e into orship state, New- r, and on in Ww. J. or and ysition licans, cast. , New- reInor, state, eneral, Behr- super- B. As- parish, of the deputy se a r Mur- inated practi- es. BD. stimat- d with fiagra- ted all nesday shortly z that ontrol. 15iness an 150 is va- 130,000 s with fire with es was o sent 2 2 orning nes in art of t kind \y peo- nkfort, he Cir- . How- e mur- is was )n. the 1 to be ials to ens to 0, thus basis. unping 19, un- Ss, ro rata ecurity 'w Jer- ployed a., was which ber of was Otto st, and ife im- Nl navy - HOSPITAL SECRETS. A Nurse Says: ‘‘Pe-ru-na is a ~ Tonic of Efficiency. -r MRS. KATE TAYLOR. Mrs. Kate Taylor, a graduated : nurse of prominence, gives her § experience with Peruna in an open letter. Her position in so- & ciety and professional standing combine to glve special prom- $ inence to her ulterances. CH: 1LL., 427 Monroe St.— Sooo 000d > pb “As far as 1 have observed Peruna is the finest tonic any man or woman can use who is weak from the after effects of .any serious illness. ; “I have seen it used in a number of convalescent cases, and have seen several other tonics used, but I found that those who used Peruna had the quickest relief. “Peruna gzems to restore vitality, increase bodily vigor and renew health and strength in a wonderfully short time, ’'--M RS, KATE TAYLOR, In view of the great multitude of women suffering from some form of female dis- ease and yet unable to find any cure, Dr. Hartman, the renowned specialist on female catarrhal diseases, has announced his willingness to direct the treatment of as many cases as make application to him during the summer months, without charge. Address The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. Canadian Imports. The total value of all merchandise imported into Canada for consumption during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1903, was $233,790,518 of which $136,- 796,065 was duitable and $96,994,451 was nonduitable, the duitable goods paying $37,110,354, based on a 27.1 per cent duty. First American Born in Guam. The first American baby to be born on the Island of Guam was the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene D. Ryan, and she is now nearly two months old. Her father is a paymaster in the navy, and was on the Concord during the battle of Manila Bay. FITSpermanently cured. No fits ornervous= ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer.#2trial bottleand treatisefres Dr. R. H. Kring, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila. Pa Is a man financially embarrassed if he has more money than he knows what to do with? Use Allen’s Foot-Ease, It is the only cure for Swollen, Smartinez, Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease, apowder to be shaken into the shoes. Cures while you walk.” At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25¢. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent Free. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. *No girl can understand how a man can really love her and think about business at the same time. PurxaMm FADELESS DYES color more goods, brighter colors, with less work than others. A married man’s idea of real enjoyment is to do things his wife disapproves of. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forechildren teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma- tion allays pain,cureswind colic. 25¢. abottie A man with a good wife is apt to hear too much of a good thing. TamsurePiso’s Cure forConsumption saved my life three years ago.—Mnas. THoMAs Ron- Lins, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 1900, In time of peace prepare for war among the universal peace societies. Pure Food Inspectors Disagree. The present unsettled condition of the German market in foreign dried, evaporated and preserved fruits is due to the total absence of uniform prac- tice and understanding among the pure food inspectors as to the amount of sulphurous acid permissable in the preservation of same so as not to be injurious to health. A Philadelphia court has decided that a man does not have to teil his wife how much money he makes or how he spends it. Before acting on this opinion it will be advisable for most men to find out what their wives think about jt.—Syracuse Herald. sets The Shortest Way out of an attack of Rheumatism or Neuralgia Isto use St.Jacobs Oi Which affords not only sure relief, but a promot cure. It soothes, subdues, and ends the suffering. Price, 25¢c. and 50c. | HUDSON'S BAY. Canadians Extoll It as the Grain Out- let for the North. The members of the Canadian Insti- tute and their friends were treated to two interesting addresses the other evening upon a timely topic—Hudson’s Bay and the question of Canadian sovereignty. Dr. James Bain, public librarian, in an introductory and explanatory ad- dress, showed by the aid of a lantern a large number of maps and sketches to prove Britain's priority in those wa- ters. He exhibited the routes followed by Hudson, by Verandrye, who in an attempt to reach the Pacific, estab- lished a post at the Lake of the Woods in 1732, and by Hearn on a trip to the Coppermine river in 1772. He also threw on the screen an early official map of the company. He declared em- phatically that the name Hudson Bay was wrong. The proper title, he said, was Hudson’s Bay, which every good Canadian should use. Mr: J. W. Tyrrell, D. 1.. 8, next showed a large number of photo- graphs taken by himself on his ex- plorations in 1885 and 1509. In con- nection with a view of the “Soo” Can- al, showing vessels carrying grain to Buffalo, Mr. Tyrrell said the grain was going in the wrong direction and that its natural outlet to Europe was by way of Hudson's Bay. He later pointed out that for 50 or 60 years the New England whalers had been al- lowed to poach the Canadian waters, with the result that the whales were becoming scarce, and the Americans ventured to claim some territorial rights. He was strongly of opinion after seeing the maps thrown on the screen by Dr. Bain; that there could be no question of the sovereignty over Hudson’s Bay. No other nation had any business there. That was the opinion not only of himself, but of ev- ery Canadian explorer. As to the navigability of Hudson's straits, Mr. Tyrrell showed views of the ice at various seasons of the year. He was convinced that the straits were navigable for at least five moaths, and perhaps for six months. In this opin- ion he was borne out by Admiral Markham, who had more experience than any man living. The straits were never frozen over. They were filled with floating ice at certain periods, but he thought that this ice would nev- er prove a serious obstacle to such ice breakers as those now in use on the Baltic or the great lakes. ; Mr. R. F. Stupart said that he felt certain that vessels would be plying to and fro in Hudson's straits before long. He was a member of the party on the Neptune in 1885, had made a close study of climatic conditions, and was convinced that it was possible to ripen grain' further north than the districts now cultivated. The isother- mal lines run in a northerly direction, and even on the arctic circle there are the high temperature and the sunlight which are such valuable factors in ripening crops. In this connection he referred to the agricultural efforts in the Yukon, and declared that he had great hopes of most valuable wheat and grazing lands further north than anything known today.—Toronto (On- tario) Globe. When Mother Was to Start. She was an elderly woman and she sat the greater part of the day in the union station directly in front of the ticket office window. She sat upon a large bulky telescope and had various other telescopes, packages and band- boxes piled about her. Draped about her shoulders was a red and black checked shawl of ancient pattern, and her hair was smoothly brushed back under a red hood that hid the greater portion of her face. ‘Added to the rest of her queer apparel was a brand new alarm clock, which was tied about her neck with a short cotton rope. Many people passed the queer look- ing woman during the course of the day, and all stopped for an instant to take in the striking apparel and odd collection of luggage. Many noticed, too, the alarm clock swinging from her neck, as if it were a prize ornament. They all smiled, and probably none guessed the real purpose of the clock. It finally remained for Will Curtis, the Santa Fe agent, to go out and talk with the kind looking creature. “Where are you going, my good woman?’ asked Mr. Curtis. “Arkansas City,” piped back the old lady in a squeaky voice, from her pos sition among the band-boxes. “Yes,” said Mr. Curtis, “your train leaves at 9.45. And may I inquire,” ventured the smiling young agent, “why you have the alarm clock tied about your neck?” “Well,” answered the old lady, “when I left home this forenoon, my son he tied that clock there. And he said: ‘Mother, your train leaves the station down there at Kansas City at a quarter to ten. Now, I've set this clock for 9.20. It’s. going to go off then, and when it does it's time for you to go out to the platform and get on the Santa Fe for Arkansas City.”’— Kansas City Journal. How Noise Shortens Life. Noise is an undoubted factor in im- pairing the tone of the nerve centres. Whether we are conscious of it or not it hurts the brain and has a deafen- ing, dazzling, bewildering effect on the mental processes. It tires the brain and terds to produce cerebral hyperemia. To live in a nois phere is to shorten 3 rasthe atmos- aplity, n COI eitects. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. It takes less sense to find fault with all than to be fair with all. eNo life overflows with joy that has room only for its own cares. - There is nothing worth knowing in the art of living for nothing. When the universe ceases to be a riddle it becomss a revelation. The honest man does not protest his virtue. He refuses to risk his rep- utation. A man doesn’t atone for his sour- ness to his wife by his sweetness to the world. 1 | i ! i visage. A burden which one chooses is not felt. A man had better be pois- oned in his blood than in his princi- ples. A careless watch invites a vigil- ant foe. A virtuous mind in a fair body is like a fime picture in a good light.” If we always bore in mind this scl- emn truth, that life is but the vesti- bule of the everlasting temple, the first stage of a progress that shall know no limit, the novitiate or apprentice- ship both of heart and intellect, I think we should acknowledge more fully the high importance of the trust, and en- deavor to fulfill its duties in a purer and holier spirit.—W. H. D. Adams. AN EXPERT PICKPOCKET. He Rede in a Brougham and Attended Fashionable Weddings. The old man, James Read, whom Detectives Collins and Waters of the L: division succeeded recently in send- ing to six months’ hard labor, was reputed to be one of the most expert and, in his heyday, the most success- ful, pickpocket in London. On the proceeds of his profession he used to drive in a brougham. Read is in his seventieth year. Tall, elegantly dressed always, with vener- able white beard, and glossy silk hat, he was sometimes mistaken for a peer of the realm. When he spoke the deception was the greater, for his voice was clear and cultivated. He was once a master tailor in the West End, but for many years he has netted large sums in consequence of his mania for collecting other people’s purses. He was an earnest patron of fashionable bazaars, weddings and oth- er ceremonies and functions attended by crowds of wealthy women. As the detectives said, another of his schemes was to follow bishops at confirmation services. To all these affairs it was his custom to drive up in his brougham. Then, in the rare cases when suspicion fell upon him, he possibly escaped on such strong evidence of respectability as the possession of a private carriage. It is believed that to that end he has al ways made his own clothes, and they were perfectly provided for his needs. His covert coat could be apparently hanging over his wrist, yet so arrang- ed was it with slits that his hand would be gliding through the centre of it all the time in and out of other people’s pockets. The departure of the Continental boats in the holiday season also at- tracted him. He was a man of con- siderable education, and so great was his gift of assumed dignity that often, even when caught almost red-handed, he would escape the consequences by the aid of his plausible tongue. It was in a large measure due to him that the backs of outside seats on London omnibuses had to be altered.—London News. Shrove Tuesday Wedding in Ireland. Shrove Tuesday weddings in Ire- land are exceedingly common, and sometimes among the peasantry they are celebrated in strange circumstanc- es. There is a story of a young peas- ant girl being aroused out of bed on the night of Shrove Tuesday to be married before midnight to a well to- do Irish Australasian whom she had never seen, though he was known to her parents, who made the match. It turned out a happy marriage. The young people usually take the matter philosophically, believing that their parents know best how to make them happy. This anecdote is told of a Tipperary girl: “Bidd;,” asked her friend, “are ve goin’ off this Shraff?” “Musha, I don’t know that,” said Bid- dy, ‘but they're sittin’ on me up- stairs”—meaning that matchmaking was in progress. Another story re- lates to a number of weddings taking place in a Munster church on Shrove Tuesday. “An‘ where's yer intended, Joe?” one swain was asked. “Be gob, Mick, I couldn’t tell ye; but I believe she’s up there amonst the feathers and ribbons in the front row of sates.” He learned who she was when the names were called out. Interesting Map. A map of America, made in 1810, and which was responsible for the naming of the rew world for Ameri cus Vespucci, instead of calling it Co- lumbia, in honor of Christopher Co- lwmbus, will be one of the interesting relics exhibited at the World's fair from the Vatican. The map was made at the town of St. Die. Lorraine, by Martin Waldseemuller, and was re- cently found by Prof. Fisher. In pre- paring a map of the world, as it was then known, Waldseemuller happened across a. letter from Americus Ves- pucci to his patron, Lorenzo de Med- ici, dated 1501, in which he referred to the newly discovered continent. Wal- seemuller marked this practically un- known terra firma America, as he had f heard of it through Americus <4 brane of t of the cer urbed. and the n suffer as tho anical violence.—1 ation { Vespucci. first The latter probably never e new land had been his name, and it was not his Columbus did not receive due for making the discov- rg Gazette. “A blithe heart makes a blooming FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW WEATHER AFFECTS BUSINESS. Structural Work Assuming Normal | Proportions—No Large Advance in Iron and Steel. | R. G. Dun & Co’s “Weekly Review of Trade” says: Unreasonable weath- er is still the chief drawback to im- ' provement in business, complaints be- ing received from every section of the country, and slower collections are also attributed to this factor. There has been much talk of damage to cot- ton, but replanting may prevent any reduction in the total yield, and a few weeks of desirable weather would re- move anxiety regarding wheat. With the exception of wearing apparel, man- ufacturing plants are increasingly ac- tive and structural work is gradually resuming normal proportions for the season. May 1 is usually the date fixed for many labor controversies, but this year there is little prospect of serious disturbance. In the West railway freight tonnage has not in- creased, but passenger traffic is very heavy and earnings of all roads thus far reporting in April are only 4.5 per cent smaller than last year. . While no further improvement can dustry, it is gratifying to find no dis- tinct evidence of a setback. Nor is it certain that a temporary check to progress is to be deplored. Experience very recently demonstrated that the disposition in the iron and steel trade was to force progress, engendering in- flation of prices and all the other un- desirable features of a boom. For about three months blast furnace out- put increased steadily and confidence appeared * to be returning. Present hesitation is directly due to the failure of the leading interest to take up an op- tion on pig iron at its maturity in con- junction with the apparent cancella- tion of several smaller orders. Rail way equipment is still the most back- ward feature, while merchant steei for implement makers leads in activity. Retail distribution of footwear is slow and wholesalers have not disposed of summer styles sufficiently to piace supplementary orders, so that factor- ies are overtaking contracts and more machinery is idle. Demands ai first hands are few and further curtailment of production by cotton mills has not strengthened the market. On the con- trary, prices are in favor of Juyvers. Nc improvement has occurred in weolens and worsteds. and the prepor- tion of idle silk machinery has in- creased. Slightly lower prices prevail fcr the leading agricultaral staples. Failures this week numbered 241 in the United States, against 166 Iiast year, and 12 in Canada, compared with 15 a year ago. NE AER EX TS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red. as <9 yoe--No. 2.... &0 81 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear 59 60 No. 2 yellow, shelled 58 9 Mixed ear. 56 5; Oats—No, 2 white. 48 49 No. 3 white.... 46 47 Flour—W inter paten 475 1 80 traight winters 4 50 4 25 Hay—No. 1timothy.... 15°25 15 50 Cloyer No. 1".~........... i300 13°50 Feed—No !white mid. ton.. 2 0) 2% 50 Brown middlings........ Bran. bulk Stravv— Wheat 9 00 9 30 qb... Sraees 9 00 9 50 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery. g 25 20 hio creamery...... 23 24 Fancy country roll.. 13 14 Clhieese—Qhio, new. ..... we 8 11 1 New York, new... ... ... kos 10 Poultry, Etc. Bons-—perly....................: 16 or 15 Chickens—dressed ... 17 2 Turteys, Hve.. ,....... .... o 17 Eggs—Pa. und Ohio, fresh. ......... 18 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Funcy white per bus...... 135 Cabbage—per bbl... Onions—per barrel Applcs—per barrel. © ww CF CON S BALTIMORE. Flour—W inter Patent...............5500 3% Wheat—No. 2 reg...... 300 1 vl Corn—mixed.... xy 51 52 Eggs......0.. I... nw 18 Butter— Creamery . 2d 2D PHILADELPHIA . Flour—Winter Patent . 8515 535 Wkreat—No. 2red..... 104 109 Corn—No, 2mixed.. Oats--No. 2 white. ...... 48 49 Buuter—Creamery, extra. Eyggs—Penunsylvania firsts. 3 NEW YORK. Flour—ratents,..................... ..& Wheat—No, 2rca Corn—No. 2 Qats—No, 2 Butter—Crealuer Eggs—Stateand Fenn Ivania......... LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle, Prime heavy, 1450 to 1600 Ib: rinje, 1500 to 1400 Ibs. . Medium, 1200 to 1300 1lbs.. Bethelfers...... .. ., Butcher, $00 to 1€00 its. Common to fair...... .. ©Oxen, common to fat....... ... Common togood fat bulls and cows 5 Milch cows, each 25 FS Tt ba 6S (LIE 00 35 0V Prime heavy hogs Prime medium weights. ...... Best heavy yorkers and medium. Good pigs and light yorkers Pigs, common togood.. Houghs............ .. . : Biags.........,............ EXtra,medium wethers Good to choice . « 47 4 Medium ..... : S 425 Common to fair. vee 25) 300 Spring Lambs, .........0. 1 600 1000 Calves, YeaLextra................ a 49) 5% Veal, good to choice. ... 330 400 Veal, common Leagy.............. 304 853 Judge John Homer Holt, of Grafton, was renominated at the Republican ju- dicial convention without opposition, the solid dele ty, left Fortn The Graf ing be discerned in the iron and steel in- ; Fertilizer From the Air. The problem of obtaining nitrogen from the atmosphere for fertilizing the land appears to have been solved, at least from a scientific point of view, by Doctor Erlwein, a German experiments er. His mecthod is first to separate ni- trogen from oxygen by passing an air- current over red-hot copper, when the oxygen combines with the metal, leav- ing the nitrogen free. , Then the ni- trogen is caused to combine in an electric furnace with a mixture of powdered charcoal and lime. The pro- duct is a black substance suitable to be spread on the land, and possessing the fertilizing properties of Chile saltpeter and potassium nitrate. It remains to and at an economical cost.—Youth’s Companion. Metric System Saves Time, The United States Statistician says two-thirds of a school year wculd be saved to American boys and girls by putting the metric system in place of the other twelve or thirteen systems. Carry the enormous saving of time in- to the counting houses of the country, into all kinds of calculations from the farm to the factory, and a fairly good idea is obtained of what the metric system would save. How to Keep House, With all the luxuries and pleasures of this life, its big enjoyments and its smaller comforts, there is an offset or antithesis which we have to contend with in the form of aches and pains. In some way and by some means every one has a touch of them in some form at some time. Trifling as some of them may be, the risk is that they will grow to something greater and rack the system with constant torture. There is nothing, therefore, of this kind that we have a right to trifle with. Taken in time, the worst forms of pains and aches are easily subdued and cured by the free use of St. Jacobs Oil. No well regulated household ought to be without a bottle of this great remedy for pain. It is the specific virtue of penetra- tion in St. Jacobs Oil that carries it right to the pain spot and effects a prompt cure even in the most painful cases of Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Sciatica. You want it also in the house at all times for hurts, cuts and wounds, and the house that always has it keeps up a sort of in- surance against pain. The Brighton (¥ngland) Aquarium has forty-one tanks and is 715 feet long by 100 feet wide. It is the largest in the world. Hoxsie’s Croup Cure, The life saver of children. 50 cents. A woman who never thinks of anything but dress is more ornamental than useful. em To Improve Italian Railways. The Italian State rail vays, accords ing to a report from Rome, will soon place orders for 200 locomotives and several thousand freight cars, eee #8100 Reward. $100, The readers of this paper will be pleazedto learn that there is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has been able to cure in all itsstages, and that is Catarrlf. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being & con- stitutional disease, requires a conetitutional treatment. Hall's CatarrhCure istakeninter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy- ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun- dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure, Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cuexzy & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. er ox CDR Oil in Trinidad. On the Island of Trinidad oil is found amid a huge tropical vegetation, and is said to be of first-class iliumi- nating power, As yet the voluminous skirts hang limply waiting for the wire hoops. Let us hope they will gain in patience rather than crinoline.—Philadelphia Inquirer. I PAY SPOT CASH FOR soonty LAND WARRANTS issued to soldiers of any war. Write me at once FRANK H. RE {, Barth lock, Denver, Colo PRI BT be demonstrated that the new ferti-| lizer can be produced on a large scale’ ‘Bl Miss Rose Peterson, Secre= tary Parkdale Tennis Club, Chis cago, from experience advises all young girls whe have pains and sickgess peculiar to their sex, to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege. table Compound. How many beautiful young girls de- velop into worn, listless er a women, simply because sufficient atten« tion has not been paid to their physical development. No woman is exempt from physical weakness and periodic pain, and young girls just budding into womanhood should be carefully guided physically as well as morally. Another woman, Miss Hannah E. Mershon, Coles lingswood, N.J., says: ‘I thought I would write and tell you that, by following your kind ad- vice, I feel like a new person. I'was always thin and delicate, and so wea” that] could hardly doanything. Mens struation was irregular. “I tried a bottle of your Vegetable Compound and began to feel better right away. I continued its use, and am now well and strong, and men- struate regularly. Icannotsay enough for what your medicine did for me.” — $5000 forfeit if original of above letter proving genuineness cannot be producsd. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will cure any woman in the land who suffers from womb troubles, inflammation of the ovaries, and kidney troubles, FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of ine structions absolutely Free and Post= paid, encugh to prove the value of oz o . Paxtine Toiict Antiseptic Bad Paxtine is in powder > ~ form to dissolve in water — non-poisonous and far superior to liquid antiseptics containing alcohol which irritated inflamed surfaces, and have no cleansing prop- erties. The couteats of every box makes more Antiseptic Solu tion — Jasts longer — goss further—has more uses in the family and deesmorezoodthanany autiseptic preparation > You can buy. The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as & Yaginal Wash, for Leucorrheea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we challonge the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. Itisarevelationin cleansing and healing power; it kills all germs which cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price, 50c. abox; if yours doesnot, send to us for it. Don’t take a substitute — thereis nothing like Paxtine. Write for the Frec Box of Paxtine to-day. B. PAXTON CO., 7 Pore Bldg., Boston, Mass, DROPS NEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and cures worst cases. Book of testimonials am days® treatment Free. Dr. H E. GRES4’S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. Looking for a Home ? Then why not keep in view the fact that the farming lands of Western Canada are sufficient to support a population of 50,000,000 or over? The immivration for the past six years been phenomenal. FREE Homestead Lands oasily accessible, while other lands may be pur chased from Railway end Land Companies. The grain and grazing lan da are the est on the continant, producing the best grain and cattle {fed on grass alone) ready for market. TWEATHERWISE | IS THE MAN WHO WEARS! SOWER ame SLICKER) 415g ED, & rar i WA reputation extending over \ NN SiXty-siX years and our a guarantee are back of \every garment bearing the a SION OCF THE FISH. |i There are many imitations. {\ Be sure of the name \JTOWER on the buttons. \ ' ON SALE EVERYWHERE. i" “A. J TOWER CO. BOSTON, MASS.U. S. A” TOWER CANADIAN CO. Limited. TORONTO, CAN. P Nu HTN PISOQIS CURE EQ CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. B . Tastes Good. Use t Cough Byrup. n ti 1 SINE by druggists. GUARANT #8 blood, wind o fl pains after eating, regularly you are ation kills mo will ne about t with Ca ne tablet g Re all bowel! troubles, appendicitis, t tis, cated cowels, foul mouth, head g years cf suffering scarets today unde tamped CCC. N C Cc Markets, Schools, Railways and all other couditions make Western Canada No en- viable spot for tho settler. For a descriptive Atlas and other informatiom apply to Mr. W. D, SCOTT, uperintendent of Immigration, ttawa, Canada. WW. L. DOUGLAS $4.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50 UION BEST IN pan: SHOES + 30k W.L. Douglas shoes are worn by more men than any other make. The reason is, they hold their shape,titbetter,wear 3 3 longer, and have § greater Intrinsic value than any other shoes. Sold Everywhere, 827% * Look for name and price Douglas uses Corona Coltskin, which is everywhere conceded tobethe fin Patent Leather yet prod Fast Co'or E {su s Shoes by 1 1,25 CATHARTIS zziness. W re people than ail Oo matter stay well 3 Ne a i