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| A PERFECT HOME SECURED AT LITTLE COST. Joan and T he odore St rinvert formerly residents Ok asc gan, but now living in Alame- da, Western ‘Canada, before taking up their home there visited the coun- try as delegates. They reported to the Government of the Dominion of Canada the result of their observations, and from this report extracts have been taken, which are published below: “We have visited a number of most | desirable locations, and are highly pleased with the country as a whole, it being beyond our highest expecta- tions. We find here a prosperous and well-contented lot of people. They have comfortable homes, and their vast fields of wheat and other crops in addi- tion to their herds of choice cattle, in- dicate prosperity in the full sense of the word. In conversation with the farmers throughout our trip we learned that the majority of them came here with very limited means, and some with no more than enough to bring them here, and they are now well-to-do. They all claim that this is the only country for a poor man, or one with little means, to get a start and make a home for himself and fam- ily. As you are aware,’ we were a little shaky and undecided before leav- ing Detroit, but have determined since that we, with our friends, will make this country our future home. It is far from being the wilderness we had pictured it to be; it is, instead, a land having all the facilities required by modern civilization, such as railroads, markets, stores, churches, schools, etc., in fact, an ideal home for those having the future welfare of themselves and families at heart. The Messrs. Striovski selected the Alameda district, but what they say of it applies in a general way to most other districts in that vast country. They speak of the fuel, which is to be had in great quantities, of the water that can be had by digging from 10 to 20 feet, and of the good grazing land to be had almost everywhere. There is | plenty of wood for building timber and for fuel, while coal is convenient, and sells at low prices at the mines. In driving through the country they may fine patches of wild rasp- , and say they can speak highly of their flavor, as they could not resist the temptation to stop and eat. Having already transgressed on your valuablé space, I shall defer further reference to Western Canada for an- other issue. An illustrated pamphlet recently sued by the Department of | the Interior, Ottawa, Canada, giving a complete description of the country, will be forwarded free to all who write for it. Yours, WESTERN CANADA. ured. First Klondiker—What was the row down at the Hot Dog eafe this morn- | ing Second Klondiker found his best soup.—Philadelph One of the boys at in, the saddle Bulletin. | Coe’s Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker than anything cise. It is always reliable. ‘Try it. | | A More Profitable H Ikey (in a burst of enthus' nsm)— | Fader, 1 vould like to be a states- man! His you. bolitician. Father—Ikey, I'm s’prised at Dere’s more moneysh in bein’ a Puck Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Ca- thartic cleans your blood and keeps it | clean by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body. Be- | gin te-day to banish pimples, _ boils, | blotches, blackheads, and that sickly | bilious complexion by taking Cascarets— beauty for 10 cents. All druggists, satis- faction guaranteed, 10c. 250. 50c. A Scottish diver in the Clyde recently excelled all European records by remain- ing under water for forty minutes at depth of 186 feet. . TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. ‘Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Drugegists refund the money if it fails tocure. 25c + Demand for More Battleships. The Secretary of the Navy has demand- ed more battleships, and there can be no doubt that congress will consider his recommendations. Protection is what our seaports require, and fortifications will | not adequately supply this. Defense against is, all disorders of a malarial type ver, adequately afforded by Hos- Stomach Bitters, an_ efficient so, for constipation, biliousness, rheumatism and nervousness. Some bank burglars in Indiana who were pursued by bloodhounds threw the animals off ‘the scent by rubbing onions on the soles of their shoe | metals were known. AN AFFLICTED MOTHER. From the Times, Paw Paw, Iu. A resident of this town who has lost twt children during the past six years, by vio- | lent deaths has been utterly prostrated by the shock, and seriously sick as a result of it. One child (aged 9) was killed by a cy- clone in ’90 while at’ school; another, three years.later was run over by a Burlington R. R. train. That griefs and misfortunes may so prey on the mind as to lead to seri- ous physical disorders has’ been well dem- onstrated in this case. As aresult of them, her health was shattered and she has been aconstant sufferer since 1890. Her prin- cipal trouble has been neuralgia of the stomach which was very painful, and ex- hibited all the symptoms of ordinary neu- ralgia, nervousness and indigestion. Phy- sicians did her no good whatever. She was discouraged and abandoned all hope of getting well. Finally, however, a cer- tain well-known pill was recommended (Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People.) She supplied herself with a quantity of. them and had not taken them two weeks when she noticed a marked improvement A Constant Sufferer. fnhercondition. Shecontinued taking the pills until seven or eight boxes had been consumed and she considered herself en- tirely cured. She can now eat all kinds of food, which is something she has not been able to do for years. She is not troubled in the least with nervousness as she was during the time of her stomach troub es. She is now well and all because of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People a complete cure has been made. If any one would like to hear more of the details of her suffering and relief gained by the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People they may be obtained prob- ably, by writing the lady direct. She is one of our weil-known residents, Mrs, Ellen A. Oderkirk, Paw Paw, Ill. Explained. Knox—I wonder why it is that we hear of so many men breaking down in the prime of life, nowadays? Fox—It is due, no doubt, to their be- ing so many more self-made men than formerly.—Boston Couri Everybody in Russia is registered by the police, and a record is kept of all travelers, the time of their arrival and departure. Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in the Children’s Home in New York, Cure Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 10,000 testimonials. They never fail. At all druggists, 25¢e. Sample FREE. Ad. Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. When the § a Japanese orange is removed the sections fall apart without any forcing. OH, WHAT SPLENDID COFFEE. Mr. Goodman, Williams Co., Il, writes: “From one package Salzer’s German Coffee Berry costing 15c I grew 300 Ibs. of better coffee than I can buy in stores at 30 cents a Ib.” A package of this and big seed cata- | logue is sent you by John A, Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., upon receiat of 15c stamps and this notice. w.n.o John M. Penniman has been for fifty years a member of the Boston police force. His age is seventy-five. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes, 20 for 5 cts. During the last eighteen years diamonds to the amount of $280,000,000 have been taken from the mines of South Africa. Piso’s Cure for Consumption has saved me large doctor bills.—C. L. Baker, 4228 Regent Sq., Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 8, ‘95. Not at All Curious. “Why do you suppose the Emperor William has sent his only brother to China?’ “Don’t ask me; gracious, I have all I can do to look after my own family rows.”’—Detroit Free Press. ‘To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10¢ or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure druggists refund mone; A school for the training of young col- ored men in agricultural pursuits is about to be established in Tuskeegee, Ala. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup For children teething,softens the gums.reduces inflam- mation.ollays pain, cures wind colic. 2 cents a bottle. Four hundred years ago only seven Now there are fifty- one, thirty of which have been discovered within the present century. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets Candy Cathartic, cure constipation for- ever. 10c. 25c. If C. C. C. fail druggists refund money. A tiger in the menagerie of Stuttgart was prodded in the eye by a keeper, and lost the sight of that eye. Now it has a eve. FOR 30 DAYS mune TOU UAW bet be Cen He Soe RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, LA GRIPPE CURED BY “5 DROPS”’ ment torthis place. “5 DROPS” has done for me. foot day and night and I sleep nor rest. ‘At times I cared not what bec [Trade Mark.) it wax difficultite tell where foom. a short time but it would come again. (Every doctor I went to told me I had so is the most concentrated and powerful specific known. Free from opiates and perfectly harmless. Relief is usually felt the very first night. We have letters of grateful praise from thousands who have been cured by “5 DROPS,” and who recommend it ¢o sufferers. COD BLESS YOU ALWAYS. Swanson Rheumatic Cure Co., Chicago. think of you as my far away friends, and thank God for directing your advertise- Yes! oh yes! 1 will gladly tell the whole world what your Dear Friends:—Yes, yes, I shall always . It found me racked with pain from head to had dreadful rounds in my head. I could not eat, ‘The doctors gave me medicine and it would stop the pain for I could not have suffered much nd my kidneys were in very ba ny different diseases in my body I could hardly get across the came of me, to comment ‘Now I cam walk one and.a half miles and back, and God bless you always. Oh, how fiedly I would take the agency if it were possible, but I am poor and have no way of traveling around if Z Snaxld take it, Gratefully yours, Mrs. L. WAaLLacr, McGregor, lowa, January 8, 1898. 1 CANNOT PRAISE “5 DROPS” ENOUCH. Swanson Rheumefic Gure Co.. Chicago. Dear Sii I wasitaken in August with Sciatic Neuralgia, and ty, but they did not heip me any. whene. what gaz have done for ae. Asa positive cure for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neural; Hay Fever, Catarrh, Sleeplessn: ousness, I thought 1 would write @ statement of my case. as treated by two of the best physicians of our coun- But happy Zor me I saw your “5 DROPS” advertisement and sent and gctabettlc and it has curedume. Iwas very bad, could hardly get around at all, but now I can T cannot praise “5 DROPS” enough for what it has done for me. I am very, very grateful for ‘Youre truly, SARax E. WiLsox, Spradling, Kentucky, January 2, 1898. ‘o any- ia, Dyspepsia, Backache, Asthma, orvous bed Neuralgic Headaches, F237 Weakness, Toothache, Earache, €roup, Swelling, La Grippe, Malaria, Creeping Numbness, ete, ete. 44 FAYE DROPS ’’ has never been equalled. 439 taken but oneea day is eGese of this great remedy and to/enable all sufferers to §6 5 DROPS % akon fist or tes wonderful curative properties, we will send out fer thirty days more, 100,000 sample bottles, 25¢ each, prepaid by mail. hs t medicine on earth. Large bottles (300 deses), $1.00; for 30 days, 3 bottles for 8: seesitels, only by us and our agents. Agents wanted in new territory. Even a sample fottle will convince you of its meri Best Not sold ay. Write us SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO., 167-169 Dearborn St., CHICAGO, ILL. “THE POT CALLED THE KETTLE BLACK.” BECAUSE THE HOUSEWIFE DIDN’T USE SAPOLIO FARM AND GARDEN. MATTERS OF INTEREST TO AGRICULTURISTS. Some Up-to-Date Hints Abont Cul- tivation of the Soil and Yields Thereof—Horticulture, Viticulture and #loricalture. All Around the Farm. “As the day lengthens the cold strengthens.” This old saw gathers added force if we have a bunch of calves to feed. Cold and carelessness are calculated to knock a spring calf in the head. Then when spring comes and they have all the grass they can eat they are liable to take to blackleg. A neighbor went to Chicago and bought a carload of calves and brought them home. This was early in the spring. He was quite a young man and it was his first venture. They were thin and so at once he fed them liberally. They would eat until they were satisfied and then lie down. This was kept up quite a while and then nine of them dieé of blackleg. The idea struck the young man that they needed exercise, sO every day for a week or more, as soon as they were through with their corn in the morning they were driven around for a couple of hours, The re- sult was not another died of blackleg. Safety is reached by commencing with a poor lot of calves so gradually that there is no suddenness in the change. When they have reached full feed no harm results. I myself, last spring, bought seven head of calves, yearlings, which were so warty they looked hid- eous. I commenced gradually and kept it up until they ate every ear they could. The warts commenced to drop off before grass came. Good pasture finished making them smooth. My opinion, after noticing calves for a goodly number of years, is that black- leg is simply paralysis of the surface blood vessels. They fail to circulate the blood. Exercise keeps up the cit- culation; lying down induces torpidity of the veins and paralysis. I am no doctor, but them’s my sentiments on blackleg. Cattle should not be fed on corn alone. It is natural for them to chew the cud, and roughness fed with corn brings both up from the first compart- ment of the stomach and all is digested. Without réughness_ scarcely half the corn goes through the process, and so it passes from them in whole grains. Hence there is waste, unless hogs fol- low, and in any event the corn does only a part of its office in the fattening process. The drouth in these ends of the earth was ‘beneficial in making, not only sound corn, but in maturing the young wood on the fruit trees. It is true that numbers of trees and plants set out in the spring have perished. Especially is this the case with cherry trees,which seem more susceptible to drouth than any other sort. Plums are all right and so are the young peach trees. Pears have stood it well. Apples not so well. Many ornamental shrubs perished; no- tably the hardy hydrangea and the cle- matis, Among evergreens the Siber- ian arbor vitae is the most susceptible to drouth. The hydrangea and the evergreen must be watered liberally or they will certainly perish. On many plants drouth is more destructive than cold weather. Co-operation is gaining ground among farmers. Near me a creamery of this sort has been running now over a year, and so well has it prospered that a 13 per cent dividend has been declar- ed. This and the fact they get the milk back, minus the cream, has given cows a boom. Properly and honestly man- aged, there is not the least doubt but that it is a good thing for the farming community, and especially for the stockholders. Another creamery run on the same plan a few miles farther away, has done as well as the above, and one year it did better, for the past six years. Men are hauling up to the house great piles of logs, which before long, will be sawed by horse or steam power. Half a day’s sawing will last a round year. To cut the wood for that length of time as it is needed with the axe is no fool of a job, which I know by sad experience. Cutting wood at the wood- pile in July and. August is a watery job. A man at the woodpile then seems to be the subject of “continual dissolution and thaw.” I prefer the steam power in the winter. How cheerful the evergreens look around the house when all the ground is covered with snow. They are the ideal windbreak. I have a good many of various kinds, but prefer for the rank and file the white pine. It grows rapidly and, with room, very shapely. There should be two rows twenty-four feet apart. The outer row should break joints with the inner row. By that means a solid shelter is made. Any quantity of men don’t seem tc care a copper whether their half of the line fence is kept up or not. Bad fences make, as a rule,,bad neighbors. After the fence is first made, ordinary care will keep it in working order. I often wonder why it is that farmers don’t see that it is much easier to be on the best of terms with their neighbors than to be otherwise. Years ago when I com- menced farming on this prairie I re- solved that my stock should never trou- ble my neighbors, and they never have. ‘The sheep industry is looking up. A near neighbor has now 1,000 head. An- other 600, and both tell me that sheep are very profitable. It is a comfort to see that diversified farming is better than hogs, cattle and corn, or corn, cat- tle and hogs, and nothing else.—Ed- ward B. Heaton in Farmers’ Review. filinois Dairymen. According to announcement the IIli- fois State Dairymen’s association held its annual convention January 11, 12 and 13, at Red Bud, a quaint old town which bears many substantial evidences of thrift and prosperity. Not far from Kaskaskia, the first capital of the / state, it is situated in the very heart of the country celebrated in the his- torical romances of Mary J, Cather- wood. The convention was a great success if it was held “way down in Southern Illinois.” Like other meetings of {ts class it brought together such a clean-hearted, keen-witted, jovial set of men, and was conducted with an absence of restraint that proved so enticing that the sec- retary was fairly harassed by applica tions for membership. The character of the dairy discus- sions has changed materially since the days when the relative merits of breeds was the all-important topic. This sub- ject was so generally ignored at most of the sessions that an ignorant at- tendant might reasonably have sup- posed that “any old cow” would do for dairy purposes. The attention of the | convention was chiefly devoted to a consideration of the comparative values of forage crops and how to preserve them in the best, most economical manner. All arguments for old meth- ods or principles not sustained by the recent experiments of the agricultural stations were received with cynical good nature and the professors in agri- cultural lines of whom a liberal sprink- ling was present, commanded at all times the most respectful attention. Indeed nothing was more apparent than the growing confidence in and de- pendence upon the work of the experi- ment stations by the progressive and practical farmers of the state who rec- ognize their inability as individuals to conduct such tests with the scientific accuracy attained by the stations and are glad to avail themselves of the re- sults. The most valuable contribution to the program was generally conceded to be the address by Mr. R. A. Pearson, as- sistant secretary of agriculture, who exhaustively described the work which the department has done and is doing to further the dairy and general agri- cultural interests of American farm- ers. We hope to give these papers and discussions in detail in later issues of the Farmer’s Review. Chief among the resolutions passed by the convention was one condemn- ing the so-called free distribution of seeds, which the Farmer’s Review has for many years so aggressively op- posed. Another of the resolutions passed was addressed to the Illinois legislature and petitioned that body to so amend the present anti-color oleo- margarine law as to provide for the appointment of a dairy commissioner and for an appropriation for the maintenance of such an office, the as- sociation pledging itself to work ‘by | undividual vote and personal influence for such legislation. The following officers were elected for the ensuing year: President, George H. Gurler of DeKalb; vice-president, John Newman, Elgin; secretary, J. H. Monrad of Winnetka; directors, Jno. Stewart, Elburn; R. R. Murphy, Gar- den Plain; S. G. Soverhill, Tiskilwa; R. G. Wilford, Red Bud, and A. G. Judd, Dixon. After the reading of the scores on the butter exhibit and announcement of awards, Mr. F. W. Brockway ad- dressed the convention on the “De- mands of the St. Louis Market,” which he summarized in the statement: “St Louis demands good butter.” Mr. Brockway was one of the judges of the butter exhibit and explained the points of the score card. He consid- ered color a point of secondary im- portance and said that the tendency of the trade is towards a lighter shade, that the Chicago and New York de- mand is for a paler hued butter than St. Louis. In the discussion which followed, Mr. Wilford expressed the opinion that the various state dairy as- sociations should unite to adopt a standard color for butter and urge its general adoption. One would think that three days of three sessions each would have ex- bausted the debating zeal of even such eathusiastic dairy farmers as these, but no, at the parting of the ways as the trains bore them north, south, east and west, wherever two or three were gathered togther the discussions went on and butter, cream, ensilage, corn, and all the other terms in the “bright lexicon” of the Illinois dairyman floated out upon the night air and doubtless mingled in their dreams as they sped across the rolling prairies of our beloved state. A Land Decision.—An interesting land case, not long ago, got in a Cal- ifornia court. A man had secured a tract of land having a small stream of water, which he used in irrigating his arid acres. A neighbor, owning an ad- joining tract, also wanted water and concluded to tunnel under the bed of the stream mentioned and by pumps and other appliances secure the water he so much desired. The owner of the stream had the court, enjoin proceed- ings and hear the case. The decision was that a California land owner owns everything straight through to China and heavenwards as far as he chose to go.—Ex. Horses in Russia.—It seems that, ac- cording to the official returns, there are 21,000,000 horses in the Russian em- pire, or about fifteen animals to about every hundred inhabitants. But, enor- mous as the number is, the supply of really good horses is limited. The Im- perial administration accordingly has established in the principal centers eighteen depots, comprising 1,600 stal- lions, most of a distinctly superior class. These are exclusively employed for the mares belonging to rural pro- prietors of all classes, without distinc- tion, and at a price varying from one to ten roubles.—Mark Lane Express. The increase of cheese is not in ex- act proportion to the fat. One pound of fat in three per cent. milk will make more cheese than a pound of fat in four percent. milk. The yield of cheese per pound of fat gradually de- creases as the percentage of fat in the milk increases. THE MAN WHO LIVED. He should have been dead. But he wasn’t, because—— “There's nothing succeeds like success.” There is no withstanding the living argu- ment of the man who should be dead, who isn’t dead, but who would be dead, but for a preserving medicine. That’s about the way it seemed to strike Editor Lawrence, of the Ohio Farmer, Cleveland, Ohio. He was afflicted with one of those colds that have, thousands of times over, culminated in consumption, when not promptly cured. In this condition he met a friend, a con- sumptive, whom he had not expected to see alive.’ The consumptive friend recom- mended Dr. J. C. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for the editor’s cold, on the ground that it had “helped him wonderfully.” It helped the editor just as wonderfully, giving Kalmost instant relief.” But read his letter: “About! two months ago, I was afflicted ith a bad cold, and, meeting a friend, he advised the use of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral which, he claimed, had helped him won- derfully. As he was a consumptive, whom I had not expected to see alive for several years, I concluded there must be merit in this preparation. I accordingly bought a couple of bottles, one of which I keep on my desk all the time. This is certainly the best remedy for a cold I ever used. It gives almost instant relief, and the J. C. Ayer Co. are to be congratulated on posses- sing the formula for such a very valuable remedy.”-W. H. Lawnexer, Editor, The: Ohio Farmer, Cleveland, Ohio. Keep a bottle of Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pec-- toral handy, on the desk, in the office, om the shelf or in the closet at home, and you will have at hand a remedy that is capable at any time of saving you suffering, money, and even life. There is no malady Se- prolific of evil results as a neglected cold. ‘There is no medicine so promptly effective- in curing a cold and absolutely Sic pr ne its effects, as Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. Every traveller should carry it. Every household should keep it. It cures every variety of cough, and all forms of lung and throat trouble. Asthma, bronchitis,. croup, and whooping cough, are promptly cured by it, and it has in many cases over- come pulmonary diseases in aggravated forms, when all other remedies failed to- help and physicians gave no hope of cure. Those who for convenience have wanted a smaller sized bottle of Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, can now obtain it of their dealer in half size bottles, at half price—so cents. Send for Dr. Ayer’s Curebook, and read’ more of the cures effected by this remedv. ‘The book contains 100 pages, and is sent free, on request, by the J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mi A whit sparrow has made its appear- ance in Lafayette, Ind. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS, We are asserting in the courts pe right to the exclusive use of the word “CASTORIA,” and “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” as our Trade Mark. I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachu- setts, was the originator of “PITCHER’S CAS- ‘TORIA,” the same that has borne and does now bear the fac-simile signature of CHAS. H FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original “PITCHER’S CASTORIA” which has been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. Look carefully at the wrapper and see that it is “the kind you have always bought,” and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the Wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. March 8, 1897. SAMUEL PITCHER, M. D. In Russia it is the custom for duelists to breakfast together before going out to fight. It Keeps the Feet Warm and Dry. And is the only cure for Chilblains, Frostbites, Damp, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores 25¢c. Sample sent FREE, Ad- dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, Blue butter is made from the milk sup- plied by the vs of India. No-To-Bac for Fifry Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c. 1. All druggists . A butcher in Morrisville, Vt., kills all his cattle by shooting them with a rifle. Read the Advertisements. You will enjoy this publication much better if you will get into the habit of | reading the advertisements; they will | afford a most interesting study and; will put you in the way of getting some excellent bargains. Our adver- tisers are reliable; they send what they advertise. Great Britain has over 10,000 postoffice savings banks, the deposits in which amount of $500,000,000. Rice wine has been in use in Japan for over two thousand years. Next to grape wine, it is the oldest alcoholic beverage known. Star Tobacco is the leading brand of. the world, because it is the best. Nearly all of the musicians in Japam are females. The male Japanese would consider that they were acting ridiculous- ly if they played or sung in society. Some idea of the attention that the Baltimore & Ohio railroad is now pay- ing to its passenger traffic may be gained from the fact that during the past eight- een months nearly 800 passenger cars received thorough and ordinary repairs, 696 being repainted. Nearly all of the equipment is now royal blue, and most of it is equipped with Pintsch gas, the | Pintsch light being used on local as well ; as through trains. The oldest bank note in existence is im ihe British museum. It was printed in China in 1368, ninety-two yeare before the birth of Guttenberg, the reputed in- ventor of printing. CANDY CATHARTICG Purely vegetable, Palatable of tast Perfume the breat Pleasant of action, Powerful yet mild, Potent but non-gripings Perfect laxative, Positively guaranteed to CURE CONSTIPATION, A booklet and sample free for the asking, or you can buy a box for toc, asc, 50c at your drug store. Satisfaction guaranteed. 73 Sterling Remedy Co. Chicago. Montreal. NewYork WO-TO-BAG foc.oaissie ty ah “eran V4. OFA The reco RHEUMATISM, + + ap + + + “= ¥ + + SCIATICA, 4p “P AFTER NEARLY The record is unbroken. ST. JACOBS OIL Is the Master Cure for eb bbe $$3¢¢0¢¢¢¢4F4 CENTURY rd still goes on. NEURALCIA, LUMBACO. FEEPEEEEE TEES Don’t be fooled with a mackintosh fit! or rubber coat. If you wantacoat§ AW that will keep you dry in the hard~ est storm buy the Fish Brand Slicker. If notfor sale in your town, write for catalogue to A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. Werth $1.00, fee 14 conte, Above 10 pkgs. worth $1 will SRI yon he, Pogetoce vite great Plant and of this notice and ! When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Faper. N.W.N. U,, No, 7, 1898. @ Vegetable HALL'S Sicilian HAIR RENEWER It can’t make a single new root. But if the root is there it will give you a thrifty, glossy growth, lo gray hair. No dandruff. For maps, pamphlets, railway rates, ete, and full information concerning this country. enjoying exceptionally pleasant climate and continuous good. crops, apply to BEN DAVIES, Can. Gov't Agent, 154 East Third St., St. Paul, Minn: Sve) CURE YOURSELF! unnatural: irritations’ or ulcerati mucous membranes, ot astrine- ] snathantrnsncuscsniegeaseabeshtinisnsenea tee Ct Caer en } } deve | — amen iat ~ es ee