AG RIOTJLTURAI* Osjra of Incoming Oow*. The profit of the dairy depends to no mall extant upon the care of the cowt preo limmsry to the beginning of a new milking period, says the Cultivator. The function cf maternity, and tin- condition of the cow, with that of the calf a* well, controls the condition and performance of the laclatjry fun. lion. It is a prevalent idea among dairymen that a cow need only pio.iu.-c a calf, never mind how, or what kind of a calf, to become a milk producer ; and that the milk production has no connection with the . ondition of the dam r ihe offspring, futhrr than its natural recurrence at the birth of a calf. Consequently the calf re- ceivi s no thought or .ut.-nti .n, and the cow b milked on until the supply become* (top- ped, or it is not fit for use. Indeed, in many cases th* cow is fed more liberally as th* milk decnoe* in ipisutity, in the at- tempt to prevent thi* decrease and maintain the supply, without any thought of th* result" to th* cow or the calf. Now the growth of the calf in tu uterine existence i* an important point to consider, because it ha* a very intimate connection with the welfare of the dam. We cannot safely disturb the natural conn* of th* anni'.il fun. -lions without mischievously dis- turbiug the health. The growth of th calf i not a tepu-ate and distinct affair from the maintenance ..f tl.e uterine ,ystem of the cow. The cow and t be c If art ore, and pro* per oruffei with each other. II tbety-U-in of the cow is strained or deprived of the proper nutriment required for the growth of the calf, the whole generative apparatus nffers and is weakened, and the poor, weak calf is borne of a weak and impotent dam. The result is risk of trouble in calving or l-f. >re it, prevalence of di*e;.n-, and injury to thu milking apparatus. So that when a cow is naturally decreasing the milk supply. eUort* to a.imnlate are injurious ; and it IH equally injurious to permit a cow, natnr.illy a copious milker, to keep up tlie (low ot milk U-yond a safe period before the appear- ance of the calf, and tin* safe period u not lens than two months. We frequently hear of cows milking copiously up to the new ca y- ing of milking to persistently that it is impossible to dry them off; but what is ths result ? These are the very cows which abort calve*, or which perish of milk fever (part- urient apoplexy) within two or three days after the birth of a calf ; and these troubles so . omsaouljr incident to the period of calving prevail almost solely in those dairies where nigh feeding and copionsand long-continued m;lk production are tin- rule. Now it is not profitable to breed and rear costly cow* and destroy th*m in this way ; nor is it profitable to injure a cow perman- ently for the sake of a few quarts of milk or a few pounds of butter late in the season, when the milking should be stopped to enable the cow to perform her maternal fund ions In altlif ully and safely. The treat- ment of the cow then from three to two months before calving is of the greatest ri portancc to the dairyman. It U far better that a cow should be productive during the rest of the time than that she should milk a few weeks longer at this time. And the supposed gain during these few reek* i* made at the expense of the cow during the nine or ten months to come. To Iry up the milk, as it is called, a sufficient time before calving i then imperative, no matter how troublesome it may lie. It is scarcely pouible that any cow would be so prolific of milk at this time, but that dry feeding and partial milking would stop the Bow. Indeed, wholly and suddenly to stop milking i* not dangerous with the majority of cow* giving no more than three quart* at a milking. The production of milk to a very large extent u known to be due to th* milking. Milking excite, th* lacteal gland*, and eause* the glandular inbstance to break down and form milk. Thii il a* well known a* any other matter of physiology that can- not be proved by actual visiMc evidence ; so that to stop milking at once redu.-es the product of milk, while dry feeding nothing more than hay alone will aid considerably in this desired result. Il 1* not safe to stop milking suddenly with all cows. Some copious and persistent milkers may be dried by putting off the inorirng milking two or three hour* fora few day*, and then still further lengthening this time until th* even- ing milk i* to reduced that it may be tut- pended. By leaving half the milk in th* udder, moat of it will b* absorbed, and in a few day* the product of milk may Iw so re- duced that the milking may be wholly stop- ped. A cow in good condition at thi* time needs no other food but good hay, and tim- othy hay i* better than clover. To a large xtent the calf must subtUlon the dam at thi* time, and it i* better that It should be so. It i* the course of nature, and gradually reduces the, amount of blood in the cow s system, and prepare" it for the sudden ex- citement of the circulation when the calf is separated and fully one-tenth of the cir i ulatory system is suddenly cutoff. Thus the danger of milk fever is almost wholly removed ; what little remain* will ! due fo inherited tendency, and may lie overcome l-v the simplest precautions, such n keeping the cow quiet in a separate stull toi a few days before the calf appears, and avoidmv all nervous excitement when tie event >- curs. Moreover, there is lea* danger of .. . i. lent* or abnormal circumstances at the birth, and the quite common inconveniences which occur in dairy herds, as retention of lie placenta, garget, Ac., are avoided. When to Bow Olof er Bwd- It is always safest to get clover seed sown early, that i* to *ay a* early in April a* possible. A good farmer who generally sow* clover teed on winter wheat sayt that he ha* mad* a practice of sowing after a light snow, taking a time when the air is still and the damp snow lies evenly over the ground. As the teed* lie on the surface it I* easy to sei how they are being distributed, ana how far th* Mwer't throw lint if the seed is sown In the morn wiiter grain can be harrowed aud a mellow seed bed made for the clover. W* have chiefly practised this last method for the sake of the benefit to the grain crop and never failed of a good catch. Th* harrow- ing it especially benciicial, both for grain and clover seed, if the surface hat been top dressed during the winter with a little fine manure. Kvery particle of manure as it is moved is do jbled in efficiency, and both noil and manure ar* so mixed that the clover seed is furnished the belt possible conditions in which to grow. Wonders From Rocky Islands. The rocky islands of Jersey and Guernsey are perhaps the highest types of culture at the prevent day. Jersey fanners make $.'>0 an acre yearly from early potatoes for the London market; they have more thiui one cow to each acre of meadow in grass, and average fJSO to each acreof the island. Cuerni-ey, with thirteen hundred souls lo each square mile, and more rock than Jersey, has developed greenhouse culture. The raising uf hothouse grape* wa* started thirty years ago by a few men. and now the i-daml exports yearly fifty ton* of grape*, which bring f-J15,UUO at the low price of eighteen cent* a pound in winter. Kitchen gardens under !ass are now the rule. Three fourths of an acre covered with glass and heated tor three months in the spring yields eight tons of t'.matoe* and two hundred pounds of | t, ana as a first crop in April and May, to be ' followed by two cropn more during the summer and autumn. One gardener is em- ployed, with two assistants : a small amount of coke i* consumed with n dollar's worth of gas a month for a small watering engine. Prince Krapotkine writ-s that be saw a quarter mile of green peas under ^lass in April which had already yielded .V<*A) pounds of excellent pea* and wciv full, ai if untouched, and be al*n saw ;.,.. it.. -. dug from the ground in April at< thu rate of five bushel* to twenty -on* feet square of ground. The iiniiiunse vineries of Mr. liashlord, in Jersey, cover thirteen acre* ; their cost, ex- . cllsntly built, wa* 12.34 s square yard. The whole work i* don* by thirty-six men, and 1 ,000 loads of coke and coal heat the whole for a season. A well-known writer on agriculture slates that " the money return from these thirteen acre* of elnss greatly exceed* those of an Kngliib farm of 1 ,300 acre*. " The ciops ar* not counted by buabels but by ion*. Resides thi* the Channel Isle* have simple shelters of thin planks and glass, which only cost ten cent* per square foot, and nevertheless allow of Dost surprising crops for *ale by the end of April. Growing an Orchard on Waate Placet- Having aWut four acres of waste land, that puzzled me what us* to make of it, it was too stony to even try to plow it, and covered with all kind of brush and tome trees, I did not want it in that stskte of na- ture for two reason* : tint, it was no profit ; second, it hurt the looks of my farm. So .the idea struck me that i would impiove the looks of the unsightly ridge, I would clear it off and get clover to grow on it, but what good would clover do when it wa* too it. my to even think of mowing it with the -cythe, to I balked on the clover part. Well, I will plant it in apple orchard. All right. So I went head with my orchard project ; Kirtt. to get the hole* dug was the next obstacle, to with pick, shovel and crowbar, we dug the holes for the applo tree (I use the word we because my boys helped me). We dug holes the best W* could. It was . si. .n) jol>, I tell you. The planting would have been easy enough if there hail l>ccn dirt to till in around the trees aud till up the hole*, for all we took out wa* mure -lone, than dirt. So we had to do a great deal of borrowing dirt, but we planted the four acres, all the same, in Ben I>avis apple trees. After plating we hauled straw that had been tramped under foot by tliecattled (thi* was in the spring) and put it around the trees. It answered as a mulcher and manure. I just put it around the tree* about three or four inches f hn-k and two feet around. The summer wa* a dry one, but the tree* grew right along, contrary to what my neighbors predicted, that they would die in Augost. There wa* not one tree dead and there i* none dead yet, and that ha* been five years I ago. In the fall we cultivated around the trees with pick and mattock, the straw had | killed the grass and made the soil loose and mellow. Remember, we bad to sprout aud I keep the sprout* down, so every spring we | hauled more draw and put around the trees, I still gelling further away from the tree, to I by this time we ar* half way with our work nl covering the ground. The trees grow fatter, look thriftier, bear better and have nicer apples than any young orchard in the district. I am alan growing an orchard on ' smooth land, with the same care and atten- tion as the stony one, but the stony one seems to be taking th* lead so far, and I think from my experience in the t wo kind* of land in orcharding that the stony land i* V' ist the kind for Ken Davis apple tree*, hi* much I do know, that where I hud a waste four acres I have a nice, thrifty young orchard. (Henry Rowman. MONARCHS OF THE FOREST, Air Hasssiel Maker Tells *f WII4 AalsBal* IB I i ..|.| . . I I . unifies. There i*no man living so well qualified to write about wild animals from personal ob- servation as is Sir Samuel liaker. For nearly half a century he has been an ex- plorer in Africa and Alia a* well as in th* least known parts of America and Europe, aud he ha* never mi**ed an opportunity uf hunting " biff game." In the cook which he has recently published in London under the title of Wild Beauts and Their Ways " he confines himself to recounting what he has actually seen, but the range of the ex- |>erience includes luch intercut ing member* of the animal kingdom as thi elephant, the lion, the tiger, the leopard, the rhinoceros, the hippopotamus aud the crocodile. In Sir Samuel Baker's opinion the ele- phant i* overrated by most naturalists, both us regard* intelligence and character. He can lie educated to perform certain acts, when specially ordered, but, unlike the dog, he never volunteers his services. The au- thor of this book never saw an elephant who would spontaneously interfere to save his master from attack. He admits, neverthe- less, that an elephant's power uf learning U extraordinary, and that hi* memory in re- markable.. After seven moi. tin' absence in Kngland, an elephant, that Sir Samuel had thu use of on a previous visit to India, re- cognized him at once on his return. It is not through fear that an elephant serves man. He is by nature an eacessvely timid animal and acutely aeuniUve U> pain. Kx- perience ha* shown it tu be impossible to direct the movement of an elephant by sim- ple kindness. He must know you to posses* the power of inflicting punishment. In one particular the elephant is superior to most other animals- namely, in its freedom from any unpleasant odor. Its skin Usweet, and the haud retains no smell after careuiug the trunk or any other portion of th* body. Sir Samuel ha* frequently encamped where fifty or sixty elephants would be kept for several days within 100 yards of his tent. Still there was no offensive *cent. With regard to the li:>n, also, Sir Samuel (taker's conclusions) differ decidedly from th* notion* banded down in books and baaed for the most part on untrustworthy evidence. It is true that he credit* the lion with the tradi- tional dignity of appearance, and holds that this is not altogether .ielusive, but corre- spond* to a certain nobility of character, the lion being much more reckles* than the tiger in exposing himself to attack. He has no doubt that a lion would, weigh more than a tiger of the asm* length. In his opinion, however, ths former animal U much lea* ferocious and formidable than the Utter. The natives of Central Africa have, it seems, no fear of the lion when he is undisturbed by hunter*, though, of course, when wounded and standing at bay he is redoubtable enough. On several occasion* Sir Samuel himself has teen linns, close to him whan he had no opportunity of shooting, and they have invariably passed on without th* slightest signs of hostile feeling. He evidently doe* not believe the stories (to frequent in booki of travel) about night attacks by lioni on the oxen belonging to wagons. In nine yean' experience of camp lif* in Africa, both equatoi ial and a* far a* fourteen degree* north uf the equator, Sir Samu*l bad never even heard of any actual depreda- tion committed by lion* upon a camp or upon a night's bivouac. He pronounce* equally apochrynhal the tale* of lions jump- ing fence* with full-grown bullock* in their grin. Tbev may burst through fence* under such circumstance*, but not jump them. It is, Sir Samuel assure* us, an impossibility for a lion to carry a full-grown ox. All it can do i* to partially lift the forequarten of the victim and drag the carcass along the ground. We find two other interesting de- tails in th* obsetvations of this veteran sportsman. The lion and tiger, when spring- ing on its enemy, does not strike a crush- ing Mow, but merely Mixes with it* claw*. The lion, on the other hand, strike* with such terrific force that many a man has been tilled outright a* if hit by a trip ham- mer. A* to the thorn alleged to exiat in the extreme end of a lion's tail. Sir Samuel says that this phenomenon, though often disputed, is a fact. The to-called thron i* a sharp, homv point, which, although only a quarter of an inch in length and concealed by a tuft of black hair, will, if pressed by the finger, make itself felt unmistakably. The size of the tiger is overrated by thoa* he tale* of travelers, or who Persia has from time immemorial been tamed aud trained for the purpose of hunting deer and antelopes. This animal is entirely dif- ferent from other leopard*, having long leg*, alight body, a long neck, a smallhevl, and large and piercing eyes. The cheetah is generally admitted to be the fastest, animal in the world, being able to overtake, on open ground, the black-buck, which surpasse* in speed the highest-bred English greyhound. It may te kept about a house with compara- tive safely, a* it seldom attacks domestic animals, but confines it* attention to the beast* of plain and forest. The domest icated cheetah* that Sir Samuel has seen were as gentle a* dogs. When game is expccte.l. therefore, this animal is conveyed to thu , scene of the hunt in a cart, seated on the out- side of hi* cage beside his master, who (us ! hi* arm around him. H* is blinded by .. hood, like a falcon, and lit* upright like . dog, waiting for hi* eyes to be uncover. > After a successful hunt the cheetah is allow ed to lap a quantity of fresh blood from a wooden ladle. This ladle, consequently, hai for him the same attraction a* a " lure " for . a falcon or a sieve of oat* for a horse. By | showing it to him you can recover the chee- : tab when he is disobedient to a call. There is a marked difference between the Indian rhinoceros, the " unicorn " of th* ' ancient*, which has but one horn (lew, ..n the average, than eight ire-hen loinri. an-1 ' the African rhinoceros, that liai twoli.i: | which the anterior protuberance is very long j 1 and straight. The Ketloa, or black ri ros, which inhabit* the country east of the | U'l.ite Nile, from Abyssinia to near the equu i , tor, is pronounced by Sir Samuel Baker the ! most ferocious of known annuals. It will ' attack either man or beast without the .- ' **t provocation. Th* longest anterior horn ; belonging to any of the Ui.i.-k rliiiu.vero* shot by Sir Samuel himself ineamred twei. 1 ;. three inches. The speed and '.he bottom exhibited by this animal aeem remarkable when its bulk is considered. The author of thi* book ha* hunted in company with Aruln, and although their horse* would go their be*t for at least two miles, they would ! i unable to overtake the rhinoceros before impenetrable jungle. There i- i danger in hhooiing this animal, owing to the difficulty of stopping hit charge His forehead is impenetrable, and *.< V. ugh aud thick is hi* skin that a specialty h.:rd- 1 ened bullet is preferred to one of pure lead. ; It is said that a rhinoceros can kill an cle- ph mt, and Sir Samuel deema thi* highly pro- , Lable if the former got an opportunity of striking the latter in the belly or the Hank. Otherwise, the African bull elvphaut i would win in such an encounter by reason of its superior weight ami strength, and uf th* length and power of its tusks. Next to the elephant, the hugnat beast in | point of bulk a. m weight is the hippopot annis. Of this animal Sir Samuel Baker has seen hundreds of specimen* on th* White Nile. One that he measured wa* 14 feet 3 1 inches long from snout to tip of tail The crocodile never venture* to attack the hip pupntuimis, which, for its part, disdains to attack the crocodile. Although, like the rhinoceros, this monsrch of mid-African riven is not carnivorous, it is VEBY FORMIDABLE TO MAX, being easily provoked and assailing the object of its resentment with reckless fury It can upset the largest boat, and in one in stance perforated with its tusks the iron bottom of Sir Samuel's steamer, causing a dangerous leak. The flesh of the hip- popotamus is always palatable, and when the animal is young, il is delicious. The kin make* excellent turtle soup. The tusks were formerly more valuable than those of the elephant, being in request by dentists because they never turn yellow. At the beginning of this century the price of hippopotamus ivory was Ift. 25 per pmiud. Since the American invention of porcelain enamel for artificial teeth it is no longer sought for, and the value of the animal .!> pend* at present on the hide ami the fat. The latter resembles lard, ami the former " used for whips. A hippopotamus .! from mostsquaticatiiinalsinthisparticnl.il j that, instead of .living head first, it sinks backward and disappears by throwing the noee upward. There i* also a marked differ ence between thin beast and the cro.-o.P- as regards the power of remaining un.i-i water. The former, notwithslandi: . enormous lungs, must come up to l-rcatl .n ten minute* at the longest, wherea-. 'l.c crocodile can stay beneath the surface for almost any length of time. I'll" crocodile has the power of living through the hut 'a a torpid state, I. uric. 1 in the mud. Hood's Sarsaparilla b a concentrated extract of BanaparfUa, Yellow Dock. Plpslsscwa, Juniper Berries, Mandrake, Dandelion, and other Tataabl* recetable remedies, erery Ingredient being strictly pure, and the best of It* kind It If possible to buy. It Is prepared by thoroughly competent phar- macist:. In the most careful manner, by a peculiar Combination, Proportion u4 Process, giving to It eurattre power Peculiar To Itself It will cure, win n In the power of medleiM, Scrofula, Salt Eheoxo, Blood Poisoning, Cancerous and all other Humors, Malaria, Dyspepsia, Billuusnets, Sick Headache. Catarrh, Rheumatism, and all difficulties with the Liver and Kidneys. It orercomes That Tired Feeling, Creates a* jlp|>etlt", and gives mental, nerve, Ixxuly, and digestive strength. The value of Hood's Sarsaparilla Is certified to by thousands of voluntary wit nesses all over the country whom It ha* cored of diseases more or leu severe. It I* <>ld by all drngg1*ts. l; six for t* Prepared nnly by C. I HOOD * CO, Api't:.cr..iiv Lowell, Haw. S. B. If you decide to take flood's Sarsapa- rllla do not be Induced to buy any other. IOO Doses One Dollar Wh. -never you meet a worthless man yon have found some one who knows a sure cur* for wart*. RotBKi tir Wvns, M. A., If. U., M. K C. S., of Albion House, Quadrant Road, (Jauonbuiv, Y, I. on. Ion, Eug., write*: "J cannot rvfiaiu frciu usufyui^ lo the efficacy of St. Jacobs Oil in cases uf chronic rheu- matism, sciatica aid neuralgia.'' IV. Idlers cannot be said to be popular, and yet many of them " carry everything before them." "August Flower" For Dyspepsia. A. Bcllanger, Propr. . Stove Foutx dry, Moiitagiiy, yudvc, writes: "I have ustl August Flower for Dys- pepsia. It gave me great relief. I recommend it to all Dyspeptics as very good remedy." Ed. Bergeron, General Dealer, Lauzon, Levis, Quebec, writes: "I have used August Flower with the best possible results for Dyspepsia." C. A. Barrington, Engineer and General Smith, Sydney, Australia, writes: ' 'August Flower has effected a complete cure in my case. It act* ed like a miracle." average th* bengal tiger, ac ' crocodiles twenty two feet in I annillaii hrcr and Ralirr m JaMslra. The cheese and butter which was sent from Canada, under the direction of I'rof. K..I. ii-on, Dominion dairy commisiioner, has been creating considerable stir at the Jamaica Exhibition. The honorary coiumi* ioner I .1 the exhibition, Mr. Adam Drown, . had arranged for a gala occasion, when his | Kxcellency, the <invrnor of Jamaica, was present. Favorable comment was made on all sides at the excellent quality of the dairy product* which were sent to represent the class of good* which Canada export*. For cheese the first place wan awarded to the exhibit of Messrs. DuckrU, Hodge A ( ('o. of Montreal | the t.ccon.l place to that of L. C. Archibald, Antigonuh, N. S. ; thu | third to the display made by Messrs Hodg I Mm Hi..*., Montreal, and the fourth to the exhibit of Mr. K. W. Fc.irman, Hamilton, Ont. For butter, ihe first award went to n.g it .lorn not long remain on th* surface. II. .l.ii k send holds the heat of the sun and drop* down through the snow, reaching the ground before the bulk of snow melts. When the snow goe* off there is usually a little ' Mr. Isaac Wenger, Ayton, Out. ; the second nl'. i of soil Uft over the seed, covering ! wa* carried off by the exhibit of the School it better than any Implement could | of Agriculture at L'Assomutimi, Quo ; the dn. It may b* several weeks before the weather i* warm enough for the clover feed to grow, bul^t I* gradually swelling under Its film of soil, and when ready to germinate It can get a good rooting an I grow without th* danger of drying up that it would have ' -own later and grrin mat iui- only on a hard N'ril to thm method of early KOW- .. ,. ..'> it Iwst plan is. to wait until the g third and fourth went to the shipments from ! Messrs 11*11, Simpson A Co, Montreal Que. ' lletide these, the dairy products exhibited by Messrs. A. A. Ayer A Co. and Messrs. Kirkpatrick A Cookson, hth of M.uitreal. osJcM forth Tery favorable . ..nii.icnt, re- dounding alike U> the exellenl .rmlitv of the KIKM| aud the ini.i). . I. in. mer . haata. from point of note to tip of of laifis 9 leet inches. This ii seldom ' exceeded by more than a few inches. One tiger, when measured b' to lie, 9 feet 7 inches 1 when cnred, was II feet 4 inches in length. Th* strength of the tiger i* also exagger- ated in the popular conception. Thus it i* often asserted that this animal can lift and carry off a cow -imply through the |mwer of it* jaws and neck. This notion is pronounced preposterous. Extremely small u are ths cattle of India, their height exceeds that of the tiger, and, therefore, a row's body must ' drag on the ground. As the weight of an ordinary native cow is just about thai of the ordinary tiger (3.V) to 400 pounds), the Utter can, of course, drag its own weight by lift- ing its victim's liody partially in ils mouth ! and thus lessening the friction on the surface nf the soil. It M a mistake to suppose that any tiger (except the so-called man eaten) attack* man with the intention of eating him, a* a natural prey. The greater number of accident* are occasioned by tigers which have no idea of making a meal of their vic- tims, and which, a* a matter of fact, leave uneaten the men that they have killed. Thty are usually prompted by the instinct of self- defense. I'.ven t he maneater, which is usu- ally an old and cowardly tiger, or more commonly tigress, attacks men not so much because of any acquired preference for human flesh, as because it is easier to kill a native villager than to hunt for the scarce jungle f have been trne at the beiiiiii.ing uf this entiiry, ihe tough scales of the crocodile are no longer bullet-proo'. A hardened, solid bullet, propelled by six drams of pnw- der, will drive through a crocodile M> though its hide were made of paper. The difficulty experienced in killing ; a man-eater i* due, not to any superiority of cnnrage over other t igen, bnt, on the con- trary, toitsexeeptionalennningand caption, ll is a sneak thief. Of the chapter devoted by Sir Sauniel to the various spwies of leopards, hy far the in ..i interesting Hcctioim relate lo the her j tu' , or '> i< inn' Ir-ipard, which in India and I trrsirh-4 asial**i fur W.illba. The pioneer colony i>: French Canadian fanners, which will be loi-at-,l at Stony IMain. about 10 mile* east of Kdmonton, N. W. T. , left Montreal on Monday evening by the regular train for Van -onver, and were joined at Carleton Junctom by a large .-on- tingent from Ontario, who are likewise to be located at different points in the great North- writ. The culonmls from Quebec number 100, and have l>een induced u settle in the North-west by Kev. Mr. Morin, who has persuaded hundre.N <( people in Joliette, Montcalm, Chambly an.) St. Jean Baptlste to take up land in our .. n I'ana- dian Dominion rather than liecoiue citi/ens o' the neighboring republic. It appears that the Metis of the locality haw upon the ap- proach of the whiles moved away to lake Labiche, '-""" mile* to the north of Edmon- ton, and having sold their cows to Father Morin the same will be placed at the disposi- tion of the new comers at a nominal rat*. The pioneer* will leave the Canadian 1'acifio at Calgary, proceed thence by rail to Red Deer, where carriages will take the immi- grants t . their new homes. The placo has been named in advance St. Jean Baptists d* la Saskatchewan, after the reverend mi*. sionary's old parish in th* province of Que- bec. Kev. Mr Morin will return in a abort time and organice a second party of French Canadians, who are fast coming t- ve th* wonderful possibilities of Canada's magnifi- cent western heritage. Geo. Gates, Corinth, Miss. .writes: " I consider your August Flower the best remedy in the world for Dys- pepsia. I was almost dead with that disease, but used several bottles of August Flower, and now con- sider myself a well man. I sincerely recommend this medicine to suffer- ing humanity the world over." 9 G. G. ('.KEEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, f. S. A. A cooper ought to be able to stave off dis- aster. No complaint is made about short mea- sure when we have a peck of trouble. A small boy i.i not neccjtarily irnpecuniooi because he is" strapped. Legal gentlemen while looking after la* law do not entirely forget the profit*. WHAT IT WILL DO. Rl lef . I n any . llmate. al any season, on* OTIMU asoUoaUoni of Jacobs oil relieve pains mm aches; often cure permanently. This Is the average experience In ten yean. Cure*. -The contents cf* nlofle bottJ* have curinl extreme ehronto case* In thous- i nutaiuvM. I'sed according to direct- leu-, there Is a euro In every bottle. The Testimony. Thousands of te*U- mouial* <i!viaimato the aN.\cki!ciucut In thtturc i I nl kinds Ot paluful ailment* The Seat. V ratlenl xnows Imtlne- lively IheNcalof hli misery, inowithat wntt> ever may I.- the origin ot lit" ailment, in ex- pression < r development produce* aches and pain*. is and Aches may be cl M Hi. ot the b"iu.*, the Ji. I ami llir nerves. They may b aito their cause. fly miisrle* a neualao iBM, th* be cicad- Treatment. -Rub the parts afltotsd Uiorviiitn!, .ih ! t Jacobs <M I Apply nlK sod inornms; If necessary. Pn4eet thi bOdy from draft nn J cl>l. TNI CHARII! A. VOGUE* CO . Bi!ttmr, ML Canadian Depot: Toroulu. Osis.