red For Heat, ? 1 things as soon as possible. No ound in a heavy black dress or one uring cold spring days when a few trying on will send you forth with Iress. - , » ® Vaist Suit-- an that--they have a nattiness, ness not usually found in dresses . SHIRT WAIST SUITS ery pretty shade of Navy Lustre, rcam Lustre. Navy Black and Cream Lustre, lavy Lustre, WASH SUITS fuslin at $1.49. ty designs in Print Shirt Waist y Blue Duck with white spot Bek, stylishly made. petals 499 we are showing n - ish Suits, 2 jis d cerized Linen Canvas Cloths in ides and Green Shades, trimmed > Undervests, 20¢., 25c., 15c., Undervests, 30c., 35¢c. e Cashmere, éoc., Je bly : tch several of these makes, on -------- mer Corsets . : O\ 3 -Orsets are in great demand-and reat demand, and Suan Ghd "are keeping this department s 50c., 75¢;, $1, $1.25. ite Muslins d - Dresses and special white uslins, 10c., 1244¢c, 15c., 20c,, ens, 123c,, 15¢., 20c., 25¢., | | | Values ens in Waiver ovr etings. 4 rchief linens, only made wide sts and dresses. lose Every Evening ays) at 5 O'clock Dyp- ugust. when only those go; racks, going across re light and not cost quite so much as splendid stock of hese gonds ther kinds. See them before T SHOE STORE - iad 44 "latitude St - YEAR 72. As Shown on Her 38th Birthday, Since Confederation, 1867-1905--Compiled for the Whig by Frank Yeigh, Toronto--All Rights Reserved-- Registered in Accordance With, the Copyright, Act. A. AREA -- Canada contains of British empire. Canada extends one-third of area over 20 degrees of Equal from Rome to Pole. Only one-quarter of Canada's is occupied. Canada has 1 unexplored area. Canada has line. Canada js 3,500 by 1,400 miles in Size. Canada is larger in area than Uni- ted States. Canada is as Jarge as 30 United Kingdoms, 33 Italy's, 18 Germany's. Canada is twice, the size of British India. i Canada is larger than Australasia. Distance from Hatifax to Vancouver greater than from London to Hali: ax. the North area million square miles 13,000 miles cf coast B British Columbia has 7.000 miles of coast line. o : is Canada's lar : gest province. ' 1s equal to A Switzerland's. . " mining. (See under "Mining.)"" Boundary line between Canada and United States is 3,000 600 land, 1,400 water. British-born people in Canada, 6 per cent.; Canadian-born, 87 per cent, British immigration to Canada. (See under "'Immigration.!" British trade with Canada. (See under "Natural Products," "Com- merce," and '"Wheat.)" BANKING :-- Canada has 35 chartered banks with 1,100 branches. Cqnada's, bunks have 79 millions of paid-up capital, Canada's hanks have 72 millions of notes in circulation, (October 3lst, 1904.) Sixty years ago there were only 76 banks, with 6 millions in circulation. Canada'¢ banks have assets of 694 millions; liabilities, 554 millions. Canada's banks have increased their assets by over 600 millions sifice Confederation. Capital of the Bank of Montreal originally - $350,000; now 14 millions. © Only 6 other banks in Awerica -or Europe have a larger capital. Capital of the Bank of Commerce, 10 millions. Canada has 1,000 post offices government savings banks. They have 216,000 depesitors with 62 millions on deposit: *I'wenty-three millions additional are in special savings banks. Four hundred and twenty-three mil- lions' are deposited in chartered banks. Forty millions are deposited in loan companies, private banks, etc. Grand total savings of 548 lions, or $100 per head. Discounts by chartered banks, 1904, 452 millions. Bank deposits of 1404 showed in- crease of 50 millions over 1903. Canada has 250 branch banks in the North-West; 1 at Confederation. Winnipeg has 12 banks. Bank clear- ings nearly 300 millions. : Deposits in Canadian banks have in- creased 164 per cent. in 10 years. miles long, 1,- and mil- Loans have increased 106 per cent. in same period. : Montreal is the largest banking centre in Canada; Toronto, second; Winnipeg, third; Ottawa, fourth. Batik clearings, 1904, in 11 Cana- dian cities, $2,795,000,000. x CANADA-- Canada is 38 years old, dating from Confederation. Canada is 146 years old, dating from British conquest of 1759. Canatla is 370 vears old, dating from Cartier's first visit of 1535. Canada has only § survivors of her 33 fathers of Confederation. Canada leads Britgin's 18 colonies, 'Canada was the first colony to form a confederation, Canada is included in 42 of Britain's extradition treaties, Canada has over 700 legislators. Canada has had 113 governors-Gen- eral since 1534. Canada has 45 religious denomina- tions, : Canada cast over one million ballots in dominion election of 1904. Canada gives $4,402,502 annually to the provinces as subsidies. Canada eomprises one-twelith of the land surface of the globe. : COMMERCE-- Canada's total volume of trade, year ending June 1904, 464 millions. An inerease of five millions over 1908, and fifty millions over 1902. Canada's volume of trade has more than doubled in ten years. Canada's expenditire, 1904, fifty-five millione: 1870, fourteen millions. Canada's surplus for year ending June, 1904, fifteen millions. - Increase in Canada's trade in twelve , 1898 to 1904, 200 millions. nerease in Canada's trade in twen- ty veart, 1873 'to 1893 thirty mil ing twenty-eight of the thirty-eight years were greater to Great Britain than to the United States. Canada's imports for 1904, 253 mil- lions; exports, 211 millions. Canada has a foreign trade one-fifth as large as that of the United States. 'At Confederation 60 per cent. of Canada's eéxport trade was to the Un- ited States; 30 per cent. to Britain. In 1903, 58 per cent. was to Britain, and 31 per cent. to the United States. Great Britain hought in 19% goods from Canada to the value of $4 per head, United States bought from Can- ada at rate of less than $1 per head. Canada's volume of trade per head, 1904, $35; 1868, $40. United States $33 per head. Canada's relative percentage of com- mercial growth for seven years, 1505- 1902 was 107 per eent.; as against 47 of United States, 25 of Britain; 38 of Germany, 21 of France. Britain is Canada's best customer-- buying 86 per cent of Canada's ex- ports. The industries of Canada totalled, 190), $2,349,717,000 Value of products of industries, 1001, £9602,987,759, or 41 per cent. of capi- tal. Canada has twelve commercial ents abroad. Chinese, --20,800 in Canada. Cotton.--Twenty millions invested in Canada. ag- Canada's West.--(See under "West- ern Canada.") CANALS Canada has spent over 100 millions on 100 miles of canals--over a million a mile. Canada's tolls, Three times a greater tonnage pass- es through the Sault canals than through: the Suez. canals are now free of D. Doukhobors.--8,000 in Canada, with 422,700 acres of free grant lands. Debit of Canada.--(Net) 260 millions: $46 per head. In 1867, 422 per head. Dawrying.--(See under 'Natural Pro ducts.) E. EDUCATION-- Canada has 20,081 public schools. Canada's public schoofs are attended by 1,128,532 pupils. Canada has 30,970 public teachers. Canada spends over twelve millions annually on her public schools. Canada has seventeen universities and fifty-three colleges. These seventy educational institu- tions are attended by 15,000 students. Eighty per cent of all adults in Can ada can write; seventy per cent of all the people can read. Seventy-six schools in North-West Territories in 188G; 640 in 1902. Forty-eight Carnegie libraries in school Canada. . - One-and-a-half millions have been given by Carnegie to Canadian li- braries. \ Electric railways--(See under "rail- ways'). Elevators--1,025 in North-West; storage capacity, forty-five million bushels. FISHERIES-- . Canada's fishery industry produced in 1901, twenty-three millions. Canada exported in 1904 over ten millions worth of fishery products. Cod comes first in value, salmon next. Canada has 100,000 in the fishing industry. Canada's fishery equipment is worth twelve millions. Nova Scotia comes first in industry, British Columbia New Brunswick third. 13,905 seals were caught in. 1904 by Canadian sealers. : Flour Mills--293 in North-West; daily eapacity, 18,500 barrels. men employed fishing second, G. Galicians, 65,000 in Canada. Grand Trunk Pacific railway be 3,600 miles long. Grand Trunk Pacific will le railway will when com- operates. 4,177 miles, : (rand Trunk system has 26,800 éni- ployees., J H. Hungarians, 20,000 in Canada. Hudson's 'Bay .company, 235 years d. I. IMMIGRATION Canada received 130,000 immigrants, fiscal year to June 30th, 1904, Canada has received half a million Pmmigrants in nine years. Canada received in' 1904; 50,374 from Great Britain; 47,171 from U.S. Sixty per eent of the immigration of 1904 was agricultural in its character. Seventy Arey cent: of the immi- -} grants of 1904 speak English. ink and Jouata: the' 1000 immigrants, lidhs. 4 ~ Since Confederation the exports dur- Canada will, it is estimated. re ceive 150,000 immigrants in 1 Al Each immigrant is estimated to be worth $1,000 to Canada. : 167,000 Americans have come to Canada in past seven years. They brought in cash 'and settlers' effects, fifty-eight millions--$350 per head. Twenty-seven different nationalities were represented in the foreign immi gration of 1904, Canada. has 65,000 Galicians from Austria, (including 7,729 arrived in 1904). The Doukhobor iminigration of 8, 000 from Russia to Canada in 1899 was the greatest exodus of a whole people ever known. The Doukhobors earned in. 1903, $110,000 in railroad £300,000 in trade. The Doukhobors have 422,700 acres of free grant homesteads; 160,000 taken up. Canada has 7,000 Mormons, Mennonites, 20,000 Hungarians. Canada has 20,000 Chinese and 3,- 612 Japanese. Canada has received 165,000 British immigrants in last nine years. For every British immigrant in nine years there, has' been an American, Sixty per cent of total immigration for nine years has been English- speaking, forty per cenit foreign. The = British wntiigration of 1904 increased 8,582 over 1903, the Ameri ean~deereased 1.302. Cost of bringing immigrants to Can- ada, 1904, continental, $2.14 per head; Great Britain, $4.68; United States, $4.53; average, $3.98. The immigration of 1904 was double that for 190%; treble that of 1809. The British immigration for 1904 was 36,694 English, 10522 Scotch, 3,128 Irish. Foreign arrivals, 1904, were Gali cians, 7,729; Germans, 2,985; Hungari- work and spent 20,000 ans, 1,207; other Austrians, 2,201 : Scandinavians, 4,203: Russians and Finns, 2,905; French and Belgians, 2,302, The immigration 2,500 per week, INDIANS-- Canada has 123 reserves, They decreased by 255 in 1904 over 1908. They. cultivate 45,000 acres of land. Value of their farm produce, 1904, £1 .9680,000. Value of their fishing and hunting, $1,132,000. Wages eamed, lion and a hall. of 1904, averaged 107,978 Indians on 1,- 1904, nearly a mil 9,785 Indian children attended 208 schools. 221 Indian youths are learning trades in industrial schools. Canada spends $300,000 a year her Indians. 20,000 of the Indians are Protest. ant, 34915 Roman Catholic, 11,269 Pagans--outside of the far north. The Indians - own 37,830 horned stock, and 32,635 horses. on J Japanese.--3.012 in Canada. K. Kingston is 200 years old. Kingrton has a population of 20,000, Kingston is the seat of the only military college in Canada. Kingston has had three of ite eiti- tens fill the lieutenant-governorship- of Ontario--Campbel], Kirkpatrick, Mo wat. "wn Kingston was represented in parlia- ment for over forty years by Sir John A. Macdonald: Kingston is a great military centre. Kingston has a great institution of learning--Queen's University. Kingston has eotton and woolen fac- tories, and a great locomotive build- ing concern, Kingston has close penal institution. * . Kingston has the finest harbor on inland . waters, a thousand ships can rest at anchor in it. to it a great L. Land in Canada. -- (See under "Wheat" and "Western Canada.") Land.--Canada has enough to give each individual 400 acd: Lumbering.--(See under "Timber."') M. Manitoba is as large as England and Scotland. Manitoba.--(See under "Population," "Immigration," "Wheat" and "West ern Canada.") ; Manitoba used 2,400 threshing ~out fits 1904, MILITIA-- Canada has a militia fore of 40,000, This force can be expanded to a war strength of 100,000 as a first line pf defence. Canada has 300 with 22,000 members. . Canada's militia department costs two and one-half millions a year. Canada has mounted. policemen, costing hali' a, million. They patrol an area as large as rifle associdtions Europe. « ~ They are subdivided into eighty posts, fromr Hudson's Bay to Rocky Mountains, from United States bound- ary to Arctic Ocean. * Canada sent 8,372 men to South Af- rica during the Boer war. ; Of this number, 2M died, and 22 were wounded. Stathoona's Horse number 507. & Canada expended $2,830,000 in send- ing the 8,372'men to South Africa. 'anada will hereafter maintain defences at Halifax and Esquimalt. This will cost Canada an additional two millions a year. This will necessitate raising the re gular Canadian force to 5,000. Canada - will spend, 1906, nearly $1 per head for military purposes; Fag land, $8.30. MARINE the Canada ranks seventh in list of - KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1905. The A, B. C. of Canada's Greatness maritime nations, Canada has 7,000 vessels registered, with tonnage of cight and one-half million tons. Canada has nearly 1,000 lighthouses, light ships, etc, Canada has 1,033 steamboats under inspection. Canada has twenty-eight lifesaving stations. 328 new vessels were built in Can- ada in 1904, MANUFACTURES OF CANADA -- Canada's munufactures have an in: vested capital of 500 millions. One hundred millions of U tal is 'invested in Canada, Canada exported in 1904, 20 mil- lions in manufactures, or 48 millions, including lumber, ete. S. capi Canada has 11,126 factories, em ploying 306,000 hands. Canadian banks have loaned 416 millions te Canadian manufacturers. MINERALS :- Practically all the valuable minerals are found in Canada. Canada's mineral production in 1904 reached 60 milligns. Canada's mineral exports were 33) millions in 1904. Canada has produced in last 20 years, 600 millions worth of minerals. Canada has "produced 200 millions in gold since 1862. One-half of this has come from the Yukon since 1896. The Yukon produced worth of gold in 1904, Canada produced in 1904 nearly 16} millions in gold. Canada ranks fourth among world's gold-producing countries. British Columbia has produced negr- ly 100° millions in gold all told. Canada's Yukon gold field is 125,- 000 square miles in area. Yukon placers have produced more gold than any other placer mines in the world. Canada's mineral protluction increased 600 per cent. since japital invested in Canadian min: ing, 104 millions Nickel was accidentally in Sudbury in 1882, Canada has produced 35 millions worth of pirkel. Canada 8 the greatest nickel posits in the world. Canada produced nearly 5 millions in nickel in 1904. Sudbury's nickel mines have reached a depth ef 1,200 feet. Canada has the hest and richest asbestos in the world Gold was accidentally discovered on Klondyke Creek, Yukon, 1896. Canada produced 143 millions worth of coal in 1904 Canada has 100,000 square miles of coal-bearing lands. British lumbia produces over 1 million tons of coal a year. British Coltmibsa produced 200,000 tons of coke a year Fernie, B.C., has 1,140 coke ovens. 10 millions the has discovered de- Fifteen thousand miners are em- ployed in the boundary country of B. C. alone. The Crow's Nest coal beds are timated to hold enough coal to last for 5,000 years if mined at rate of 4 million tons a year. Mineral bounties paid, 1904, pig iron* and steel ingots, $803,641; lead, 08 Canada produced 5} millions worth of copper in 1904. Canada produced 1} millions worth of iron ore and pig iron in 1904. Canada supplies 85 per cent. of the world's total product of corundum. Canada produced $1,637,000 worth of lead in 1904, Canada produced of silver in 1904, (Canada produced nearly worth of petroleam in 1904 Canada's mining exhibit at Louis ranked ameng the best i provinces are nearly as + as Fngland and Wales. 7.000 in Canada, of which Alberta. 20,000 in Canada two-thirds of its 41 mil worth farming. $2,127,000 worth 1 million St 6,000 are in Mennonite Manitoba lion acres i N. NATURAL PRODUCTS :- Canada produces annually 275 mil lion bushels of grain of all kinds Forty-five per eent, of Canadians are engagod in husbandry. Sixty-three millign acres are occu pied, onehall cultivated. Eighty-seven per cent. of Canada's farmers own their holdings ? Canada exported, 1904, 37 millions of agricultural products. Canada exported, 1904, 63 of animal produee. Making a total of 100 millions sported, 1896-1904, agricultural products Canada « 1 billion, 787 millions invested in agriculture (1901.) Of this, | billion is in land and 275 millions in live stock. Annual value of farm crops and produce in ( anada, 363 millions. Total value of farm property, lands and implements, 1§ billions. Great DPritain bought 9-10 of Can- ada's natural product exported in 1904. id Great Britain bays 93 per cent. of Canada's exports of butter, %0 per cent. of cheese, 78 of poultry, 99 of bacon. We sell Britain 24 out of 234 mil lions worth of cheese she buys. We sell her fout out of 101 millions worth of butter she buys. r We sell her 12 ont of 66 worth of bacon she buys. We sell her 13 out of 145 worth of wheat she buys: We sell her 10 out of 44. millions worth. of cattle she buys. : The = British market is market for the future. In 1904 Canada sold Great Britain 78 out of the BEL millions worth of farm produce bought. ry every $100 worth of natural products sold Great Britain by Can- ada in 1904, other eowntries sald her 8747 worth Total - valug. of - cheese exported, 1868, 1 million; 1904, 24 willions. Cheese produced in Canada, 1891, 108 million pounds; 1901. 220 millions.' millions 679 millions millions Canada's Canadian flour sold to Japan - 8 BY THE A PROCLAMATION For Uniting the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, Into One Dominion, QUEEN! Under the Name of CANADA. VICTORIA R. HEREAS, by an Act of Parliament, - passed on the Twenty ninth day of March, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty- seven, in the Thirtieth year of ou r reign, intituled, "An 'Act for the Union of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, and the Gov. ernment thereof, and for purposes connected therewith," after divers recitals it is ehacted that "4t shall be lawful for the Queen, by' and 'with the advice of Her Majesty's Most Honorable Privy Council, to declare, by Proclamation, that "on and after a day therein appointed not being more than six months after the pass ing of this Act, the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, shall form"and be Oae Dominion under 'the "name of Canada, and on and after that day those Three Provinces shall form and be One Dominion 'under that Name accordingly" and it is thereby further enacted, that 'Such Persons shall be first Sum- moned to the Senate as the Queen by Warrant, under Her Majesty's Royal Sign Manual, 'thinks fit to approve, and their Names shall be inserted in the Queen's Proclamation of Union." We therefore, by and with the advies of Our Privy Couneil, have thought fit to issue this Our Royal Proclamation, and We do ordain, declare, and command that on and after the First day of July, One Thousand Eight Hundted and Sixty-seven, the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, shall form and be One Dominion, under the name of CANADA. And we do further ofdain and declare that the persons whose names are herein inserted and set forth are the persons of whom we have by Warrant under Our Royal Sign Manual thought fit to approve as the persons who shall be first summoned to the Sema of Canada. FOR THE PROVINOE OF ONTARIO---John mour, lexander John Ross, Samuel Mills, Benjamin Shaw, Adam Johnson Ferguson Blair, Cox Aiking, David Reesor, Blijah Leona Pucrhain, Joan Simpson, James Sk A FOR THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC--James Léslie, Asa . Oliver, Jaeoue Louis Renaud, Suc Lettellier do St. Just. Ulric Joseph Noel Bosse, Louis A Charles Cormier, Antoine Juchersau J. Duchesnay, Leandre Dumouchel, Louis Lacoste, Wilson, William Henry Chaffars, Jean Baptiste Guevremont, Davia. Lewis fpephegeii, oN na, ford, Donald Mucdonaid, Oliver Blake, Tilia Flint, © Walter an. ¥ Hamilton, oderick - Ma \ Walter Hamilton Dickson, James David Christie J ames nstor, Asa 'Allworth rea, dW, Belknap Foster, Olivier Bureau, Charles alhiot, J Tessier, John Hamilton, Duchesnay, David Edward Price, Elrear Armand, Charles James Ferrite, Sir Joseph F. Narcisse Fortunat Belleau, ft. "homasRyan, John Sewall Sanborn, FOR THE PROVINCE OF NOVA SCOTIA~Idward Henry, Jonathan Me Cully, Thomas D Archibald, Kheht. B Dickey, John H Andetson John Holmes, John W. Ritchie, Benjamin Wier, John Locke, Caleb R. Bill, John 4 William Miller. THE Bourinot, OR PROVINCE OF NEW BRUNSWICK--Amas Edwin Botsford, 1Bd- ward Barron Chandler, John Robertson, Robert Leonard Hazen, William Hunter Odell, David Wark William Henry Stoeves, Robert Duncan Wilmot, Abner Reid MeClolan, Peter Mitchell. William Todd, John Ferguson, Given at our Court, at Windsor Uustle, this Twenty-second day of May, in the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty-seven, and in the Thirtieth year of our reign. GOD SAVE THE QUEEN. months of 1903; $6,000 period, 1904, $82,000 worth. Good root crops are grown on the Mackenzie and Yukon Rivers, Total exports of farm produce, 1904, from Canada, 85 millions worth. Capital invested in dairying, $6, 315,000 Canada now tong of honey. Canada exhibited at St. Louis 91 varieties of apples, 34 of pears, 24 of plums, 16 of peaches, 70 of grapes, 20 of small fruit. exports hundreds of 0. Ontario is over four times as large as England. Ontario is 113 years old Ontario-born people gone to Cana- dian west, 1901, 121,451. Ontario has 150,000 of scent. Ontario's grain crop, 1904, 150 mil lion bushels. (Ontario immigration, 1964, 25,000, Ontario has 580,355 voters. Ontario; density of population 9.9; all Canada 1.7. Ontario; area, 166 million acres. Ontario sold or disposed of twenty three million acres. Ontario land still in the crown, 102 million acres, French de- Ontario revenue from woods and forests, 1904, $2,781,272, Ontario has 700 newspapers. Ontario population twenty-nine per cent. urban; seventy-one per cent. rural. Ontario has 224,127 occupiers of land. Ontario population (1901) 1,858,787 born in Canada; 324,160 elsewhere. -- p POPULATION-- Canada's proportion of population is only 1.5 to square mile, (England has 558 and United States 21 to square mile). Canada's population by first census of 1666 was 3,251. : Canada's population 70,000, Canada's population at Confedera- tion, 1867, 3% millions. Canada's population, 1901, 5.371 315. Canada's population estimated on June 30th, 1904, 5,604 898 Canada began 20th century with same population as United States be- gan 19th. Canada has forty coulitries and na- tionalities in her population. . Canada has 132,101 mors, joabes than females. © in 170 was Canada is adding to its population worth, same | every year by immigration a number equal to Toronto's population. Canada has more than one-half of the white population of all Britain's colonies, Canada has enfranchised 25 per cent. of her population, Canada has 87 per cent. of Canadian born people; 4,671,815. Canada hos 8 per cent. of British born people ; 406,883, Canada has therefore 95 per cent. of British born subjects; 5,077,698, Canada has only 5 per cent. of for eign born people; 293,617. Fifty-five per cent. of Canada's for- eign barn population are naturalized. 'anadwn's population is 73 per cent. rural; 20 per cent. urban. Canada has Ql centres of 5,000 po- pulation and over, and 31 of 10,000 and over, Canada's centre of population is near Ottawa, and is moving west. Canada's western population fifty years ago, 8000; to-day, 800,000, Canada's western population is 76 per cent, British and Canadian bom; 26 per cent, foreign born. In 1901, 121,451 Ontario horn peo- ple had moved to the west, One ont of every three and one-half in .Canada is of French descent. LA93T1 out of 6,371,315 are of French descent, Quebee province has 1.322115 of Erench descent, and 200,000 British, Ontario province has 150,000 of French descent, | There are 10,000 of French descent in the Canadian west. The United States census of 19000, shows 1,181,255 from Canada. 11.4 per cent. of the United States foreign population i= Canadian. In fifty years 3,250,000 Canadians have gone to the United States. Canadian emigration to the United : Value Of '"Ozonme." The value of "Ozone" (it is really uid oxygen) 'is well known to medi- cal science, Tt kills. the germs of in- ternal disorders. If taken in concen- trated form (and that means "Solu- tion of Ozone, the coupon kind") it ensures a speedy oure for asthma, bronchiris, Bright's disease,' kidney trouble, mala and rheumatism, This stringent remedy needs with it a thie loxative to secure A ig Te. sults, our ruggist ve you rixteen ounces of 'Solution of Ozone" for fifty cents, and il you insist on the coupon kind will guarantee a free Jackage of "Celery King." . The Pub- Drug Ubmpeny, Bridgeburg, le . 7 g if a o § fries ; th i i miles of railway Te EL TR age is in the west : The Canadian Pacific railway o atts 108 miles, ; a now, 35.000, 3 1, Canada gave the 0. P, in cash 1 n> , : R. was built in five years, ten as per contract. les. : 6. TR I , 1804, 19,000; now 26,000. ose 18 ; : ian Northern aysbem will be 2,100 miles long at of 1905, be Canadian government railways are 1,510 miles Grand Trunk Pacific will be 3 milés long, and will cost 125 lions. ! Five hundred and thirty-four miles of Dew railways built in Canada # p Canada has 767 miles of electrie railways. ; on Canada's electric railways have cost 80 millions, - Er They earried in 1904, 181 millio passengers, 30 times the popula of Canada, ; S-- S. Saskatchewan province has 275,000 square miles, Size of Canesda. (See "Area.)" : Surplus of Canada, 1904, 15 lions. T, TIMBER :-- A Canada has the largest white pine atu ob & comtinmt. t 'toiled ada's forest produc J 80 millions in 1908. Fos Canada exported in 1904, 33 mil lions of forest products. Canada has, it is estimated, a lion square miles of standing ber. Dominion forestry branch The distribute, 1905, 20 million ) British Columbia cxports 120 =n lion feet of lumber a year. 3