) \ \ \ \ ( } \ CO8'O \ \ \ Ve.tU\l\\\e.\\Y. " i To Qe\ Yfe \Q\\eS\ & \Q.\ / . ej ec \WlY8 ( b\l \ \ \ e " 1 e\\\\\ " , , - . r1ANUFACTU'RED EN THE CALI fORNIA < FIG SYRWf . rSOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS SQ'ASCITLE . < ' : " " , . . " . . { 1 . - . r .j = ? 8/ - ttutt / . ysr t r wt I ttt- II I I _ - - - . . . o . / - - : ' tt ! . - I . , . . - , . . - - : : . t A wise hog goes in a drove by itself. . Moldy : : corn is dangerous feed for the horses. . in the Intensive methods are needed flalry as \\jcll us in other lines l of farm- Iris. . High-priced seels will return a prof it if put into u good cow not a poor one. No kind of feeding pays in the case of the poor cow. Oive farmer rho started with a ce ment trough for his pigs has extended the u-e of cement to the building of ; a silo , barn , and the next thing will be a cement house. Look carefully after the cows that ] are to calve this spring. Don't let the I bright warm days that we get occa sionally delude you ; into thinking that there is no longer need of shelter and I care. are admitted to t the Before sheep fattening pen they should be carefully examined by an experienced person , and If any evidence of skin disease or ' vermin is found they should' be dip ped thoroughly. Just one bare fact ought to be neces sary to prove to the person of open mind that it pays to keep l the hens' : nests clean and in good o fler. Watch a hen cluck nice things when she be 1 holds a freshly strawed nest. The best dairy barns are long , with low ceilings. Ventilation. Is enhanced if the ceilings are low. To keep l the stable free from flies at milking time burlap curtains should be hung in the windows and the windows should be plentiful. Some time ago Ohio established a local agricultural school us an experi ment In a certain section of the , state. ' ' . Ohio It has proved a splendid success. farmers are all stirred up over it and have it Is said that fifteen counties made applications for such schools. follow A writer recently gave tho ing method of getting rid of quack- grass : "Plow ' the ground in the fall and sow rye ; the rye and quacl -grass will come up together and look nearly alike ; then sell the land. " This ] sounds like the advice formerly sold at $1 per. Some people said when the phone ' was introduced that neighborhood gatherings of two or three families or more would be discouraged. This re sult has not been alarming. On the other hand "dates" for such gatherings conveniently and shortly ar can be so ranged that "at homes" are more com mon than ever. If your hired man happens to ask for ' a raise in wages don't snub him off by telling him that he ought to be 1 mighty well satisfied to get what he is getting and that if he were working in Italy , for example , he would have to be satisfied with $3 or $4 a month , per haps. That is just the kind of logic that makes good men tired of working out. The German proverb that the ma nure pile is the farmer's bank , de pends ) for its truth a good deal upon the way the banking is done. Stich banks don't pay interest if every rain I is allowed to wash away the best part : of the manure. The surest way to get full value for all the manure made on the farm is to got it out on the land as soon as possible. - - - - This idea of figuring and figuring : to I find how many bushels of corn you caii ] raise to the acre : if you can got each } hill to yi ld so many ears is foolish be ' yond < 1 . : : ; ( 'ription. Oive your seed the right care , give It the right prepara tion plant properly } and when the time comes to harvest the crop you can gc out and count the number of ears tc I the hill and save all the figuring. The moldboard plow must be recom mended > as able to do the best work : i in nil places whore the moisture condi ' tions are favorable. In nearly all i.ri- ' gated and humid sections , and often in dry farming sections , this type of plow if i 'much better than the dislThe : dislpl : w is capable : of handling ground that has : become too dry and hard for the moldboard ) ] > low. ] It is of somewhat lighter draft does not re quire sharpening ] so often , cuts through ] trash better and does not clog sc easily. AVcecl Seed in Manure. Prof. Oswald , of the Maryland : sta tlon has undertaken to obtain mor < efinite information on the vitality o : weed seod in manure studying tin effect ! of the fermentation of inanun handled : in different ways and of pass ing ; through ; the digestive systems o : various animals \ on the vitality of va . rious "weed seeds , including seeds o : about 50 of the worst weeds. In experiments in which the manun . remained for six ] months in a barnyan + eap and for a short while in piles , ai ! . r . ' . . ' > , . , ' , , ; . , . when shipped in car load lots from cities , it was found that in the first case there was no danger and , in 1 the second case little danger of distrib - / ing live weed seeds. In the experiments in which the i weed seeds were fed to. yearling steers and the manure handled in various ways , it was found that where the 1 manure was hauled directly from the f stable as a top dressing , an average of only 32.8 per cent of the seeds fed to animals germinated ; where manure was hauled directely from the stable upon the land and plowed under , 2.3 per cent of the seeds fed to animals came up ; . wiiorc the droppings remain ed on the pasture fields unadulterated as they fell , an averag < \ of only I 3.1 : per : cent of the seeds fed to animals ger minated. The result indicated that in general it is safe to assume that the vitality of weed seeds is destroyed in well rot ted manure , but that many pass un harmed through the digestive tracts of animals and may be carried to the I land if the manure is not well rotted before use. I Epidemic Amonf ? Horses. Efforts are being made by the State Liye Stock / : : Sanitary : ; Board and the Pennsylvania Society for the Preven- tion : of Cruelty to Animals to exter minate an epidemic of mange which ] has broken out among horses in Phil adelphia. The disease , according to Dr. Horace Iloskins of the state board , has been brought to Philadelphia through horse importations from the West. 'The trouble began at least six months ago when preventive measures were taken , but vigilance has since re- ] axed and there are now approximate- ly 1,500 horses under quarantine and the disease is spreading rapidly. The disease is not confined to horses I alone , according to Col. F. ! B. Ruther ford , secretary of the Pennsylvania So ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Owing to its very conta- : gious nature , he claims ] , it has in'fect- . ed drivers and stablemen with an un usual skin disease which 'causes the cuticle to come off in large quantities , leaving the hands , face and neck very sore and tender. In his opinion num ber of local cases may be attributed to horses which came from New Jersey dealers. All stabos infected are required to undergo a twenty-two days' quarantine , during which time they are fumigated ' all curry combs , brushes and sponges previously used destroyed and the in teriors of the buildings are white - - the washed. State inspectors supervise work , and veterinary surgeons are re quested to report all cases where these regulations have not been complied with. Clipping horses is said to be a preventive of the disease. Young Farmers. ! Husbandry has assumed an Import ance never before accorded to it dur ing the past quarter of a century. The agricultural lands of Europe are fully developed and there is an annual short age of production as compared with in creased consumption as represented I In the : growth of population. England is I annually drawing larger supplies from the United States , Australia , Argentina and India to support her population. Vast works : of irrigation are being con structed on the Nile : and in India to increase agricultural production for the maintenance of the native population and for home consumption. Land cultivation Is annually engross ing increased attention , and agriculture from a life of primitive drudgery has advanced to a dignified profession. The young farmer who is a land owner i is now a man of importance in national affairs. He is a producer whose com modities are indispensable to the wel ] fare of society. If the farmer would ' limit production to. his individual necessities for only one year , famine and anarchy would triumph over mod ern civilization. No wealth produced by human endeavor has the intrinsic l value of the products of the soil which ] I sustain life. If man had all the gold in the world he would gladly exchange it for agricultural commodities when those products were necessary to sus tain life. Land cannot fall its owner and gives the young farmer a dignity and inde pendence not vested In other property. The farmer produces from the soil more of the necessities of life than any ; I other occupation. No man is so nearly ; the architect ] of his own fortune as the young ; : farmer. In other lines of indi vidual endeavor the labors of the in dividual are either appropriated by ; another or else mnssod : In an indivisi ble whole. The farmer who plans im provements knows that he will be the I beneficiary of progressive endeavor. Everj' ; increase in the volume of pro , duction from his limited acres is spe : cifically credited to his personal bene fit. Ownership fn land Is one of the best possible investments for personal ex - ploitation or as an inheritance to be queath to posterity. Nature is true * to her unchangeable laws and is 3 ever ready to reward the tillers of the soil. There is no taint of dishonesty In any - branch of husbandry as natural laws : r insure just recompense to skilled effort - in cultivating the land. While other r professions are overcrowded , agricul ture offers the young farmer Indepen dence and liberal remuneration for in telligent exploitation of the resources ! r ! of P the soil. , . . - ' - - - - - - - ' , "I . . . - I " . " . .y . -e " PAINT EVERY YEAB. ij i j N'o One "lY.izilx to Do It , lint Some : Pnliit 1VI11Vear Xo r.on ; ; er. I " ' ! lel1 you : have : :1 i job of paintinp ; rlone , you don't expect to have it done over again very soon. But to mnke : a j I : lasting : : job ] , several things must be taken into consideration - the proper time to paint-the condition of the 1 ! 'urfaf'e.-the kind of materials to use , etc.:1 : these matters are fully cov- pred in the specifications which car lie had free by writing National Load Company. 1002 ) Trinity Bull ! ding. Now York : and asking for I'Souseowner's Painting Outfit No. 40. The Outfit Includes a book of color schemes for I bolli interior and exterior painting , and a simple instrument for detect ! 112 ! adulteration in the paint matera ] : ; . The outfit will solve many painting : ; ; l'rlJhltllIfor [ every house-owner. Meantime : : when buying paint see that every white load keg bears the famous Dutch P.oy Painter trademark which is an absolute guarantee of purity : ami quality. ! If your paint dealer cannot : supply : you National Lead Company will see that ! some o > : > else will. It has been frequently noted by aero : nauts that the barking of a dog is always he ; last sound they hear from earth , and it has been discovered that this can be neard under favorable circumstances at ill elevation of four miles. ; DOLLAR \VHEAT HAJS COME TO STAY. - - 7 n Less Than Five Years Central Canada Will IJe Called Upon to Sni iI ) - the United States. A couple of years ago , when the an oouncenient was made in these c1 0' umns that "dollar wheat" had ( 'omeJt t stay , and that the time was not f ; . distant when the central provinces o Canada - Manitoba : , Saskatchewan an Alberta-would be called upon to su ; ply a large part of the wheat consunr : tion in the United States , there wer many who laughed at the prediction : and ridiculed the idea of wheat rent- ! ' ing the dollar point and staying therr Both of these predictions have come t . pass. Dollar : wheat is here-and it i not only here , but is here to stay ; an at the same time , whatever unpleasa sensations it may arouse in the supo : Canada I sensitive American. Central already ] being called upon to help koc l up our bread supply , and within th next five years will , as James J. Hi' says , literally "become the bren -b:1 : - ' Uat ; of our increasing millions. " There are few 'men in the Unite States bettor acquainted with tli wheat situation than Mr. Hill ui : < ; there are few men , if any. who are it I : dined ] to be more conservative in tho" expressed views. . Yet it was this groat : est of the world's railroad men w1 ! ! said a few days ago that "the price o wheat will never be substantially lowe ' than : It is to-day" - and when 10'c''I i 'I taken into consideration that at Ilia time wheat had soared to § 1.20 , wo ! above ! the dollar mark , the statement j' i peculiarly ! significant , and doubly ? i'4 nificant is the fact that In this coun try the population is increasing at tin ratio of 65 per cent while the yield of ; wheat and other products is increasing 4 > t the rate of only 25 per cent. Foi several ; years past the cost of living has been steadily increasing in thf United States , and this wide different the and consumption is In ! production reason. This difference must be supplied ] by the vast and fertile grain regions of Manitoba : , Saskatchewan and Alberta ' ' is absolutely no doubt o There now this. Even the press of the countr concedes the fact. Results nave sliowi that no other country in the world c.'u ever hope to equal these provinces a- wheat producers , and that no othc' country can produce as hard or as goof wheat. Said a great grain man ro cently , "If United States wheat main tains the dollar mark , Canada whoa will be well above a dollar - a bushel for in every way it is superior to oui home-grown grain. " With these facts steadily impinging their truth upon our rapidly growinp population , it is interesting to note jas' what possibilities as a "wheat grow er" our northern neighbor possesses While ; the United States will neve : surrender her prestige in any manu facturing or commercial line , she must rery soon acknowledge , and with ac ' she F i ? much grace as she can. that bound to be beaten as a grain produc er. It must be conceded that a great deal of the actual truth about the rich ' area ness of Canada's grain producing has been "kept out of sight , " as Mr. Hill says. by the strenuous efforts of anfl magazines to stem jur newspapers the exodus of our best American farm ers iito those regions. It is a fact that up to the present time , although Qanada has already achieved the front rank : in the world's grain producers the fertile prairies Manitoba , Sas katchewan and Alberta have , as yeb scarcely been scratched. Millions of . acres free for the taking 'still await - and when thesp our American farmers t.and millions are gone there are other mil lions in regions not yet opened t > p to immigration. A few years ago the writer , who had been through those wheat provinces several times , laughed with ] others of our people at the broat1 statement : that Canada was bound to " ' bread-basket. " become "John Bull's - Now : , after a last trip ( and though he is a staunch American ) he frankly be lieves that not only will Canada be ' but it come John Bull's bread-basket , will within the next decade at leasi BECOME : THE BREAD-BASKET OF THE UNITED STATES. Perhaps thi may be a hard truth for Americans to swaJlow , but it is a truth nevertheless And it is at least ) a partial ] compensa tion to know that hundreds of thou I sands of our farmers are proftlng by the fact by becoming producers hi thlj - new country. I . . . . . . . . . - . . , . . . \ . - - \ . - . _ r - ' n - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ . . - . . . _ _ , , : . . . r _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ , _ _ _ _ _ _ " ' _ _ _ _ _ , rY .r. : ' .j1 E ) N. ; : S'f . , ? . t.- , . ? : } " 'Id Irr4 , JS'-.r"1 urlUl' i - - 4SM'J' ' ' - - - * h td11i1 ( l $ m& i l y' I t " Children. t P& & J "For Infants and i SCa 1 p - - - t , 1,111 + c. . .n - You Have 4 o - ' " , . , . . . . . , . . , ' ' ' ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . ] tpUdl , . ; , ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. - lob AN getablePreparationforAs- similalin theroodandReguIa- Bears the I " ' ting Hie Stomachs andBowelscf 1 , 8dB. : , 1 jaslgi ] ' Signat ! R-iO jSj I , , ' 1L r , ! tl 1 &Sf { 3fevJ , DigeslionChcerruF l i ; of $ 4 r l ! I ness and st.Containsneithcr. _ X13 Opium.Morphiae narMioeraL i . \ t rm $ ' ' NOT N AH C O TW. : ! ! ' . , . . . : . * t ' * ' .lttpufOldlkSJNjJfZrIl11IiJl \ ' d + Rnsokin Stet ! - 1 i n IJ + . &hdfiSIF - ' ; n -f171S , , Jffd + tc ; ! C1 Z fipJff271fUf- Ji lr.L1ot1t ! ftld. , . I l1irGI Sml- C/qritd SlJrpz : . U ' Y ri + I f'iJJ.W * real : iomr7 < , - : : ! p S 8 * , 'Xi iW' ' ' A erfect Remedy forConsfipa- , , tion , Sour Storaach.Dtarrticea t Q ; I WormsConvulsious.feverish' ; : . F t1 U r 0 V r { r mulLOSS OF SIJillR j I ness © _ - - l I yin , l Simile Signature of a Thirtu Years . T i c I. „ ] g1 / T ! ! ff NEW ' YORK. ; 1 ll I ! ! I . , , ! A ST 0 R I A , , tide. . ' II 32 Q:7' Guaranteed ' under , Food . . . . . . . Ir Exact Copy of Wrapper. THE CCNTAUB COMPANY. ' NEW YORK CITT. A . , . . . . . . - - " ' . - ' - ' . Ai Ai . - , - - " - . ' - _ . - . . : ; . ' . ; 'f } " , oJ i . , . - - - - - - - - - r rY ' " - For : ' 4ri' Croup ' ra J 1 I Tonsilitis " t , . r . and hwe ter , , Asthma. . d , . t . . - " - - . . " ; r . , A quick and powerful remedy is needed to break up an attack of croup. Sloan's Liniment has cured many cases of croup. It acts instantly - when applied both inside and outside of the throat it breaks up the phlegm , re- i f duces the inflammation , and relieves the difficulty of breathing. i SIoans ! Llnlit1ent . x gives quick relief in all cases of asthma , bronchitis , sore throat , tonsilitis , and pains in the chest. Price , 25c. , coc. , and si.oo. x Dr. Earl S. Sloan , Boston , Mass. . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . i . - , . , . , , . . , . . , , . , ' " " " - - - - - - - - i. < ' ; ; t'l ! ' : ' = l. 'h I'W1'1 " " ; < ! L.o ; Fo" - rg ' : : - ; ' ' " II- " - , - - - The ! papers of this country have nat- [ I 'rally made the most of the brief pe- Mod of depression which swept over Panada : , but now there is not a sign of ; t left from Winnipeg to the coast. > ; . yer have the three great wheat rais- : ug provinces been more prosperous. Capital coming into the country from ill 1 quarters , taking the form" of cash for investment industrial concerns s eking locations , and , best of all , sub stantial and sturdy immigrants come to help populate the prairies. Towns are booming : scores of new elevators are springing up : railroads are sending iut their branch lines in all directions ; "Mousands of prosperous farmers are leaving their prairie shelters for new and modern homes - "built by wheat" : j J everywhere is a growing happiness and contentment-happiness and content ment built by wheat-the "dollar wheat" which has come to stay. Not withstanding this. the Canadian gov- ernment is still giving away its home- steads and selling pre-emptions at $3.00 an acre , and the railway and land com- panies are disposing of their lands at what may be considered nominal fig. ures. Jl-r-rc - . Trusty Henchman - Well , what are your plans for the future ? Defeated Candidate ( with , exceeding 'Mtterness i ) - I am going to start a weekly ewspaper ! By gad. I'll ! show 'em I The way Hamlins Wizard Oil soothes - and allays = all aches , pains , soreness , swelling and inflammation is a surprise and delight to the afflicted. It is simply great to relieve all kinds of pain. A leading Swiss scientist , declared that the Roentgen rays can be so applied that white horses become black. He is now ex- perimenting on oi : : gentlemen's beards. Take Garfield Tea ! Made of Herbs it is pure , potent , health-giving-the most rational remedy for constipation , liver and kidney diseases. At all drug stores. Excitement on 'Chnn c. "Hello , Graynes ! I haven't seen you here for several days : Been out of the city ? " "Not particularly , Stox. I might have ' been farther away than that , however. for all you know. I might have been out . of my mind. " "Huh ! You might 'have been out of that without even leaving your house. " Try Marine Eye Remedy For Red , Weak. Weary , Watery Eyes , Granu- lation. Pink Eye and Eye Strain. Murine Doesn't Smart ; Soothes Eye Pain. Is Com- pounded by Experienced Physicians ; Con- tains no Injurious or Prohibited Drugs. Try Murine : for Your Eye Troubles. You Will Like Murine. Try It in Baby's Eyes > for Scaly Eyelids. Druggists Sell Murine at BOc. The Murine Eye Remedy Co. , Chicago , will send You Interesting Eye Books Free. _ . , , _ ' , . .i- " s - < , . . . - - i ' This Trade-mark , A 1 Eliminates All Uncertainty in the purchase of f paint materials. i - . It is an absolute f guarantee of pur ity and qualitjr. . f , For your own protection , see ' , i that it is on the side of every keg of white lead a . 'I you buy. ' NATIONAL LEAD COKFASY : $ 1902 Triniiy Buildinz , Haw York ' " I Is Your Health t sz z ! ts s Worth 10c ? That's what it costs to get aweek's't treatment-of CASCARETS. Tkej l I - do more for you than any mediciaV on Earth. Sickness generally shoTra- , and starts first in the Bowels and Liver ; CASCARETS cure these ills. It's so easy to try-why not start l to- night and have help in the morning ? CASCARETS ice a box for a aweek's $ j q treatment all drutg st3. Biggest seller ) in the world. Million boxes s. month. .t. gF451o5O , . - Dnshels of t - Wheat per Acre } ' . have been grown on Farm Lands in VJESTERN CANADA al Much less would be satisfactory. The general average is above 20 bushela- r . , " : \11 are loud in their praises of the great crops a.nd that wonderful country. -Extract from cirrespondence National Editorial Association of August , 1908. It is now possible to secure a Homestead o ) 160 acres irce and another 160 acres at $3.oopez acre. Hundreds have paid the cost of their farms ftl - purchased ) and then had a balance of from $10.09 to $12,00 per acre irora : : one crop. Wheat , Barley Oats. Flax - all do well. Mixed Farming : is a great success and Dairying is high ] 7 profitable. Excellent Climate , splendid Schools an < ! , Churches , Railways bring most every district within easy reach of market. Railway and Land Companies have lands fox lale at low prices and on easy terms. "Last Best West" Pampfclels nd maps sent free. For these and informatics IS to how to secure lowest Railway Rates appjy te VV. D. Scott , Superintendent of Immigration , Ottawa. Canada or E. T. Holmes , 315 Jackeoa St. , St. Paul , Minn : , and J. M. MacLadalan , Bos Ii6 Watertown , So. Dakota. Authorized Gcveza _ \ . . , Been Agents. i Fleasfl tar wher J 7n taw this adT rtis ni nt. " - - - - - SER YFRrriNO TO .ADTERTl&EB& . WHEIT r 937 yon saw ha sdtuEbasss- . . Im tku DaDs , . - S. C. X. U. - - Xo. 18 - 190 * . : . . . : - ' ; i , .1 : < , . . ' , " _