-> X-i S -v. HE famous ship NlagSra, the Which turned defeat into victory for Oliver Hazard Perry In the battle Of Lake Brie on September 13, 1813, wtil sail again this summer the vatsljl where she conquered a British fleet. The raising of the Niagara is tb.a mckk- striking feature of the impending cfie- bratlon of Perry's victory which stryed the fortunes of the United 8fc&sss a hundred years ago. This engineering fe».t seems to have no exact parallel, and in senclme-ital and patriotic interest It Is the most not*,hie phr.ae of the coming centennial celebration. To attempt to lift the hulk from the mad of Eric harbor rvas a daring idea from the start. To Viititce the project fact required courage and per severance of a high order. Many were the scoffers. It was said, to the very lasfc> that the contractor had hold of an old canal boat, and not till the gun ports of the Niagara appeared above the surface of the lake did the great crowds ashore .concede that Parry's ship was a c t u a l l y ragged. When) the gun ports'came in sight a throng of half frosen curio seekers was held back with dlffl- . culty. Once it be came evident that the battered hulk was actually that of the Niagara the eqofTers' were gar to rush upon the wreck and tear her to pieces for souvenirs. Bllnd- p&RKYJt? 2W aarrxz aaf-* jyzmsea "snow and cracking ice seemed no deterrent to their frenzy. Within a few. day* the battered craft had,been f«teed higher above the water and propelled to shore on pontoons. She is soon to be hauled to * shipbuilding yard near by, where she will be partly rebuilt and put Into shape for her last •plendid crul** 6n Lake Erie this summer. On this cruise the Niagara will visit all the. principal ports of the great lakes, decked with •fify'""•»!«< varicolored bunting, aad wallowing spgonrtrdly as befits a ship of her size, entour and. guns. It was almost as much of a feat for Oil* ver Hazard Perry to' build the vessels as to win the battle of Lake Erie. The commodore had been in the Amer ican navy for soma time, and 1l 1811 as a lieutenant In command of the schooner Re venge he ran the ves sel ashore at Watch Hill, R. I., and wrecked It In a storm. He was tried by court martial for this, but acquitted. He failed to get a command when the War of 1812 started. Then he applied *o Commodore Chauncey and was ordered to re port at Lake Erie. On March 27, 1818. he arrived at Lake Erie and found a force of fifty shipwrights. The squadron had to be built from the fores* near by tassel b was built by him and his men. A rejp ment of Pennsylvania militia covered the ship- hvllders while they were at The battle against a superior British squadron la«ted all day, and the Lawrence was dismantled, so that Perry had to row through a hail of snot to the Niagara,'where he hoisted his flag again. At 3 o'clock he was able to send his famous dis patch: "We have met the enemy and they are oars." _ Commodore Perry w*s then twenty-seven years old. RESULTSIN MURDER Top of Victim's Head Is Shot Off as He Enters the Doer of.>> ̂ Home. m IM Sain Jose, CaL--Stunned by ft blow from the hutt nf k r«yolver, bound to a chair, where she ww forced to #it- ness the murder of1 her young hoe- tend, then held prisoner for a day and a night until the murderer reli aBleey from exhaustion, when she released herself from the bonds and ran nine miles to Dells station for assistance, is the experience of Mrs. Alta Ben- • neker, aged sixteen, a bride of two months. Her husband, Henry Benne- ker,' aged nineteen, was killed by Thomas Shearin, scion of a wealthy and prominent family of stock raisers 111 the hills near Pachoco Pass, twen ty, miles from Gilroy. When Shearin a woke and found the girl-wife missing, he took to the hil'.a •In an effort to znr.ke his escape, but v.-s m - m ? y \X - i/ j. ̂ ' • -.A ,'41 O Low round-trip summer excursion fares are in effect on certain dates via Chicago and North Western Ry- to all important points West, North and Northwest. HQ Splendidly equipped daily trains providing through service leave the new and palatial Passenger Ter minal, Chicago, at convenient hours. fl Ror rates, reservations and lull particulars apply to your nearest ticket agent or address n CAIRNS Gn'f and TickrtAti. . Chicago and forth Western Railway 226 W. Jack ton St.. Chfeago. IlL pi Wl --r^.Sv ible achievement. She is 110 feet long, has a 7~~ _ t.i«nH»r hv hlrth The son foot beam and Is about-10 feet deep. There **** Perry was a Rhode I ^a _ y_ m nothing of the clipper ship about her, but there ^sl a stanchness that kept -her steady while she \ •mptied broadsides at a whole English fleet. In"* her prime, at the time of the decisive battle of t*ke Erie, she was a .brig of the old-faahloned sort, with an enormous spread of sail for those days. She had single topgallantsalls and, what was more characteristic of the time, single top- • sails. Thus the number of her sails was not ap parently great, but her actual spread of canvas was very large for her day. Her rigging was all. •f the old-ctyle sort Her main, fore and mizzen tops were really fenced in tor lookouts and she had a spanker to aid her In maneuvering better tfcan her natural square rig would. Capt. .,W« L. Morrison of the United States, training ship Wolverine, who Is an official of the Peyry Centennial celebration and an authority on historical facts relating to the Niagara, has made the prediction that in the vessel's hold will be discovered many old buckles and revolvers; and IS a abort time the world will know if he Is ; tight. . Raising the Niagara was the hardest kind of fcrork. It is a big feather in the cap of the local contractor, who succeeded • in lifting the hulk from the mud of the lake bottom, where she had lain for a hundred years.. The task had to be done In winter in order to use spring to get the vessel In shape. Winter on the great lake* Is ifuch as to make a naturally delicate Job of this -dfort well nigh impossible. The. interstate board of the centennial celebrar fiV?'*Sfton had official charge of the wortt. To raise the hulk took just three months. The original contract called for fee task to be done In thirty £ays, bat bad weather knocked this schedule sky lgh- wmB planned at first to «#nk paatoons along- #lde' this Niagara and pump them out, bringing the ship to the surface with them. Had the Iveatber permitted this the salvage of the hulk ..fi;;/' V°uld have been accomplished in contract time. -W £ \-Storms, however, threatened the undertaking al- . - ^/' j.V'TOost every day and the contractor dared not-1 |'| K; 'fink hie pontoons lest he lose them. Therefore v. •- f . ' four pontoons were anchored on either side of y where the ship would lie when raised vertically ^ lake® surface. Other pontoons were sta- f e f 1 , m ^ i o n e d o v e r h e r b o w a n d s t e i t i . C h a i n s w e r e I > •f': I made fast to the wreck by divers and she was •;r V \ , Simply pulled up to the water's edge. 1Ice piled up six feet high about the pontoons, £ " .'5r< Workmen were In constant danger of loslng.thetf ' r '• 'fives In the black and icy water. Several fell R %' <- "^nt°' airholes in Chawing Ice but were rescued. $•- : Niagara had to b« raised through twenty i :' teet of water. m ' • And now ,or •ometlifn ̂ about7 the Nia®sm5fc ̂ ^•v historic day. ̂ Niagara and Commodore. Barry'* flagship. Jp^:_.;thei'Lawrence, were the only two vessels in thf American fleet of six ships that, even in 1813; could have been called men-of-war. They wefe 600 tons burden each, and each carried twenty of a naval officer and the daughter of an Irish woman of unusual attainments!,- he had the most careful early training, so that after Lake Erie some who knew the family spoke of it as "Mrs. ( perry's victory." Young Oliver Hazard Perry was fond of Plutarch's Lives, Shakespeare and Addison. He was a pupil of Count Rochambeau. 4$ fourteen he was commissioned a taidshtpmariJ - When the war with England began there was probably no better ordnance officer In the Amer ican navy, and in the training of his crews he was unwearying In personal attention to details. B^ . | assembling his gunboats occasionally he gained actual knowledge of the evolutions of a fleot. He also practiced sham battles, which taught him r . much. " • .« Within twenty-four hours after receipt of Com- modore Chauncey's order to go to Lake Erie he had sent off a detachment of fifty mdn, and five ( days later he set out himself with his younger brother, Alexander. Traveling chiefly In sleighs he reached Erie on March 27. There he found Noah Brown, shipwright, and Sailing Master Dob bins awaiting fifty carpenters from Philadelphia* The carpenters were more than five weeks mak ing the wintry Journey. The keels of two twenty gun brigs and three gunboats had already bee-i laid. Incredible toll In the wilderness enabled Perry to collect utile" vessels of 1.671 tons with 54 guns capable of •throwing a broadside of 936 potinds of metal, 6f Which 288 pounds could be! fired at long range. Puny figures these seem In this day of dread- naughts, but in 1813 they were respeotable If not exactly impressive. The Lawrence and the Niagara, which were ,, {he two twenty gun ships, carried two long welve pounders and eighteen thirty-two pounder .*arronades. The long range guns were the chief dependents of the Americans. To make his car- ronade fire effective Perry relied on grape and canister shot and favorite American ammunition, langrage, which was made out of scraps Qf iroj) sewed up in leather bags. Perry's force of men consisted of about 500 landsmen and sailors, many of whom had never seen salt water. On the British side Captain Barclay had six vessels of 1.460 tons, manned by nearly 500 men. but he had sixty-three cannon. Barclay was one of Nelson's veterans. , As the fleets approached each other at about 11 o'clock -the bugle sounded from the flagship.. The men of the whole British line gave three cheers and the long guns of the Detroit opened on the Lawrence at a distance of a mile and a half. By noon the battle began in earnest In the form of a duel, the heaviest vessel in each •fleet confronting the other. Barclay had at first • a manifest advantage. The gunners of the Law-' ^rehcet depending toe: much on their, carronades. . fired too fast, and overshottlng. their stumpy-guns - were able only to pit and dent the sides of the Detroit. So the Lawrence was reduced to a hulk -by a steady British flre. After two hours only* r one sun was left mourited. the cockpit was crowded with wounded, and only c«^htee'n tfbf"1 u harmed men. Including commander and surgeon, were left on board. < The Niagara for some reason had remained in -tile rear. The smaller American vessels seemed unable to do anything to prevent a British vic tory. With the audacity of genius Perry called four sailors to man the boats, and with his brother Alexander, the flag of the Lawrence wrapped round his arm. he left the ship. , At first he was Shielded by the' battle smoke. Then he was ijowed through the enemy's flre for fifteen min utes, at last reaching the Niagara unharmed. The breeze now freshened, speeding the Niagara and the American schooners into action. The Queen Charlotte of the British fleet was disabled while Setting into position for a broadside. She fell foul of the Detroit. The American schooners took raking positions. The full battery of the Niagara, joining In the steady and rapid flre, swept the British decks. Kentucky riflemen in the tops acting as marines picked off vevery enemy visible. At 3 o'clock the British flag was hauled down. It was the flrBt time in Britain's history that she had lost a whole squadron. Then it was that on the deck of the Niagara Perry dis patched to the secretary of tne navy the brief sccount of his victory and shortly afterward sent to Oen. William H. Harrison the line: "We have net the eneifhy and thfcy are ours." Congress voted Perry thanks, s medal afid •he rank of captain. The city of Boston pre sented him with a set orf silver, and other cities voted him thanks. He assisted in the defense of Baltimore, and in the squadron that was sent to the Mediterranean in 1815 he commanded the frigate Java. In June, 1819, while in command of the John Adams and other United States ves sels In the West Indies, he contracted yellow fever In the Orinoco and died. The United States has appropriated $2501000 for a Perry memorial to be erected at Put-In-Bay on Bass Island. The great shaft will stand in the midst of a park. Individual states have brought the total up to $700,000. New Tork gave $50,000: Ohio. $83,000; Pennsylvania, $75,000; Wisconsin, $50,000. Other states that Interested themselves were Michigan. Illinois. Rhode Island, Kentucky ^nd Minnesota. .• About a year ago the national commissioners of fine arts accepted a design for the memorial submitted by J. H. Freedlander and A. D. Sey mour, Jr. The design provides for a plaza 1,000 feet long and about' 200 *eet deep. On the lilaza will be a Doris column 320 feet high. The 1 Inland on whieh the column will rise Is one of a ifroup St the western end of Lake Erie. The fourteen acres have been acquired to pro- ;;;Vlde a reservation around the memorial. The 1)0ric column w)ll serve as a lighthouse. Other features are a museum, a statue typifying peace flanked by a colonnade. In the museum will be ..panels arranged for mural paintings descriptive of historical events connected* with the battle of ,Lake Erie. - The plan calle for a crypt under the shaft In which will be placed the bodies of American and British sailors who perished In the battle, which were burled onvthe island. The sum of $100,000 has been set aside for harmonWag the'landscape with the general • scene. The members of the commission having charge bf the Perry centennial celebration will try to secure a brief suspension of that convention be tween the United States ar.d Canada by which warships may not enter the Oreat l^akes. The Idea is to have British and American battleships at the ceremony of dedicating the column to • Perry's victory and possibly a warship or two of Canada's now navy. The national commission of fine arts which se lected the design for the Perry memorial con sists-of Daniel H. Burnhain, chairman; Daniel C. - French, Thomas Hastings. Frederick Law Olm sted. Charles Moore, Cass Gilbert and Francis D. Millet. Thev were unanimous In their choice of a design. Commander George H. Worthlngton, Gen. Nelson A. Miles and Col. Henry Wattefson are on the interstate board In charge of the celebration. I Naturally Indignant. "Did you tell your troubles to a policeman?" "Yes," said the man who had beei(i robbed- "And I tell you that policeman was indignant. The hold-uf> man hadn't even asked bis permission to, operate on his beat" LITTLE SURPRISES r "I don't want any afternoons out, mum; I'm satisfied' If I can go to church 8unday evenln's." "Harry, you've been, an awful long time mak ing up your mind to aek me to marry you I ' "Your bill, doctor, is only about half what I expected It would t>e." .' "Bobby, I've kept you In after sghdol 'to tell you you'ra a dear, good little boy. . Won't you give your old tisacber a kiss?" "No, sir, I haven't anything in stock 'that's quite as good as what you are asking for; try that druggist across the street." B|sw Off the Top of Nla Head. was overtaken by a posse, who started, in pursuit,, after hearing the girl's Btory. | The murder is a result of a quarrel over the division of 2,000 acres of land in which Benneker and his wife Were accused of having endeavored to use undue influence on David Shear- In, the venerable head of the Shearin family. Thomas Shearin Is said to have In formed his father that the other chil dren were quarreling over the division of the estate. Young Benneker, whose brother married Shearin's sister, sided against Shearin, and this resulted in fanning a flame of Jealousy which began with the arrival of the newly-married pair on the Shearin ranch two months ago. The murder was one of the most cold-blooded and brutal in the his-, tory of the county. Shearin. after Vying the girl-wife in a chair, calmly sat down and waited for Benneker, who was attending to his chores, to return from the barn. As Benneker opened the door Shearin trose and with a repeating rifle blew off the top of his head, killins him almost instantly. ONE TALE OF TWO GOATS Mrs, Ryswyk's "Gets" Mr. McCrac* ken's and a Neighborhood Quarrel 1» the Result. Spokhne, Wash. -- Mrs. Mlnnls Ryswyk has a goat. Henry McCracken had a goat. Mrs. Ryswyk's goat 14 a hollow horned ruminant mammal, genus Capro, of the family Bovidae> Mr. McCracken's goat was a figment of the imagination. Which is sufficient preface for chronicling the fact that Mrs. Ryswyk's goat got Mr. McCracken's goat. For Mr. McCracken had a pear tree, a rose bush and several other small but high ly decorative trees and shrubs In his back yard. Mrs. Ryswyk lives across the alley from Mr. McCracken. When Mrs. Ryswyk's goat broke Into the Mc Cracken yard and ate the rose bush; mangled the' pear tree and mangled the other trees and shrubs, Mr. Mc Cracken's "goat" departed for pas tures new. The Irate owner of the ruined herbarium dashed into the alley and unbralded Mr. Ryswyk and his wife. "He punched me In the face SKd I bit him with a stick," Mrs. Ry&wyk ex plained to the judge. "He got my goat". "Your honor, that Isn't true. Her goat got my goat. I may have been a little hasty, but 1 had lota of provo cation." McCracken was put under peace bonds of $500. "If you are brought In here again. McCracken," said the court, "you may get my goat, and if you, do it will go pretty hard, with you." . HUBBY WAS LEFT GUESSING And at Thf. Dai. Ha Still la W«n4«k , Ing Jest Who Wait the UnklMWt . , Female. RASH SPREAD TO ARM3 759 Roach Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.-- "At first I noticed small eruptions on my face. The trouble began as a rash. It looked like red pimples. In a few days they spread to my arms and back. They itched and burned so badly that I scratched them and of course, the re sult wias blood and matter. The erup tions festered, broke, opened and dried up, leaving the skin dry and scaly. I spent many sleepless nights, my back, arms and face burning and itching; sleep was purely and simply out of the question. The trouble also caused disfigurement. My clothing irritated the breaking out "By this time I had used several well-known remedies without success. The trouble continued. Then I began to use che sample of Cutlcpra Soap and Ointment. Within seven or eight days I noticed gratifying results. I purchased a full-sized cake of Cuti- cura Soap and a box of Cutlcura Oint ment and in about eighteen or twenty days my euro was complete.*! (Signed) Miss Katherlne McCallister, Apr. 19, 1912. \ Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston." Adv. ' , Unsympathetic. The following story Is one of John Drew's favorites. A man lost his life in a great flood. He was dead, but in the spirit world he lived over and over again the ap palling scenes and incidents through which he had Just passed. It seemed to him that he must talk it over with some one. He therefore approached an elder ly man and told him the story of how he died, giving a vivid word picture and making a lurid tale. To his great surprise, the old man showed little interest; in fact, he appeared to be bored. At last, beiag rathe- annoyed at such indifference, he asked 'the reason. "Don't you know who I am?T asked the other. "Why, no, I don't," was the answer. "I've only juet arrived." "Well," said the other, "I'm Noabt," "Sudden Willy.". A late professor was wont to relate a rather characteristic story of the boyhood of the present German em p e r o r . \ ¥ V . . The professor Wfts conversing with Empress Frederick concerning her son, when her majesty remarked de- precatinglyrespecting her eldest born: / "Meln Willy 1st so plotzlich." ("My Willy is so sudden.") t Could anything have summed up the kaiser, as a boy and man, better than this colloquial confidence of his Impe rial mother. Mr. Brown issued forth from Fsir- bank Terrace and wended his way wards the village inn. An insurance agent nan»ed Dawson 'was holding forth. "Do you know Fairbank Terrace?** Several nodded assent, and Mr. Brown became more deeply interested. "Well believe me, gents, I've kissed every. woman in that terrace except one." Mr. Brown's face assumed a purple hue, and hurriedly quaffing his ale he quitted the barroom. Rushing home, he burst in at the door. "Mary," he shouted, "do you know that insurance chap, Dawson?" Mary nojflded assent "Well," he continued, "Fve Just heard him say he's kissed every woman fn this terrace except one." Maty was silent for a moment, and then with a.look of womanly curios- ity said: V**! wonder which ene that' 4C Important to Wlothefe , Examine carefully every bottle Of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and Bee that It Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria ^ • Scientific-Point Cleared Up. ~<* A Germap astronomer has publlstvsd a series of tables which seem to show a Connection between the appearance of sun spots and the wabbling motion of the earth on Its axis, due, perhaps, to a variation to the sun's magnetism. While engagrti ln loving your silh mies, jlon't slight your friends. T When fiction gets bvfcy facts beooSfc* ashamed of themselves.^ HER -BEST FRIEND" AWotnan Thus Speaks of Poetam* FOLEY KIDNEY PD2S RICH IN CURATIVE QUAMTIBS ; fOR BAOKAOHE, RHKUMATISftJU KIDNEYS AND •LAODfEM THE LATEST FASHION K0TB Says: "It Is a wise precaution against holes in delicate hosiery to powder the shoe* bofure puttliitf thwm uii." Minj iwuplc »pf4nKl* the famow antiseptic powder, Allen's Foot-fiMi Into the sboes, tiid find that it sarect 1U oooitm tlinM oTor In keeping holes from hoelery u wall as lessening friction aad consequent inuttm aad aching of th* feet. FOR SICK HEADACHE SOUR STOMACH, DYSPEPSIA, POOR APPETITE, CONSTIPATION, UVBR COMPLAINT, BILIOUSNI ROMAN EYE BALSAM FOR SCALDING SENSATION IN EYES AND ALL, FORM8 OF IN FLAMMATION OF EYES OR EYELIDS * %.To Entertain the Children. "Ciehnoe to Our rainbow party,M read Invitations written upon blue paper In .red ink. Upon their wrrival the children were delighted with what they saw. The first thing that greeted each ribbon was s little bag of bon bons. Attached to one string was the mystic number 7, entitling the finder to the contents of the treasure pot. A large cake showed pink, yellow, brown and white layers, with a delicate froat- thekn was a big rainbow of blue, yel-1 lnB of purple, making a rainbow effect, low/red. pink and purple cheesecloti/j The ice cream was pink, the sherbet t'-ihed thiuHgh two rooms. At^one yellow, and the flowers for decoriitl-jua were various colored hyacinths. Several young mothers with Small children, who do not keep mald^.l,dVe following a. novel plan of entertain ment for the children and relief for 1 -V'1 end'was the pot of gold. In the pot was the number 7 and a mysterious package. Colored ribbons led through the house. an<l each cbose the ribbon he wished te follow. At the end of . - ' ' - V y v - C * themselves. Each Wednesday after noon one of the mothers takes all of the children to entertain for the aft ernoon. which leaves the other moth ers for that afternoon free for social duties, matinee, shopping or any other pleasure or duty, and as It' Is Only once in four w^eks that each mother has all the children* It does not be- oame tiresome.- The children call it their party day, and roost thoroughly enjoy it. They usually make a kin dergarten afternoon of It. though each ss to that. Simple refreshments sre served, and the plan has proved m great'success. m r ;!iV- l^i' .Towel Hae Lasted Many Years. Miss Ada Walker of Brlcfeeryllle. Pa., has a towel 104 yeSrs old. It lias the date 1809 sewed on the border. It is a homemade linen towel. It was woven by her great-grandmother 2art- man. It is decorated with solid em broidered stars, plants. bl*iis and horses. It Is In an excellent state of v?. m. •:;S Said His Servanta Were "Quests*" London.--An ingenious attempt U> evade the National Insurance act has just been frustrated. Robert Cramsie, a lawyer of Antrim, Ireland, prose cuted 'for failing to pay his tax under the act for his three servants, set up the defense that the servants were- now his guests and were no longer in receipt jot wages. The kitchen maid appeared and said that she had been discharged on July 1, aince which time she had been the "guest" of her for mer master. Mr. Cramsie paid her no wages, but gave her presents. Other servants testified that they continued to reside at the home of tbeir former master as his guests, and that they received presents from him. They alt testified that Mr. Cramsie did some of the housework, The court refused to accept the guest theory and fined thd defendant, after ordering him to sta^np the cards of his servants from last July 1 \ Some Mover! Atlantic City, N. J.--Declaring that no place of abode seemed to suit her bUBband, Mrs. Gertrude Towne ap plied for divorce. She said he had svsryMspo ** * year. We usually consider our best friends thoBe who treat us best; Some persons think coffee s real friend, but watch it carefully awhile and observe that it is one of the meanest of all enemies, for it stabs one while professing friendship. Coffee contains a poisonous drug- caffeine--which injures, the delicate nervous system and frequently sets up disease in one or more organs of the body, if Its ase is persisted in. "I had heart palpitation and nerv ousness for four years and the doctor told me the trouble was caused by coffee. He advised me to leave It off, j but I thought I could not," writes s WIB. lady. j "On the advlca'of S friend I tried, Postum and It so.satisfied me I did not care for coffee after a few days' trial of Postum. "AB weeks went, by end I continued to use Postum my weight Increased , frotn 98 to 118 pounds, and the heart trouble left me. I have used it a year | now and am stronger than I ever was. j I can hustle up stairs without any j heaft palpitation, and I am free from i nervousness. ! "My children Sre very fond of Post-1 um and it agrees with them. My sister liked it when she drank it at my house: : now she has Postum at home and has j become very fond of It You may use my name if you wish, as I am not j ashamed of praising my best friend-- Postum." Name given bjr Pustun Co^ Battle Creek, Micb. j Postum now comes In new concen trated form called Instant Postum. It is regular Postum, so processed at the factory that only the soluble portions are retained. A spoonful of Instant Postum with hot water, and sugar and cream to taste, produce Inetantly - a delicious beverage. - . . Write for the liUle book. ̂ Ths Hosi to WellvHle/* mk isto S* - tHOW In th* Provlno* ml Saskatchewan, WMtirn O ene da Do ron dealt* to act a rwtHopwiMiJoflaO ACKK8 of tlirt well „ know* Wheat Lull Tbe ar«i!s becoming c-bot BQleM nlMbl*. , NEW pISTBICTS „ ten NcnUrMM opened np for ••tllwMBt, mmI into thcao nUl-roads ar« now being built. The <a.j wilt aooa eomo wben thM* will be no |mi) ggnHome»te»dln|f ffcnaer writes: ,;1 came on »jr homert--a. lterch 190U, with nboBt •1,000 worth OMhinm and uaohin; •IT, aad Just HB ln: i oaah. Today I baveWacraaof wheal, 800 acre* of oate, and B0 acre* of nax. Not bad for six yean, bat only an ln-•tanoe of what nar be donala Western Canada fn Manitoba, Saakatcbewan or Albarta Send at onoa for Literati Ballwa/ Bate* etc., to t. lilies i. WlwfcwhLHJHtjBfcwi •.». SriMM, m jrfiwwa •tbalt W. B. WffWtX Civethatyemfc- ful, slenderneM of figure now more faahion- Stjrl* «*. n>«d. low tatat. Ions blpaaad fcaek.eoatll or batlita flue It to » - • • - lrta»tl.W Bt;l« M, mad. fclfrfc teat TW Umg blp»^outll or b«tMr If to » W.B.n--llnii ffiilwi Cmato FwS'o* Riw BpecUUT worn rolwbb. ginr«a»«i< net ta knai, tMr or break. WEINGARTCN N ««. IM, low btnt. ceatU aari featlata a*. ls«, ined burt '«nr dealer^ or dlraet poriptli «ata)o(«« for wuuft BBOTMERS,'Ckicaao. I ^ frrheis's, ft Rsssoo" ft* Poetuns.--± AVBSSh Sc stamp for Classltlpd List of over 1000 II ned cant Uiioivibout United Btatea, au ••illw vskM; bargain prices, from MO to 1MB. /•. "'v;: .;v y.7 » ,*'J" •"4^?* •,« 'V* ji '