HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1890-06-20, Page 7tt
As
FOR THE FARMER.
" things Which Every Agriculturist, Ought
to gnQw.
FARM AND GARDEN JOTTINGS.
Green Things Growing.
Oh, the green things growing, the green things
growing,
The faint sweet smell of the green things
7rvzx , Ac z, tg1, 1, ,^t,. ..S „,1 1-1.mar �wr1.;Y�+. .:...._Fes, ;• .. ,,... _c,.: b:._.,,:...
L'L should Mille live whether I smile or eve
• Just to watch the happy life of my green things
growing, ,.
Oh, the fluttering and the pattering of those
green things growing 1
How they talk each to each when none of us are
knowing,
In the wonderful white of the weird moonlight
Or the dim, dreary, dawn, when thea nooks are
crowing.
I love, I love them so�mygreen; things growling,
And I think that they love me, without false
ehowing ;
For by many a tender touch they comfort me FIG
mush,
■ Wit
eaoh rain eo as to destroy the weede se soon'
u they appeardlebove ground.
Plant Oman Trees.
By planting small troor they pan be
better started and will be less liable` to the
effects of dironght. ,00mpered with older
trees. Too mush topeon young trees ie
frequent Dense of loss, they not possessing
illl1olent roote. to.. nourieh the many new
shoots that are produced on tops that
have not been out bank.
Feeding Grain to COWS.
Grain may be fed liberally to oowe when
they are in full flow of milk, but if the
cows are drying off previoae to salving it
better to withhold mil grain if the animals
And in the rich store of their blossoms glowing,
Ten for one I take they're on me bestowing ;
• Oh, I shuld like to see, if God'a will it may be,
Many, ny a summer of my green things
Jng
But if I must be gathered for the angel's sow-
ing,
Bleep out of sight a while, like green things
growing.
Though duet to dust return, I think I'll soarcely
mourn,
If I may change into green things growing !
—Dinah Lfulock Craik.
Raft as n Fertilizer._
" Salt is good." This is averred by the
very highest authority. It is good for
land. It is really a fertilizer, as it supplies
soda and obiotine, which is found in every
plant. It is good for all crops. It die-
aonrages fungi whish infest the most
valuable crops, as runt, emote, etc., and it
discourages insects whish damage the roots
of plants. 1t has a remarkable effect upon
grass and clover, at times doubling the
yield. One of the beet and most proaperon5
Ears n1gew. Jersey applies 1,000 lbs. of
it eve y year to his pastures and meadows,
and although he sella et times . more than
$500 per aore of. market orope from a part
of his farm he avers that hie grass pays
him more profit to the aore than hie
melons, oabbages or tomatoes. Any
farmer who is troubled with scab on hie
potatoes should try a liberal sprinkling of
salt along the rows before dropping the
- ,seed .
About the Silo.
Study the silo; the promise of ensilage;
the beet crops for it; the..great eoonomy.of
it; and then go to work to make a silo and
grow Drops to fill it with. It makes one
sore produce as mush animal food as three
acres oan do without it, and it eolvee the
problem of how to keep one cow or one
steer for every sore of the farm.
Hatching Time.
As a rule, for the hatching of ohiokene
21 days are required ; for partridges, 24
days; fo'r, pheasants, 25. days ; for guinea
hone, 25 days ; for common dunks, 28 days ;
for pea fowls, 28 days ; for turkeys, 28
days ; for Barbary decks, 30 days, and for
geese, 30 days.
Weed-Hillers.
No Drops hold their own against weeds
better than millet or Hungarian groes, and
espeoially the latter, the frequent mowinge
beveflting the orro►l end_ lea opin_g_the mem;
ber of weeds. As the seeds soon germinate
and the plants grow rapidly, especially
during the warm days, they soon take full
possession of the ground and crowd down
the weeds. A orop of Hungarian grass
will clean a piece of land of weeds as well
as though cultivation had been given, and
if, after the final mowing, the orop be
turned ander and a dressing of lime
applied to the plowed soil the labor of cul-
tivating the land the following season will'
be materially lessened, while the lend will
be fit for almost any kind of orop.
A Valuable Sow.'
A sow that tenderly Dares for her pigs
is more valuable as & breeder than one of
better breeding but careless. The number
of pigs annually lost by careless ,.sows is
very large, and it is important to observe
the disposition of a sow with her first
litter. Some sows, however, improve with
age, and .an old sow should never be re-
placed by a younger and untried one.until
her usefulness is impaired.
The Care of Manure.
If mannre is thoroughly composted with
raking od or other refuse, it will be of
better • ality than if heaped and allowed
to deco•, , • se rapidly.There is sometimes
Tate a lose of ammonia from manure that
is exposed, or that is too closely packed,
and the addition • of aubstanoee which
absorb the gases and prevent overheating'
not only prevents loss but improves the
whole.
How to Get OO•ood I4i[llk.
The milk from oowe fed on wholesome
grain and good pasturage is of better
.quality for food than that from stall -fed
animale''that are permitted to eat refuse
from granaries and faotoriee without
regard to breed. Chbiae breede to produce
a choice article must be provided with food
of the best quality for that purpose.
MeiiHoe the Melon Patch.
is should be well hood and culti-
vated until they begin' to run. The very
young plants May be hoed with advantage,
but after that time all oultivation should
be done without disturbing the hills.
Melon-growere hoe In front of the vines,
not among them, . as they soon Dover the
ground.
A Bad Plan.
. Breeding from immature stook, every
year will sooner do Yater tend to deteriora-
tion. It is better' to nee animals in their
prime than to replaoo them with youtl,g
etoek. If a change is desired reserve the
younger stook until eaoh is mature nd
f nlly,developed..
Look After Tho 'Woeds.
When moisture ie plentiful and tho rain°
come at the proper timer' it must riot be
overlooked-4het the weeds are benefited by
the favorable conditions -.ea well as the
crops. The rains lnoroane the work of
destroying mode, but mnoh of the labor
may be eaved by using the cultivator atter
milk fever at calving time. Plenty of grass
ie auffioient for dry sows, grain being nn-
neoeesary.
Hints on Horaeshoeing.
Never fit the foot to the shoe, but fit the
ehoe to the foot.
Never put a hot shoe to the hoof ; many
good hoofs have been reined by burning.
Never pare the hog,
-Never twist off the male nee nippers
for gutting them off.
Never drive large nails. '
Never drive the nails too high in the wall
Never trim the hoof more than is neon -
eery.
The art of shoeing is important and
sdould be understood by the owner of the
horse. Moore good.hoof :hayebeen_apoiled_
by bot shoes than, in any other way.
Burning slope up the pores of the hoof
wall and makes it brittle and the horse
tender footed. D. E. ASHER.
Farni and Garden.
It ie a Mistake to suppose that peas,
beans and Dorn should be covered heavily.
Althea, increase thequantity. of ,the straw-
berry Orap and'make it better colored and
firmer.
Have yeur seed ready before the day
you wish to plant or now. Only use the
beet and purest.
Smaller Beed of a kind germinates first
bot are afterward slower in development
than the larger ones.
The Agrionitural Department will eup-
ply sugar -beet seed to farmers wishing
them, in email quantity to eaoh.
Many animals appear siok and refuse
food, when the cause may be due to the
toothache.
As a precaution against weevil in grain
the granary ought to be entirely cleared
every year and old grain stored elsewhere.
The difficulty when Dream will not raiee,
in nine oases out of ten, is the temperature.
Every batter -maker ehonld use a ther-
mometer.
f the new variety of oan a supe. , e
emerald gem is one of the boat. It is of
medium size, and drops away from the
vine as Boon as ripe.
A pound of bran makes within 17 per
sent. of as mnoh milk as a pound of oorn-
meal, whioh usually costs much more; but
Dorn -meal makes rioher milk.
A Rhode Island farmer raises veal salves
to weigh 190 pounds when four weeks old
by allowing them warm skim -milk and oat-
meal gruel. Bach calves should pay well.
Mix one level teaspoon of gunpowder
with a gnarl of Dorn -meal, after the latter
is scalded. Feed once a day for three days
to ogre gapes in ohiokene, and again five or
six days.
It has long been observed that sheep
prefer a hill to It plain on whioh to spend
the night outdoors, but if they graze on
hillside 'they will • invariably choose a
southern exposure—probably the grass is
,more palatable to them.
Tbe. mnre~frequonntly the grace is cat the
greater the tax on the land. Use plenty of
manure on all land intended for grass next
season. First kill out the weeds by culti-
vating the land with a prop requiring the
use of the cultivator.
Australia's Grand Old Man.
For unflagging industry and versatile
mental activity the septuagenarian Premier
of New South Wales, Sir Henry Parkes,
runs our own g. o. in. pretty close. Not
content with running the government of
the parent Australian colony and engineer-
ing the federation of the colonies, the old
Birmingham ex-ohartist makes long coun-
try tours, publishes plenty of poetry, and
epende three hones every day writing np
his reminiscences. But all this does not
-satisfy hie devouring avidity for work. Sir
Henry has just commenced a series of ooir-
tribntiona to the Sydney Morning Herald
under thewell-ohosen title of " Wise Words
of William Ewart Gladstone." These
papers dre composed of oris., paragraphic
lid -bite from, the vast array of Gladstone's
writings and speeches. Sir Henry, as
everybody knows, is one of the most ardent
of Gladstoniane, and it is gratifying to see
his admiration of the Liberal leader taking
this eminently praoticel"and highly useful
shape. When the papers are eventually
oolleoted and published in book form, as
they doubtless will be one day, they will
form a companion volume, but of more
wholesome and sunshiny oharaoter, to the
" Wit and Wiedom of Lord Beaconsfield."
London Star.
The British Post Office.
The Britieh post office,' whioh in 1840
distributed seventy-six millions of lettere,
per annum, now distributee sixteen hun-
dred millionsexclusive of post (lards, news-
papers, eto. In London alone the number
of Tetters posted and delivered annually is
eight hundred end fifty millions. Statistics
of this etupendous • oharaoter convey far
more than diagrams, models and rolioe.
•
Looking Backward.
Young Springley (andaoioasly)—How old
are you, Mies Breezy ?
She (Sweetly)—I was born on a Thursday.
You oan calculate as well as I.
Dr. Watters, surgeon to the 9th
Battalion, QUeebeo, teaa thrown- from hie
horse at the review yesterday Bind
sustained eerions injuries. The doctor is
very low, but hopes of his recovery are
entertained.
The,etrike,of. the ooelhandlers' on the
Montreal wharves dill ° -continuos, and coal
veeeele are diooharging very slowly.
There is a matrimonial boom in St. John,
N.B. About adozcn weddings.:were reported
yesterday.
It le a oarefal wife who puts four big
berries on top of her husband's dish and
!leaven at the bottom of her dwn.
THE HAIR.
Some (i}ood Advice* Its Card and
"IJoa't"Wish •Our hair." Thiel fd'advfoe
given by a wqma,i who bas been at the
head of a lending hairdreeeing establish-
ment for the loot 12 years. Rhe says fare
ther: " I believe the average young,
woman drowns the life of her hair by fre-
quent weeping in hot and sold water. We
Bend out about 20 young women who dress
hair by the eeaeon, contrasting for the
entire family. They plan to give eaob
head a combing twine a week, and, by
etreoial arrangement, make house -to houee
visite dail Nota drop of water is pit on
thin tYr ttlniktdey iorkir seep "quo is oloan
and healthy condition. Wein our faith
to a good boucle ant her short -h faded,
narrow brush, backed with olive or plain
wood. We use the brush not only on the
hair but on the scalp se well. A maid has
to be taught how to dress and oare for the
hair by object lessons. This inetraotfon is
part of my duty. In teaching one novice I
per -ate on the other the first thing- to do -
when the flair is unpinned is to lessen it
by lightly tossing it about. The operation
need not tangle, and se the treesee are
bein aired the • fall into natural len the.
combing should start at the end of
the hair. In other words, comb upward
to avoid tangling, breaking and tearing the
hair out. This raking of the hair will re-
move the -duet; -After thisthe ehouid
be brushed thoroughly. By this I mean
that a full hour should be spent, first brush-
ing the hair and then the head."—New
York Times.
The World's W. 0. T. H. Exhibit.
(Contributed.)
Verylittle has yet been'.qbliehed in this
country concerning one veiny remarkable
feature of the Paris Universal' Exposition,
viz., the international exhibit of the
World's W. C. T. U. conducted by Mrs.
Josephine R. Nichols. The printed report
of this exhibit is just out, and.. shows a
marvelous work accomplished. In a land
where it was the greatest innovation for a
woman alone and independent of mascu-
line management to arrange for such a
display, where public sentiment is entirely
opposed to the total abstinenoetoarinoiples
advocated, where even water could scarcely
be had, no provision having been made
for supplying it to visitors on the
grounds—in this great centre of wine
and beer drinking, thronged by
sightseers of all nations, a Worlds W. C.
T. U. Pavilion was set np wheremillions of
pages of temperance literature, in nine
v. a
gee_c._.-.Pere dietrihnte
curious visitors, where white ribbon doc-
trines were explained and a living interest
in the temperance movement' aroneed
among people of all nationalities. In this
pavilion a tetnperanoe safe furnished all
eerie of temperance drinks to the visitors.
Here were entertained in temperance
fashion the United Btatee Marine Corps of
young men, and numerous notables from
various countries. Representatives of the
eduoational interests ot Russia, Bootland,
England, Denmark, Switzerland, Holland
and many other nations name to learn what
they could in regard to the temperance
instruction of children. Newspaper men of
various nationalities Dame to take notes of
this novel specimen of woman's progress.
Many pastors from the oity and provinces
name for material for temperance sermons:
During mnoh of the time on week days, an
average of a thousand persons a day passed
through the building, curious to learn
what this dieplay meant. When the
orowds swarmed about on Sundays the
olosed doors and curtairueri windows were a
silent witness for Sabbath . observance.
The success of the exhibit was farther
emphaeized by the Government
award of the highest prize, a ' gold
medal. The chief points upon
whioh the award was ,• based were
the general work of the society, ite publica-
tion aeaooiation, its hygienic teachings from
a scientific standpoint. and the feature of
the, temperance cafe. The World's W. C.
T. U. exhibit wasa practical demonstra-
tion that the world's union is not a myth.
The National W. C. T. U. of America
helped royally with money and enooutage-
ment. The British Woman's Temperance
Association sent a young English worker to
aseiet Mrs. Niohols and also bore a share in
meeting the ,expenses for building and
literature; Mrs. de .Broen, President of
the Paris W. O: T. U., helped secure
the apace for the exhibition : ban-
ners were sent by unions in Nor-
way, . Australia, New Zealand, the
Hawaiian islands, South Africa, Sweden,
Japati and other countries, as well as by
many state unions. Several national pease
eooietiee oleo gave their support to the un-
dertaking. The total expenditures for the
exhibit were $2,429.30, the total expendi-
tures by the superintendent $1,155.20. • It
is impossible to estimate the far-reaohing
results of the work, Letters are constantly
being received telling of the interest it has
awakened. Mre. Nichols was invited to
take the exhibit both to the national exposi-
tion at Dunedin, New Zealand, and to the
great exposition of Japan; opened in
January. Without a doubt a World's
W.O.T.U. exhibit will be a feature o! the
greef,t world's fair.
A Woman's Way.
A woman wage-earner who works from 8
in themorning until 6 at night and 000s-
sionally finds herself too weary to sleep,
takes down her hair at 10 o'olook, brushes
it vigoronely, washes ' ar faoe, neck and
arms with lukewarm water, takes a crash
towel bath and goes to bed, with a hot
water bag at herl feet. The light in her
room is so arranged that she can, atter
reading for a few minutes Boma light,
pleasant work, extinguish it without -rising.
and she usually drifts into dreamland in
lees than half an hour.=Chi ago Tribune.
For the ye, r ended June 1st the toll re
ceipte'of thee Brooklyn Bridge were $1,078,-
847.03, being an increase over the previous
year of $113,794.92, or 11.3 per Dent. Rail-
road fare was reduced to 3 cents on Maroh
1st,1.885.. Promenade -tickets weresold" at
wenty-flue for 5 oenta after February let,
1885. .
Philadelphia eapeote to come out of the
oensna conflict with a millioninhabi:
tante. And eo doer' Chicago. . •' ....
Queen Victoria has ordered the artist
Angell to paint for her a portrait of Mr.
Stanley.
THIN PANANS.S, CAL•e&L.
The Great Saving it Will Prove to the
World's Commerce.
The special Panama Canal , Commiseion
has prepared a fresh report on the pros-
pective. earnings of the caned in ogee it is
oompleted. In this the annual cost of
mainteuanoe is placed at 6,500,000 francs.
The expen ea'of administration are placed
at 1,800,000 franos annually, and the coat
of transit is estimated at 10,000,000 franos
annually. The income for the first four
years is estimated at 51,250,000 franca.
This is calculated on an average annual
tonnage fon that period of 4,100,000 tone,
and the m sod tate b e 10 t, o to
ottieiveyind ontional� [haunt ` elti tommY•
Won estimates that after the first four.yeare
there sro'iald La ail t molal Ina/wise in din
tonnage of 250,000 tone until a maximum
tonnage of 6,000,000 be reached. After the
canal has been in operation twelve years
the annual net receipts, all expenses being
deduoted, are estimated at 67,000,000
franos. This amount would be distributed
between the preeent and future shareholders
in a000rdanceowith the terms of a .contract
to be oonolnded between the old company
and the new.
OILANQB YOB A BURNS OEM
Unrivalled Collection of Belled for Sale for
£1,000.
Every summer thonsandeof visitoremaks
pilgrimages to the cottage in which Robert
Burne wee born, near Alloway Kirk acid
the Banks o' Doon, Says London TrwL
They are shown the room .in whish et ..
poet first saw the light, as well as ties,
" original " furniture used by Berne'
parents. Will it be believed that all that
genuinely original furniture of the cottage
was sold off by publio roup in September,
1843, most of it being now in the possession
of a gentleman in Manchester, who wants a
a» ndaf
>?�! �a ems, f���� x�t�
.:he Whirs ober clhe mother's chair,
the poet's chair, Pembroke table with
flap, another withoutffi 'Mlle mother's
work table, ohestr of drawers, eight-day
clock, corner cupboard, drinkingcup of
wood, ale horn, tea bell, tea-cady, toddy
ladle, twelve chairs supplied by ".the Millet
Goodie," the sword worn by Buena as as
exciseman and the probe he used on his
preventive ezonrsions. All these are
authenticated by lettere from men who had
seen them before 1843. The seller throws
in fivevisitors' books—from 1829 to 184.3--
1,1,1
some Scotch museum or Burns Club. They
were offered for sale to the Beoretary for
Sootland, but his secretary wrote that
while they were of " no value," they might
be given tostho nation. The Beller rephed
that, as the nation had never given hinx
anything, he did not eee his way to Derry
out the proposal. A sixpence from every
member of a Berne Club would seoure the
collection.
A corner is a good plane for brio-a-brao
shelves. A eeriee of three or five, one
above the other, can be pat up by sorewing
narrow oleaets against the will_; a binge a narrow embroidered or painted band,
or strips of felt out in fringe, three or four
inches deep, tacked on with braes -headed
taoke, or with common tasks covered by a
braid, ornamented with etitohes of gold.
colored silk, will finieb the shelves prettily
and hide the cleat&.
Another way of arranging corner shelves.
for books'or 'brio:a-brao is 'to place them
one above the other .until as high as the
top of the door twinge. Before fastening.
the top shelf, put at.eaoh end of the front
side screw eyes such as are.uaed for hang-
ing pictures; gild the eyes and run a brass
rod or gilded wire through them. On this
wire, by brass rings or gilded button rings,
hang a drapery of any light material con-
venient. Lace or darned net should be
lined with Dolor. Ohina silk is pretty, and
as only one width is needed it is inexpen-
sive. Cheesecloth embroidered with any
emelt figure, as rosebuds, daisies, etc., in
orewele of colors to harmonize with the
eurroundinge, and tiny teasels of the same
orewele on one edge would be exceedingly
dainty. Loop baok about three or four feet
from the floor, set a jar or figure, urn or
jag, on the top shelf.'
Again, a corner is a good place for a
h r, and ei4 r1 r i r
holdipg a' lamp. Over the mirror, two
bright folding fans can be fastened, bring-
ing the eider together at the angles. Or
have a bracket shelf above for vase of
grasses, ete., and hang a drapery from it
to loop backed either side of the mirror,
or attach the drapery to a rod placed aoroee
the corner.
A corner is a very oozy place for a small
writing -desk or table. Place a braoket
shelf three feet from the ceiling, if high ; it
low, plane a curtain pole or braokets close
to the ceiling, hang draperiea heavy or
light according to surroundings, and loop
book about three feet from the floor. With
a lamp and the curtains drawn,sthie makes
of an evening a oozy little study, where one
may read and write as privately as it
alone, with the room fall of people.
A corner between windows can be made
to simulate a bay window, by arranging
the draperies aoroes the corner. It one or
both of the windows have a Bunny ex-
posure, by placing shelves across them,
and the norner1likewise, the oheives Med'
with plants, you change it into a tiny
conservatory. With a song bird hanging
ingilded' sage, between your looped back
draperies, yon have a bit of summer for
the darkest winter's day.
Free Dinners for School Children.
Free dmnere, whioh the Vienna sohool
children have been,so fortunate as to have
provided for them during the winter, were
stopped at the end of last month, mnoh to
the regret of the little ones. Oar corres-
pondent says that they will begin again in
November. Four hundred thousand por-
tions were served in thirty-three days to
3,000 children. Many of the school chil-
dren brought their little brothers and
sisters to share the dinner with them, and
the Fondants of such children were always
extra large. A great number of children
from the streets also applied for food and
were never refused. The school masters
end mistresses testify that the ohildren'e
health in the winter has been very much
better since the introduction of the free
dinners. A good moral effect has oleo been
produced upon the children, who feel them-
selves oared for and the objects of atten-
tion. The ,Swiss Government has asked
for details of the management, as it is
intended to establish sohool-kitchens in
Switzerland on the model of those n
Vienna.—London Daily News.
THE General Aaembly of . the Presby-
terian Churoh of the United States North
has followed in 'the footsteps of the
Women's Christian Temperance Union,
and deolared war on the use ot tobacco in
all its tonne, believing that it ie injarions
to the body and weakening to the mind.
Tutti frntti has es yet camped condemna-
tion. Why, we do not know.
A movement hue been Bet on foot in
Chicago by the Italian residents to collect
$50,000 to erect a statue to the memory of
Garibaldi.
The recent northeast gales have packed
the coast of Newfoundland with ice for 15
milee ont.
--- A Cure'tor Dipsomania.
Those most hopelessly addicted to alco-
holic' beverages would seem to have found
a friend in a certain Russian medical prac-
titioner, Dr. Pombrak by name. He has
recently contributed an artiole on alco-
holism to the Meditsinskoe Obozrenie, in
which he desoribes seven cases of ine-
briety treateel'by hypodermic injeotione of
strychnine. He states that in oases of
chronic alcoholism and of dipsomania he
has found strychnine a very valuable
remedy.--Not-only are-attaoks -cured, but ----
the desire for drink ceases to exist. Even
oases of delirium tremens yielded in large
measure to the influences of the method
adopted. The treatment, however, would
seem to be somewhat tedione, requiring to
be carried oat systematically and most
frequently for long periods` of time. Dr.
Pombrak has, in son1 exceptional
etanoee,
prescribed doses of one -fifteenth
o' a grain, ' • on: , in genet rablrea Of1t
that amount have been given, and, while
under the treatment in question, patients
have°abstained from all Spirituous liquors
of their own free will.—St. James' Gazette.
Temperance in Tokyo.
The W. C. T. U. of Tokyo, Japan. now
meets once a month and has taken up
twelve departments of work. Mies Aoker-
man's recent vieit greatly strengthened the
organization. During her stay a new
temperance Society of young men was
organized, four hundred of ' whom. signed
e pledge through her influence.
fro
41,
Sweet Necessity.
" He's a sweet specimen of a politician,
isn't he?" said the Major; referring to an
acquaintance.
" Perhaps ; yon know he's a oandy date,
replied the Judge.
_Major Job; Mayor—otlairailel N,' , --- __.
has anumbrella whioh he has had in his
possession for thirty-five years. He mast
have kept it in the safe.
Chris " Magee, the Pittsburg million
sire .politician, has donated $10,000 to be
used for the erection of s home for boot-
blacks and messenger boys in that city.
M. Rietioe is about to bring a suit` for
divorce spinet his wife, ex -King Milan
being named as co-respondent.
D. 0. N. L. 25. 90.
Marriage Paper and partioalara of society that pays 5 O0 at marriage. F!'dg
Address The Globe, York, Pa.
I took Cold, •
I took ''Sick,
I TOOK
.G --TTS,
ULSIO
RESULT: c'
I take My Meals,
I take 'My Rest,
AND I AM VIGOROUS ENOUGH TO TAKE
ANYTHING I 'CAN LAY MY HANDS ON;
Eetting Vat too, FOR Scott's
mulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oit
and HypophosphitesofLimeand
Soda NOT ONLY CURED MY Incip-
ient Consumption BUT BUILT
ME UP, AND IS NOW PUTTING
FLESH' ON MY BONES
AT THE RATE OF A POUND A DAY. 1
TAKE 11' JUST AS EASILY AS I DO MILK."
Scott's Emulsion isput up only in Salmon
color wrappers. Sold by all Druggists at
) 500. and 51.00.
SCOTT v -_.,R 'W.Aze, Belleville.
1CURE Fi
THOUSANDS OF BOTTLES
GIVEN AWAY YEARLY.
When I say Curo• I do not mean
merely tb stop them for a time, and then
lave them return again. 1 MEAN Af R A D I OA L C U R E. I have made the disease of Fite.
Epilepsy or Falling Sickness a life-long study. I warrant my remedy to Cure the
Worst cases. Because others have filed is no reason for'not now receiving a cure. Send at
once for a treatise and a Free Battle of my Infallible Remedy. Give Express and
Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you. Address; --W. Q. noOT,
M.C., Branch Office, 18B WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO.
Aloli SURw4Y
*C���,® .I1RF�l
•
TO THE EDITOR :—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for 04
above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been perntanentiyrcnred,
1 shall be' glad to send two bottles of mj' remedy FREE to any of your readers who have coin
gumption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully, T. A. SLOOYI%
M.O.. Ise West Adelaide. tit., b'ORONTO, ONTARIO.
1
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