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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1909-09-16, Page 6KERNELS FP.Ohi THE SMCTUM MILL niterestixag Paragraphs from of r Exact ge> The things you are going to do add thing to your bank balance. tw truth is found not by kinking at old, but by leaving it behind, steals the. Blood Rich and lied. Miss Cyett1 is I3ntchieen, Haneeville, O., writes: "My system was so cam- etely run down that my friends lie Well as nevelt thou,vht I could never gat bettor. An medicates failed to help Mese. A. trial of Dr. Chase's Nerve Fcod benefitted mo and at the end of a month people soarcoly knew me I had improved 30 much. The blood was enriched, color improved, new flesh was added and I got strong and well," , The most heavenly truth may bo evil when it forms a barrier between bro- ;here. Somehow when a man gets into a Crowd he thinks he in the only one in burry. ')rive Rheumatism out of the blood with Dr. Sheep's Rhenmatio Remedy tad see how quickly pain will depart. &Iib -one never did reach the real disease. 3heumatism isn't in the skin. It's deep .Sown—it's constitutional. Getting rid If the pein, it+ afar ell, what counts. Mat is why Dr. Sheep's Rheumatic !remedy goes, by word of mouth from ane to another. And herein lies the opularity of this Remedy. It is win- ing defenders everywhere Tablets or liquid. Sold at Walley's Drug Store. It is always easy to know whether to )rgive your enemy after you know how ig he is, It would be strange if the world 'ere blind seeing the freaks who are rer trying to get in its eye. ?IL Dr. Chase's Oint ment is a certain and guaranteed eurefor each and every f or m of itching, bleeding and protruding les Seo testimonials in the press and ask ,lir neighbors about it. You can use it and rt our money back if net satisfied. We, at all talere :,. EnnnANsox, BATES & Co., Toronto. OR. CHASES_ OINTMENT. As a protection against heat the erlin fireman wear a jacket filled with ater. George E. Beach, 0 P. R. ticket -seller Fredericton, N. B., has been arrested a charge of stealing from the com- ny. Best Treatment for a Burn. If for no other reason, Chamberlain's lye should be kept in every household account of its great value in the ,atment of burns. It allays the pain )fest instantly, and unless the injury r severe one, heals the parts without 'wing a soar. This salve is also ma - anted for chapped hands, sore nipples .i diseases of the skin, Price, 25 ate.' For sale by alI druggists. The world is being helped not so much Our admiration of the Gospel as by 7 practical interpretation of it. ilany who address God as the All ise evidently think He would know filing but for the Information convey - n tletr prayers. ' — eoZ4Z • 1.._ stAIiE OF OINTMENTS FOR CA - CREEL THAT CONTAIN MERCURY. heronry will surely destroy the Bence mell and completely derange the his system when entering it through mucous surfaces. Such articles old never be used except on prescrip- ts from reputable physicians, as the Cage they will do is ten fold to the 1 aI you can possibly derive from them. WS Catarrh Cure, manufactured b .' f, Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., con ,k Rs no mercury, and is taken inter y, noting directly upon the blood muoons surfaces of the system. In gig Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you the genuine, It is taken internally made in Toledo, Ohio, by F, J. `ell & Co. Testimonial free. ld by druggists. Price 750 per qe. eke HalI's Family Pills for consti- pin Sndon's customs receipts for Ang- Ctotalled 880,9.16.11, an increase of SA GI, over August of 1908, and of t.93 over July of this year. r ATARRH Hon want a sure cure for CATARRHiOF THE HEAD, e YG£JIIT08 Ft REASON WHY : BECAUSE XY(IENATOR HEALS aucous membrane being in an t1 condition, causes running at nose ; bttt when this membrane is the discharge costes, very effort should be made to cure rrlt for it leads to Catarrh of the end§Bmaeh or Bladder, Consump- xygonattor" isDpDut up in large eine ee. Price, X1.25. $1.ee, and SOD. reg adtorsiii old by all wholesale . Oygenator Company Toronto, Canada. Many saints think they have fixed their foundations if they have but made sure of having the right number on the front:door. Of the SCO seres of flex sown at Sea - forth, only 2C0 acres will be pulled by lined, the balance being cut by a me- ebine made for the purpose. The fercoity of the tiger can be seen from the foot that, according to e recent writer, he is made responsible for 37 per cept. of the human beings killed by the wild animals of Hindustan. CASTOR A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Allways Bought Bears the ��s—' Signature of �W-i-e4 A Missieippi mob, unntle to get pos- session of a negro murderer, but gE d the man's brother in his stead, The new contracts aloe nsa3e last year by the New York Edison Company, numbered S4,S21, aggregate g an equiv- alent of 2,700,(116 lamps of 10 candle power consuming 50 vsutts. Goad for Eiltousness "I took two of Chamberlain's Stom- ach and Liver Tablets lett n isht, and I 'i feel fifty per cent. better than I have for 1 weeks, says J. J. Firestone of Allegan, Mien. "They are certainly a fine article for biliousness." For sale by all druggists. Samples free. Emery Shelley, held at Simcoe in eon- neotion with the shooting of Michael Hall has been discharged, the Crown having no evidence except that the boy was shooting in the woods on the day of the tragedy. Bears the The Ked You Hata Always Bought Signature hof A report comes from Guelph that Alex, Banyan, the man reported mur- dered at Grafton, was a native of that pity, and the hole found in his head on which the murder theory rests, was a birth mark. The record of shooting accidents bas already begun. The man who allows a gun to point towards himself or anyone else is not fit to be trusted with it. He who is sure a gun is not loaded is most dangerous. The doubtful man is safe. It's a pity when sick ones drug the stom- ach or stimulate the Heart and Kidneys. That is all wrong! A weak Stomach means weak Stomach nerves, always. And this is also true of the Heart and Kidneys, The weak nerves are instead crying out for help. This explains why Dr. Shoop's Restorative is promptly helping Stomach, Heart and Kidney ail- ments. The Restorative reaches out for the actual cause of these ailments—the failing "inside nerves," Anyway test the Restorative 48 hours, It won't oure 80 soon as that, but you will surely know that help is coming. Sold at Walley's Drug Store. According to statistics just published, the excess of female population in England amounts to 1,070,000, mainly due to the lower death rate among women. At the June Session of the Bruce County Council the tender of O'Hara & Co., Toronto, for 20,000 four and a half per cent debentures was accepted, Their offer was $20,436. Their offer was $150 above the next highest tender. It is said that the county has backed down and now refuse to take the de- bentures. A clever, popular Candy Cold Cure Tab- let—called Preventioe—is being dispens- ed by druggists everywhere. In a few hours, Preventios are said to break any cold—completely. And Preventics, be- ing safe and toothsome, are very fine for children. No Quinine, no laxative, nothing harsh nor sickening. Box of 48 —25c. Sold at Walley's Drug Store. Horse L$Iemper THE WI.NUIIIAM TIMES, SEPTEMBER, 16, 1909 Prince Edward farmer Solemnly Declares Nerviline is a Specific. "After fifty ycc r exp•'tk'nca in rnie- ing lao.•eotl I ecu te'a:a ::,- tettaty that Ito remedy gives such geo,l results for en all-round stable linine,nt ae Nerviline ' Thus opors the very t :c, news letter of J J Evanston, who het s near \Bailin&; ton, P. E. "I hal a very v, lti tble horeo that took distemper a month ago, and was afraid I was going to lose him His throat e;,e110 and hard lumps de v,.l.ip'd Heti nt,e ran sats he had terrible oough I trted different re- medaes, but wee unable to relievt n y horse of his pin and suffering till I st yrtt d to um N'r^eiiitae. I mix ed a notate of N.'r- .�.....�.� vtitne and sweet oil and rubbed the enix:.arc on the throat and chest three times a day and you would scarcely believe the way that horse picked up. Nerviline cured biro. I also have need Nerviline for colio iu horses and cows. and earnestly recom- met,d it to every man that is raising stock " For &trains, sprains, swellings, colic, distemper, coughs cod colds, no lini- ment will prove so effaoacioue in the stable as "Nerviline"—it's good for man or beast, for internal or external use Wherever there is pain, Nt rviline will cure it. Refuse substitutes. Large bottle 25c., five for $1.00, at all deniers, or The Catarrhozoue Co'y., Kiogeton, Oat. Nerviline Cues Quickly It is related of a preacher in a small town who was to be absent from his pul- pit a fortnight, that he recently an-. nounced after the sermon: "The preacher for next Sunday will be Mr. Plank, and the one for the Sunday after you'll find hanging up behind the door on the other side of the vestry. SPRING itIEDICINE, As a spring medicince Burdock Blood Bitters has no equal. It tones up the system and removes all impurities from the blood, and takes away that tired weary feeling so prevalent in the spring The Lathes' Home Journal charges $4,000 for a single page of advertising for one insertion. Hero are a few other high publications : —Youth's Companion $2,4C0 per page; Saturday Evening Post, $1,000; Woman's Home Companion, $1,- 800; Delineator, $1,800; Collier's Week- ly, $1,600; Chicago Daily News, $1,141; New York Herald, $998; New York World, 8896. Look Out for Pneumonia. Your system is in a run down con- dition, You catch cold. You think it will soon pass off. It doesn't. You neglect taking any special care of your- self. Bronchitis develops and ehen comes pneumonia and a fight for life. A fight for life which is too often nn - successful. Why not take every cold seriously and cure it promptly by using Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Tur- pentine. An eminent lawyer was once cross- examining a very clever woman, mother of the plaintiff in a breach of premise action, and was completely worsted in the encounter of wits. At the close, however, he turned to the jury and ex- plained, "You saw, gentlemen, that even I was but a child in her hands. What mast my client have been?" By this adroit stroke of advocacy he turned his failure into sucoess. Tickling or dry Coughs will gniokly loosen when using Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy, And it is so thoroughly harm - lees, that Dr. Shoop tells mothers to use nothing else, even for very young babies. The wholesome green leaves and tender stems of a lung healing mountainous shrub give the curative properties to Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy. It calms the cough, and heals the sensitive bronchial membranes. No opium, no chloroform, nothing harsh used to injure or suppress. Demand Dr. Shoop's. Accept no other. Sold at Walley's Drug Store. It has been found that good paper can be made from the lalang grass of Malaysia. Hereafter persons not belonging to the naval establishment receiving per- mission to photograph war vessels or navy yards, will be required to furnish without cost, plates of all pictures taken, At Londesboro' Ont„ on Wednesday, September 1, at the reeidenoe of Mrs. W. H. Whiteley, the marriage of her second daughter, Lizzie Vida, to Mr. Robert Burns Carter, of Gowganda, for- merly of Blyth, was solemnized by the Rev. Mr. Small, of Blyth. The bride wore her travelling dress of brown cloth, with large plumed hat, with a cluster of white asters, and was given away by her brother, Mr. Percy L. Whitely. The bridesmaid was Mies Zilla Whiteley, who wore a ohampagne silk poplin (formerly her mother's wed- ding dress). Mr. Alex, Smith, Blyth, was best man, the wedding music being played by Miss L. Carter. After de- jenner Mr. and Mrs. Carter left for Toronto en route to Gowganda. The groom's gifts were a spray of pearls to the bride, gold locket to the bridesmaid, A watch to his sister and cuff' links to his groomsman. Guests were present from Woodstock, London, Godericb, Clinton and Blyth. They Help Your Stomach Out And Save You a World of Wretchedness Tho fox is fast multip!yingand spread, ing uortliwerds across Australia, and in New South Wales the settlers have established fox oaths and meet at dif- ferent neighbors' houses every fort. night or mouth, when twenty or morn horsemen engage in a fox drive. Tho I hunters ride through the timber craek- A stomach that cannot digest a good meal is certainly a sore trial. It has been responsible for almost everything in the nay of human misery, up to suicide. The trouble in most cases is that the stomach and other digestive organs lack vigor, Not enough of the juices ss neceary to digestion are secret, nor does the stomach work up the food properly. The worst of it is that there is not sufficient nourishment taken out of the food to restore the system's vigor, and the trouble goes frost bad to worse. The stomach needs help. "Little Digesters" meet the need exactly. One "Little Digester" after each meal will ensure perfect digestion, provided, of course, that the food is good and wholesome. "Little Digesters" are guaranteed to cure Indigestion, and Dyspepsia, or your rnorney will be refunded. sec at yoit's, tit by mail & s frotheColemanK -eineCO.,Toronto. 27 ing whips and making a hullabaloo, and the shooters lying in ambush snap the fox as he approaches Thirty-three foxes were killed in a casually recorded drive. For a Sprained Ankle. A sprained ankle may be oured in about one•third the time usually ie- quired, by applying Chamberlain's Lini- ment freely, and giving it absolute rest. For sale by all druggists. A young country chap once got a job in a city grocery. He was very cautious in his new berth—They had told him at home that the city people would try to josh him because he was green. He kept a sharp lookout, nocordingly for joehers, A sober old maid entered the grocery one morning, "I want some bird seed, please," the said. The new clerk eneered and answered scornfully, "No yo don't lady. Ye can't josh me. Birds grow from eggs, not seeds." Don't be afraid to give Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to your children. It ooutains no opium or other harmful drug. It always cures. For sale by all druggists. "Saltford Heights," the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bissett, of Col- borne Township, was gay with a festive throng on Wednesday, Sept. 28th, the happy occasion being the marriage of their daughter, Elizabeth, to Richard John Penny Walter, son of John Walter, of Colborne. The happy young couple stood before a bank of ferns as Rev. James A. Auderson, pastor of Knox Church, Goderioh, performed the ceremony, and the house was decorated with asters and other flowers. Pink Pain Tablets—Dr. Shoop's—atop Headache, womanly pains, any pain, anywhere, in 20 minutes sure. Ferran. la on 25c, box. Ask your druggist or doctor about this formula—it's fine. Sold at Walley's Drug Store. James Gunn, an old inmate of the county jail, died at Goderich Tuesday night, Sept. 7th. Mr. Gunn had been confined to the jail since June 4, 1904, being sent there as insane, and he was really more a patient for an asylum than for the jail. For some time he had gradually been growing more feeble, and for several weeks past he had been unable to leave his bed. Peter Gunn, of Goderich Township, and Thomas Gunn of Ashfield Township, are nephews of the deceased. Doan's Kidney Pills act on the kid- neys, bladder and urinary organs only. They cure backaches, weak back, rheum- atism, diabetes, congestion, inflamation, gravel, Bright's disease and all other diseases arising from wrong action of the kidneys and bladder. A new postoflfce was established in a small village away out West, and a native of the soil was appointed post- master. After a while complaints were made that no mail was sent out from the new office, and an inspector was sent to enquire into the matter. He called npon the postmaster, and, stating the cause of his visit, asked why no mail had been sent out. The postmaster pointed to a big and nearly empty mail bag, hanging np in a cor- ner, and said: J "Well, I ain't sent it out, 'cause the bag ain't nowheree nigh full yet."—Harper's Bazaar. The essential lung -healing principal of the pine tree has finally been successfully separated and refined into a perfect oough medicine—Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Sold by all dealers on a guarantee of satisfaction. Price 25 oents. Mr. James Leggett, uncle of Mr. John Leggett, of Walkerton, and cousin of Mr. Ben Canon, License Inspector, and who for over half a century was one of the prominent farmers of Brant, was killed in a runaway near Chesley on Monday, last week. The blowing of a threshing engine whistle in an adjoining field, frightened hie horse and in the runaway which followed Mr. Leggett was thrown against a post, breaking ,nearing all the ribs in his bank, and pausing almost instantaneous death. The deceased was married three times and leaves a large grown-np family to mourn his death. The Kind You Have,,�� AAl¢lwayss" Bought Beare the Signature of Forgetting self is the secret of finding satisfaction in life. .4.. s1'r c:s Wit. X -A. Hears the The Kind You Have Always Bong 6igaatare 01 Nothing keeps a man from being rich like thinking he has enough; nothing fi.om knowledge and wisdom like think- ing he has both. THE LADIES' FA.YOR1TE, Laxa-Liver Pills are the ladies' favorit medicine. They oure Constipation, Sick Headaohe, Billiousnoss, and Dyspepsia without griping, purging or siokening. Immigration figures just received, at Winnipeg offices show that during the months of April, May and June there were 32,921 Americans came to Western Canada as compared with 20,407 the year before. A Travelling OIau's Experience. "I must tell you my experience on an East bound O. R. & N. R, R. train from Pendleton to Le Grande, Ore., writes Sam A. Garber, a well known traveling man. "I was in the smoking depart. went with some other traveling men when one of them went out into the poach and name back and said, 'There is a woman sick unto death in the oar.' I at once got up and went out, found her very ill with cramp colic; her hands and arms were drawn up so you could not straighten them, and with a death. like look on her face. Two or three ladies were working with her and giving her whiskey. I went to my suit case and got my bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy (I never travel without it), ran to the water tank, put a double dose of the medicine in the glass, poured some water into it and stirred it with a pen - oil; then I had quite a time to get the ladies to let me give it to her, but I suc- ceeded. I could at once see the effect and I worked with her, rubbing her hands, and in twenty minutes I gave her another dose. By this time we were al- I most into Le Grande, where I was to leave the train. I gave the bottle to the husband to be used in case another dose should be needed, but by the time the train ran into Le Grande she was all right, and I received the thanks of every passenger in the car." For sale by all druggists. Commenting on the demise of the Port Dover Herald from acute indi- gestion and ohronio disoomboboliza- tion, the Waterford Star says: Another newspaper, started to fill a long felt want, has ceased to exist. After nine months the Port Dover Herald makes the announcement be. low, John is a good newspaper man and a first class printer. In dozens of oases in Ontario in the poet few years it has been proven that a town of ten or twelve hundred could not support two papers and Port Dover was no exception to the rule. It may be news to our readers to know that Old Ontario has fewer newspapers now than ten or fifteen years ago. This does not mean that Ontario is go- ing back, but the field was overcrowded with newspapers. Ontario is being better served to -day with fewer news- papers." Dickens and Diet. Dickens is the novelist of the meal. No other writer, pile be np never such lists of delicacies fit for Lnoulles, has the gusto in describing humble feasts which gives the very reader an appe- tite. Thackery, for all his "Ballad of Bouillabaise," never touched the hem of his garments in the recording of meals. Who that has read them can ever forget, for instance, Mrs. Damp's directions to the chambermaid for her nooturnal reflection, or the tea which awaited Joe Willett and Dolly on their return to the locksmith's dwelling on the occasion of Miss Migg's final rout, or the unassuming meals recorded in "David Copperfield," or the more pre- tentious feasts in "Piokwiok," not for- getting the leg o' mutton "swarry" to whioh Mr. Weller was invited by the elite of Bath footmen? And has not every reader of "Martin Chnzzlewit" allowed a tender smile to curl his lips over the evolution of that inoompara- ble pudding, in the preparation and consumption of which snob. damage was done to John Westlook's affections? So go and read—and acquire your ap- petite.—London Chronicle. Dr. Laberge, of Montreal, says that oar climate is a contributory canoe of tuberculosis. If he had said that the way we treat our climate is such a oause be would have been nearer the troth, says the Montreal Star. The Indiana were riot bothered with tnberenlosie, though they probably faoed a severer climate than we do and faced it in greater poverty. But they met it in the open. They did not shut themselves np in airtight boxes in the winter time and then light a fire in the enclosure. The air they breathed was always fresh, for they had no means of keeping the pnre variety ont of their wigwams. If Canadians were careful to get as mnoh pure Mr in the winter as in the summer, we ehonld probably not hear our climate described as as contributory cause of the "white plague," Could Not lie On His Left Side Op, ID YOU EVER FIGU1E THE COST of a single day's baking — the material, fuel, time and labor—and consider that it is all wasted if the baking is a failure ? Is it economy, then, to use a flour of uncertain quality when a few cents more will buy ?lora held Flour —a flour that you can depend upon to produce light, crisp and wholesome bread or pastry? It is made from selected hard wheat, milled by a most modern process which guarantees absolute. purity. Royal Household Flour does not vary in quality — does not disappoint. 17 Ogilvie Flour Mills Co., limited, Montreal.. TWENTY YEARS AGOG Local History of the early 80s. Items from the "Times" fyles. (From the TIDIES of Sept. 13, 1889.) LOCAL NEWS. Mr. R. 0. Sperling shipped a oar load of eggs to New York- on Tuesday. Mr. P. S. Linkiater is now able to be around again, after bis severe attack of malaria fever. Conductor Quirk, of the G. T. R , has returned, looking the picture of health, after spending a couple of weeks in Detroit, Ohioagb and other Western cities. Heart Would Stop. Hundreds of people' go about their, daily work on the verge of death, and yet do not know it. It is only when the shock corns that the unsuspected weak- ness of the heart is apparent. There is only one cure, and that is MILBURN'S HEART and NERVE PHLS Try Then% aiwl ie Convinced. Mr. Paul Poull, Cascapedis, Que., tsrites:—"Abont five years ago I gave up fall hope of getting better of heart trouble. I would nearly choke, and then my iheart would stop beating. I could not lie on my left side, and became so nervous rand weak I could not work. A friend told me to try Milburn's Heart and Nerve ?ills, and before the first box was taken I was almost well, and the second boa eomplltted the sure. I have advised many others to try them, slid Vhey lave all been cured of the same trouble. I hove offered to pay for a box foe anybody the do not cure." 1 j1burn's Heart and Nerve Pills sail 30s, per box, os 3 boxes for 31.25, II dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont, By injunction of General Assembly of the Presbyterian church, Sunday last was Children's Day, on which occasion the Rev. H. McQaarrie preached an ap- propriate sermon. Four car loads of furniture were shipped to Montreal, by G. T. R., from Messrs. Gilohrist, Green & Co's factory, last week. Mr. John MoLean has let the'contract for the erection of a residence on Alfred street, opposite Recreation Park. Mr. R. A. Graham, of Morrie, offers hie farm, implements, &o., for sale. The Caledonian games at Luoknow on Wednesday were fairly well attended, there being perhaps four thousand people present. Wingham and vicinity was well represented. Nearly all the events were well contested, and several prizes were taken by our townsmen, Messrs. G. Musgrove and S. Leggatt. Mr. A. J. McArthur, of Orangeville, is now with Dr. Towler as assistant in his drug store. BIRTHS Elliott.—In Turnberry, on the 7th inst., the wife of Mr. James Elliott; a son. Nethery.—In Morris, on the 3rd inst., the wife of Mr. John Nethery; a daugh- ter. MARRIED.' Simpson—Douglas.—On the 21st inst., by the Rev. A. T. Green, at the resi- dence of the bride's father, Port Hope. Mr. Robt. Simpson, of Wingham, to. Miss Carrie, eldest daughter of John: Douglas, Chief of Polioe. DEATHS. Campbell.—In Morris, on the 8th inst.,. Christina Campbell, relict of the late James Campbell, aged 65 years. HELPFUL HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Olean zino with kerosene, robbed on with a soft cloth, and follow with boil- ing weber. A sprig of mint in the water in which potatoes are boiled will add a piquant flavor. When boiling cabbage the odor will be much lees noticeable if the lid ie left off the pot. A few chopped almonds added to 'a custard or bread podding will greatly improve ite flavor. Cold drawn linseed oil, robbed on with a soft cloth, is best for cleaning mahogany furniture. A whisk brash that has outlived its usefulness can be shortened and made into a sink brush. To get rid of rats, stuff their holes with laundry soap, whioh has been lib- erally sprinkled with cayenne pepper. Keep a bowl of cold water at hand into whioh dip the fingers frequently when hulling or Dapping fruit for pre- serving. Scraps of kitchen soap should be saved in a jar, and when there is enfrioient quantity they may be put into a good liquid soap. Oanliflower should always be soaked for a full hour before it is boiled, and then should be boiled in water very slightly salty for from 20 to 30 min- nton. To hyoid scraping new potatoes let them boil for a little while until their skins are ready to peel off, strip them and put them into the oven to finish cooking. Canvas shoos may be gleaned with soap and water if one works quickly, so that the moisture does not penetrate the canvas. Make a think lather of pure white soap and warm water. It a hardwood floor is sticky after being treated with boiled 011 and tnr. Dentine, get s pail of strong older vin' agar, wring a cloth out of till, and wipe the fleet with it. It will cause great improvement. To prevent a steak from being tough, place it in a pan in the refrigerator with about an ounce of olive oil, into whioh has been stirred a half tablespoon- ful of vinegar, and torn it over several times at intervals. If ham that is to be boiled for break. fast is allowed to soak over night in milk it will have a delioions sweet flavor. If not too salty the milk need not be thrown away, but may be thiok- erred and used for gravy. An old-fashioned rule for preserving currants ie as follows: Pick over and Wash seven pounds of red currants, add three pirate of currant juice, a pound of raisins and seven pounds of sugar, Cook the whole, stirring frequently for ten minutes. To olean suede gloves, put the gloves on "trees" or on your hands and rub them with fine oatmeal, whioh ehonld finally be brushed off with a fine nail brush. Any obstinate stains may be removed with benzine, applied with a piece of flannel. Indigestion Stomach trouble is but a symptom of, and not In itself a true disease. we think of Dyspepsia, Heartburn, and Indigestion as real diseases, yet they are symptoms only of a certain specific Nerve sickness—nothing else. It was this fact that first correctly led Dr. Shoop in tale creation of that now very popular Stomach Remedy—Dr. whoop's Restorative. Going direct to the stomach nerves, alone brought that suCresr and favor to Dr. Shoop and his Restorative. With. out taut original and highly vital principle, nc such lasting accomplishnustts were ever to be had. For stomach distress, bloating, biliousness, bee breath and sallow complexion, try Dr. Sheep's ;:ertoiutive—Tablets or Liquid—and see for yout self what it cent and will do. INC tell and cheer fully recommend Dr. hoop's Restorative WALLE'Y-',S DRUG $TORE. ;