Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, October 09, 1901, Image 3

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Shirt WaUta for Golfing Girls.
Golfing girls wear shirt waists of
the severest type, relying only upon
perfection of fit and material for
charm. Heavy linen, often of the
coarse "butcher" variety, and pique,
are the favored fabrics, and, if white,
have stock and belt of the same ma
terial, only colored. But if colored
linen or pique is used for the waist,
then the belt and stock must be white.
The stiff collar is rapidly disappearing
and soft stocks are taking its place,
k
fphler Web Stockings.
Stockings of black silk, with the
fronts embroidered with sprays of pink
t rosebuds or forget-me-nots, are very
fetching with sandal slippers. Lace
fronts arc a feature of other stock
ings. For those who cannot afford the
y extravagance of pure silk there are
stockings of spun silk made with very
pretty open work effects. Silk clocks,
in black and colors, on an otherwise
plain stocking give a smart appear
ance to the foot, and stockings thus
embellished have the advantage of be
ing more serviceable than openwork
hoss.
Childron't* Ward Decoration..
A new children's ward in a London
hospital has decorations suited to the
little inmates. On the walls are long
series of pictures representing well
known inhabitants of fairy land
giants and monsters, elves and sprites,
all brought together to while away the
weary hours of little sufferers. The
idea is not a new one for private
nurseries, but is not usual In public
Institutions. Wall paper of couse, is
contraband in hospitals, but plenty of
pictures illustrating children's stories
might be introduced in all the chil
dren's wards of this and other cities.
Ro*n l'etiil lions.
There is quite a rage for rose petal
boas, but these are really a luxury,
and only suited for evening wear.
They are useful to protect the neck
at dances or evening functions, and if
such things were adopted there would
be fewer colds. To make rose petal
boas buy some cheap artificial roses
and pick them to pieces. If the boa is
to be of white or pink tulle sew the
petals on very lightly, using pink sew
ing silk and a fine needle. A very full
double ruche should be made to go
round the neck, and the long ends
must be bordered or sprinkled with
rose petals.
Trouble for the Summer Girl.
, The girl with bare arms, browned
and even blackened in the sun, has
been prominent in the country and at
the seashore. No protestations of
parents have influenced the girls to
avoid this sun burning, which often
lasts until late in the winter and looks
curious enough with a ball costume.
But the girls are themselves beginning
to take alarm. As many men know,
exposure of the arms to light and air
encourages the growth of hair and the
arms take on a covering which is
not pretty, and girls especially object
to it, and it does not disappear with
the tan.—Newark Sunday Call.
Itlouruing Veils.
To women who wear mourning veils
those of the so-called grenadine are a
blessing. Indeed, by comparison,
those of heavy crepe or nun's veiling,
look and feel unbearable.
These dainty grenadine veils, on the
contrary, are light in weight and of a
fairy-like texture, and yet with asplen
j did body, which prevents tliem from
"skewing" or losing their shape.
For summer most women not in ab
solute first mourning, and regardless
of rules, choose them rather short,
with the points reaching very little
below the waist line. Unless one has
Just gone from a heavy veil to one of
these there's no realizing the sense of
comfort.
As for price, the real hemstitched
ones begin at SB, and they get finer,
firmer and richer as the figures go up.
But for $3 and $3.50 oue may get a
veil in pretty much the same effect,
which will last as long as she'll care
to wear it.—Philadelphia Record.
The Experienced Traveller.
People who travel very little do not
realize how different an old traveller
appears in numberless little details to
y one who seldom goes far from home.
U Dfcss, wraps and impedimenta of all
." kftids ha -e a different strap upon
them. The way people enter a Pull
man and settle themselves for a jour
ny shows to an observant person
whether they are in the habit of go
ing only short distances or whether
travelling has become second nature.
The various belbngings of an old
traveller may be, and generaly are,
very smart but never look new. They
bear the cherished marks of use, and
the labels on a much travelled valise
or trunk are never removed with the
consent of the owner, who values
these baggage stamps of far off lands
as much as an Alpine climber does
the notches and names of famous
climbs on his mountain staff. Woe
betide tRe unfortunate maid or valet
who Is over-zealous enough to clean
and polish up the sole-leather bags
that have rare custom house marks
upon I hem! A young woman about
j to go abroad for the first time was in
f terrupted by a friend while busy oil
' Ing her new leather trunk with a rag
which she dipped from tine to time
Into a plate of road doit. "What am
I doing?" she answered in reply to the
latter's query. "Why taking the new
ness off, of course. I would not travel
with a spick and span trunk for any
thing?"— New York Tribune.
The Wife's Vtue.
"The world will never know a tithe
of the debt it owes to the wives of
great men," Lord Tennyson once said:
and it is perfectly true that, apart
from their wives which many of our
greatest men have so generously
acknowledged, the world, but for
them, would be poorer by many
a masterpiece and the husbands by
many a great reputation.
It is fairly common knowledge that
but for Mrs. Rudyard Kipling her hus
band's famous "Recessional Hyman,"
perhaps the most powerful and valu
able tiling he has ever written, would
never have seen light. Mr. Kipling
had worked at it and written and re
written it with so little sense of satis
faction that, when it was completed,
he tdSsed it into the waste-basket in
sheer disgust.
It was fortunate for him and the
world that the contents of that waste
paper basket came under the critical
eyes of his wife; for she saw in the
discarded poem a gem of rare value,
and insisted on its being published,
wich what results the world knows.
Mascagni owes an equal dept to hia
devoted wife, for without her he
.would certainly have missed Ills great
est and perhaps only chance of fame,
and we should never have been
charmed with the magic of Cavallerla
Rusticana.
The now famous opera was com
posed when Mascagni and his wife
were reduced almost to the verge of
starvation, and when heart and hope
sunk almost to zero. The winter was
bitterly cold, and as there was no fuel
in the house and no money to buy any,
the young composer in a moment of
recklessness and dispair threw the
nearly completed score of his opera
on the grate, and was on the point of
applying a light to it, when his wife
rushed to its rescue and saved it just
in time.
A few weeks later Mascagni found
himself the most famous man in Eu
rope, fussed and feted like any king
and assured of fame and fortune.
It was to Millet's wife, the brave
and loyal Catherine Lemaire, that be
owed his fame and the world some of
its most prized nrt treatures. It was
only after long years of struggle and
dire poverty, through which ho was
consoled and supported by his wife,
that the peasant-painter was able to
tc take the three-roomed cottage at
Rarbizon and "try to do something
really good." It was then that he
began to paint the most beautiful
"poem of poverty, the "Angelus,"
which is today one of the most valu
able pictures in the world. Again and
again he threw aside the picture in
dispair of ever finishing it to his sat
isfaction, and as often his wife re
placed it on the easel and induced him
to continue.
On one occasion he was so incensed
at not being able to produce a certain
effect that he seized a knife and would
have destroyed the canvas and ended
the matter once for all had not his
wife fortunately seized his hand and
induced him to give the picture an
other trial. Thus it was that, at last
the "Angelus" found a place on the
walls of the Louvre. The success it
won encouraged Millet to paint many
more pictures and thus place himself
among the immortals in art. —Tit-
Bits.
fFo R
Cerise is one of the fashionable
shades this summer.
Narrow bracelets of palin and gem
set gold are again in fashion.
Petticoats of colored brilllantine are
new, pretty and serviceable. These
come in light shades of pink and blue
and other delicate colors, and are
trimmed with lace.
The hair low in the neck is coming
into vogue, though it takes time for
women at largo to adopt it. English
papers speak of fashionable Ameri
cans in London wearing the low coil.
White and green and black and
green are popular color combination!
this season, and the result is very ef
fective if the right shade of green be
selected, particularly when used with
black.
Linen is the approved material for
out ins gowns, and some particularly
handsome models are seen in bright
colorings, such as sky blue, strapped
with black and white braid, arid white
with a touch of orange in the trim
ming.
White liberty Bilk makes a pretty
and useful belt. It is built ypon a
crinoline foundation, with a new soft
bones to preserve the shape. The belt
Is broad in the back and tapers down
very narrow in the front, where it la
fastened with hooks and eyes and haa
a row of small silk buttons on either
side of the opening.
A charming model of torn linea
seen on the golf link within the week
had a skirt laid in narrow panels with
plaits arranged like Vs. These ex
tending almost to the knees,
close bolero was made in the same
way and there were undersleeves and
blouse of white embroidered muslin.
About the waist line was a belt of
white tafTeta finished with an old
silver buckle held down well fn front.
PEARLS OF THOJGHT.
A song will outlive all sermon 3 In
Ihe memory—H. Giles.
It is an infamy to (lie and not bo
missed. —Carlos Wilcox.
It is better to take many Injuries
than to give one.—Franklin.
All human power is a compound of
lime and patience.—Balzac.
Almost always the most indigent
are the most generous.—Stanislaus.
Example is the school of Aankind;
they will learn at no other.— Curiae.
Do not speak of your happiness to
one, less fortunate than yourself.—Plu
tarch.
Without good company all dainties
lose their true relish, and, like painted
grapes, are only seen, not tasted. —
Massinger.
In every part and corner of our life,
to lose oneself is lo be gainer, to for
get one's self is to be happy.—Hubert
Louis Stevenson.
Blessed be the hand that prepares a
pleasure for a child, for there is no
saying when and where it may bloom
forth.—Douglas Jerrold.
BEAD CHAINS.
A Faalilnn in Vogue in London Now Ex
pected to Attack New York.
The bead chain has not yet reached
in New York the same vogue that it
has enjoyed for the (last six months in
London, but the craze seems likely to
be seen here before* next winter. Al
ready there are few girls who have not
chains to match particular costumes,
and the summer piaz.za leisure has
given a decided Impetus to the fad.
As it is, the beads have been im
ported by the dealers in nearly every
conceivable shade. They come In
warm tints of terra cotta, and they
are bright yellows as well as the more
usual tints It must be a strange shade
that cannot be found in these beads.
The chain should usually fall in
front nearly to the knee, and the ends
are finished always with some elab
orate tassel or otheq ornamentation.
The Japanese and other Oriental stores
have imported painted and fancy beads
in varied colors and designs, and the
strand is punctuated with these at
different points. They come now in
solid colors and also In dull colored
carved woods that alternate effectively
with the colors of the beads that make
up most of the chain. The chains are
used rarely to support a lorgnon or
locket and are generally intended only
for ornament They are rarely strong
enough to hold anything heavier than
the tassels at the end of the chain.
They are not likely to remain a
fashion permanently, as they are sim
ple enough to be made without diffi
culty, and the materials are cheap.
The only thing needed to make them
well is a certain neatness in stringing
the beads. A pretty combination seen
the other day was of rather vivid blue
beads ornamented at five points in the
string by bright yellow beads a little
larger than the others. These yellow
beads were strung on each side of a
long oval black bead on which were
painted flowers in a Dresden pattern.
Dark brown beads made up with a
bright carmine are very ornamental to
a dark brown dress.
The chains are always to be limited
to house wear, and only the informality
of country life excuses them in the
open air. Most of the department
stores sell them now, and in addition
to the pretty colors to be found among
these exhibits there is always the
pleasure of searching In the Japanese
and other curio stores for strange
Oriental beads. —New York Sun.
To ]>oineaticate (lie Zebrii.
R. J. Stordy, who is connected with
the English government in East
Africa, has proposed a scheme by
means of which he believes the zebra
can be domesticated and made of great
use to mankind. He says: "The great
difficulty so far has been the domesti
cation of the adult animal. I would
propose that a kraal be formed within
a district where firearms are non-ex
istent, as in the case of a preserve. The
kraal would have two extondiug arms
leading from the open country into it,
and it would be large enough to hold
a herd of SO adult animals. Several
mounted Cape bovs wouui nrst be em
ployed whose duty would be to accus
tom the zebras to the neighborhood of
the kraal and to the sight of horses
and mules. Through their following
the horses or else by driving them,
they arc finally secured in the kraal.
Here they would be allowed to breed.
As ft has been found almost Impossible
to rear a young zebra away from Its
mother, the foals would be left in the
kraal until they were several months
old. Then they would be separated
and gradually accustomed to the pres
ence of man and the other domesti
cated animals.
"In the course of a generation or
two Mr. Stordy believes that a new,
very hardy apd entirely docile beast
of burden could be secured, which
would have especial value in the dis
tricts afflicted with tne tsetse fly, as
the zebra Is quito immune to the lat
ter's bite.
Tlie King nnd I'iirllHiiient.
No peer is allowed on the floor of
the house of commons. He cannot
cross the threshold. Nor can a king.
No king has entered or attempted to
enter the house of commons since the
time of Charles 1., and the minutes
adopted in condemnation of his Inva
sion of the sanctity of the parliament
He always In sight of all the mem
bers to this day as a perpetual re
minder. The journal tit that date is
kept under a glass cso.—Chicago Rec
ord-Herald.
Belgium, according to the census
)nt '•'•en. has P. 800,000 Itfhabltants.
Half-Sick
" I first used Ayer's Sarsaparilla
in the fall of 1848. Since then I
have taken it every spring as a
blood - purify in g and nerve
strengthening medicine."
S. T. Jones, Wichita, Kans.
If you feel run down,
are easily tired, if your
nerves are weak and your
blood is thin, then begin
to take the good old stand
ard family medicine,
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
It's a regular nerve
lifter, a perfect blood
builder, ji .00 & bottle, au druggist,.
Ask your doctor what he thinks of Ayer's
Sarsaparilla. lie known all about thin grand I
old family medicine. Follow his adviceand I
we will be eavisfled _ I
| J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mass. Ej
Liver Pills
That's what you need; some
thing to cure your bilious
ness and give you a good
digestion. Ayer s Pills are
liver pills. They cure con
stipation and biliousness.
Gently laxative. A inrww..
Want your moustache or heard a bcautil'ul
brown or rich black ? Then use
BUC KIN G HAM'S DYE Whiskers j
Colored Troops In War.
111 view of Mr. Chamberlain's asser
tion of our right to employ our colored
troopy Ju any war, it may bo oskocl
wihefher any other European Power
has ever used such a right. The ans
wer is that France used African sol
diers from Algeria in the Franco-Ger
man war. Several regiments of
Turkos and Spalris fought all through
t'he campaign, and the former particu
larly d'bvinguished themselves by
their bravery against the Bavarian
troops in the terrible engagements of
Weissenburg. Worth and BazelUes.
The term "Turko" was really a nick
name given to infantry regiments
composed of negroes and and
specially organized for service in Al
geria. Their uniform was similar to
that of tlie Zouaves, except that it
was pale blue. Their black faces
were of so sinister a cast that it is
said tlie German Government circu
lated pictures of them among its
army in order to accustom the sol
diers to the sight of these African op
ponents. Many of tlie Turkos fell ill
action and large numbers were taken
prisoners. A few of them managed
itio get back to Paris at the time of tlie
Commune. There, without -tlie re
straint of discipline, they gave way
to drink, and eventualy made them
selves such a nuisance that tlie Paris
ians were very glad 'to see the last of
them.
A period of five seconds between a
flash of lightning and thunder means
that the flash is a mile distant from
the observer. Thunder lias never
boon heard over 14 miles from tlie
flash, though artillery lias been heard
at 120 miles.
The first patent was granted to
Samuel Hopkins in 17'JO 4 for making
"pot or pearl ashes."
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not spot, streak
or givo your goods an unevenly dyed appear
ance. Bold by all druggists.
It has been that it will re
quire eighty-live men working every day
until 1047 to unearth the entire ruins of
Pompeii.
YYoxv'a 'rill* >
"Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any ease of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY A Co.. Proos., Toledo, O.
We, the underdgnhjl. have known F. J. Chs
noy for the lust 1.0 years, and belicvo him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any
tion mado by their firm.
WEST & Tniux, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
WALDINO, RINNAN MARVIN, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Prico. 75c. per bottlo.
Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall's Family Pills aro tho best.
Kansas City, Mo., has a city forester
whose duty it is to plant and protect
trees oh the public streets.
Kent For tlie Ilowrls.
No matter what ails you, headache to a
wmcor, you will never got well until your
bowels aro put right. CASCARETS help natur3,
cure you without a gripe or pain, produce
easy natural movements, cost you Just 10
cents to start getting your health bock, CAS
CARETS Candy Cathartic, tho genuino, put up
in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C, C.
•tamped on it. beware of imitations.
A chestnut tree, planted by King Ed
ward, grows beside the toinb of' Washin
gton at Alt. Vernon.
For 00 Years Frcy'n Vermifuge
Has been curing children of worms. It Is sure.
Never falls. 25c. Druggists and country stores.
The home consumption of our bitumin
ous coal last year was 170,000,000 tons.
A new rifle is now undergoing *x
imustlye trials in several of the
French army corps. It Is the Inven
tion of mi Italian watchmaker named
Lamaechia, living near Toulon, who
has* speivt over ten years in perfecting
ftL The rifle in on the lines of the Le
bel, but is much lighter and carries
10 rounds in the magazine.
If restlees imd unable to sleep, take a Gar
fleld Headache Powder; it will sootlio and
quiet tho norves an 1 bring natural rest. Send
to Grr.)e*d Tea Co., 1 rjoklyn, N. Y., for
•ample i*
A sing'e American firm has rented six
teen shops in Vienna, Austria, to sell
Y'&nkee-madc shoes.
A new and odd cur glass pattern
In a circular b*piral effect Is ealhv*
tbe "Orchid."
Black walnut Is less than half the
weight of a corresponding quantity
of ebony.
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day's uho of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise freo
Dr. R. H. KLINE, Ltd.. 981 Arch St., Phila. Pa
The footpad naturally breaks into a
shoe store tor booty.
Mrs. Winslow'a Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften tho gums, redueoi 'inflamma
tion,allays pain, curos'wind colic. 25c iv bottle
The man who makes alarm clocks ought
to do a rousing business.
Fiso's Cure is tho best medicine we ever used 1
for all affections of throat and lungs.— Wm.
O. ENDSLEY, Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10,1900. i
Three-fourths of the entire area of Nor
way is not capable of cultivation.
Unlike tho majority of remedies for head
aches, Garfield Headache Powders contain i
nothing that harms or dorauges tho system.
This is tho simplest and most fruccessful rem
edy offered. A trial proves its worth.
Herman Elegan, of St. Louis, Mo., has
constructed a Turkish bath house to be
run as a trolley car.
S9OO TO SISOO A YEAk
We want intelligent Men aud Women as
Trailing Representatives cr Local Managers;
salary S9OO to #ISOO n year and nil expenses,
according to'experience and ability. We also
want local representatives ; salary $9 to |li ( s a
week nud commission, depending upon tbe time
devoted. Send stamp for full particulars uud
tale position prefered. Address, Dept. 13.
THK DEIX COMPANY. Philadelphia. Pa. • j
ASTHMA-|f^FEyW
Apdh'.SS D&;TAFT,79 E.130? ST.. NY CITY
3yiHln civil war. 15udludlcutiuurlainih,att.v tinea I
CTARK trees
JSfc fi FKI IT ROOK free. W1 A V CASH
DROPSY
r-'fHH. Book of teattmonialtt and tOtlavM' tteatmeul
Five. Dr. H. H. OREEN'B BONO. Box B. AtUut*. Q.
"The Ntneethit made West Point fameus.**
McILHENNY'S TABASCO.
Careful weighing, it is said, shows i
that an ordinary bee, not loaded, |
weighs the five-thousandth part of a
pound, so that it takes- 5,000 bees to
make a pound. But the loaded bee, '
when it comes in fresh from the
fields and flowers, freighted wirh
honey, often weighs throe times more.
~ St
Jacobs Oil
beats all records and alwayß will.
Cures
Rheumatism,
Sprains
A k Weakness of
'( l\ the limbs
) and nil
Aches and
f rains.
•I j magic
Mt Conquers
£m> Pain
********************
*******************
♦*sESj©wnThas Book!/
** IT SHOULD BE IN EVERY HOUSEHOLD AS IT MAY *
% BE NEEDED ANY MINUTE. *
A Slight Illness Treated at Onco Will Frequently Prevent a
.j, Long Sickness, With Its Heavy Expenses anj Anxieties. if
•: EVERY MAN His OWN BOBTOR >
* Ily J. HAMILTON AVE US, A. M. t M. IT.
-k
* This is a most Valuable Book for the Household, teaching as it docs the 4
■fc easily distinguished Symptoms of different Diseases, the Causes and Means *
of Preventing such Diseases, and tbi {Simplest Remedies which will alleviate
or cure. CO3 Pages, Prsfusoiy Illustrated. 4
'CxGD This Book written plain 4
. * V the technical terms which render y.
most doctor books so valueless to
* Book is intended to bo of Service . *
"k / 1 V * n l^e V* an] y> * s 80 w °rdcd as *"
J| to be readily understood by all. *
** f" CtS. Po p" da , * 4
* ft ftThe low price only being made 4
•ic H tfsnY /JI P° flß 'l)le by the immense edition 4
. jv „ Qjr //) j printed. Not only does tliis Boole 4
** y contain so much Information Rela- 4
ft"' V ° *° BCaae ®* * vei 7 properly
k * thing pertaining to Courtship, Mar
•k riage and the Production and Rear- * . /
k . J?', - . incr of Healthy Families; together *
4C """ v with Valuable Recipes *nd Prescrip- *
k tiens. FTolanatiom* of Botanical Practice. Correct Use of Ordinarr Herbs.
4( New Edition, Revised and Enlarged with Complete Index. With this 4
£ Book in the house there is no excuse for not knowing what to do in an em- 4
kg ergency. 4 -j
if Don't wait until von ham in yn* frmi'v before von order, hut 4
send at once for this v.ibmble volume. ONLY 60 CENTS POST-PAID. 4
Send postal notes or postage stamps of any denomination not larger than
* B cents. + n
* BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE 134 Leonard St., N.Y. *
* ******************
* *******************
KEEP YOUR SADDLE, DRY!
//,„// > THE original
wfrmM POMMEL
/WMffiM/ SLICKER
/Vs/&£fy6 PROTEUS BOTH
RIDER AND SAODLE
YWHE BC - ' M THE
HARDEST STORM
LooKfonH CATALOGUED FREt
SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS.
A.J.TOWER CO..BOSTON.tiASS. 39
The reputation of W. L. Douglas 53.00
I and 53.50 shoes for stvle, ccmiort and
! wear has excelled all other makes sold at
these prices. This excellent reputation has
been won by merit alone. \V. L. Douglas
shoes have to givo better satisfaction than
other $3.00 and 53.50 shoes becausfe his
reputation for the best $3.00 and 53.50
shoes must bo maintained. The standard,
has always been placed so high that the
wearer receives more value for his monev
in the W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.50
shoes than he can get elsewhere.
W.L. Douglas sells more $3.00 and $3.50
shoes than any other two manufacturers.
IV. L. Douglas $4.00 Qilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
W. "L Douglas $3.00 and S3.SO
chocs are made of tho mama high
i grade leathers used In $5 and S 3
shoes and aro Suet as good.
Sold by the best shoe dealers e verywborc.
I Insist upon having W. 1.. Douglas shoes
i i with naiuo and prico stamped on bottom.
I I low to Order ly illuil.—lf W. 1,. Douglas
shoes are not sold In your town. send order direct to
factory. Shoes sent anywhere on receipt of price and
- 5 r, s. A'hit'.lonal for carriage. My
made shoes. fit an<|
I f _ O foot as shown on model: state
I |V desired: sue and width
t i# S or light'sole*.
r:tet 'p
j CsUlos frU. . 1.. Doiiislu*, Itrocluou, MSN.
The Canadian Exhibit
OF 6RAINS AND GRASSES,
I SHOWING THE PRODUCTION OF THE
FREE GRANT LANDS
| CANADA
j kiwi ■iiiiii mini ——
IS WELL WORTH A VISIT
BY THOSE WHO ATTEND
THE PAN-AMERICAN, BUFFALO
The ytald of Wheat il
wln-at tieids of Manitoba,
1 wan and Alberta. 'JO,OOO extra farm hands will lx
| required this year to harvest.the grain'crop. The
highest wages paid. For low railway rates, rmmph
; lets, ete., descriptive or the fount ry. apply to P.
, I'kui.kt, Sup't Immigration. Ottawa. Canada; M.
; St. .loun. Canadian Exhibit, HulTalu, New ,ork,
I or the nearest Agent of the Canadian Government.
I fcfTDo not fail t see the Canadian Exhibit
when you visit lhilTulo.