HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1896-10-09, Page 2TIMES I OCTOBER 9, I8 6.
- +r•.�rr• ""� "" perpetuete themselves. mere ly always the appetite ante testlparaxlly Invigorate
An Ornamental. Screen.
teeingwell mixed iii (a tub, and the boil: danger of such renditions whenslopes or to bird, and thus far play be llsseful. 'A screen is of no anti of value In the
cP1 I -. But after all, the best tonic is whole- furnishing of a room where ugly oornert
Mg water turned on, stirr#n„ well dor- other areas unfit for cultivation are danger ing tlw adding of the water, until the forested, and there is spooled danger ;
whole is a stiff' dough (nut wet). Let where forest fins are prevalent There • sA1ue food. In their natural condition or homely piens of furniture roust Heads
fatvla get the Flight stimulant they need be hidden from sight. The fanny frame•
this he done at niglht,andiu the morning are a few shn)all red sandstone areas in ' in the arnnsrttie seeds and berries they work is no longer onnsiderbd good taste,
over the streams dry up for weeks in snows- waLL•'GURBiI1Ca, the mess will be Softepea and easily di- Now Jersey now in this condition, where lick up on their foraging grounds, so the newer models inclining toward the
nested. Do net keep any i ortio)s ces- that tonics are not to be wholly eschewed..
until the next day, as it may heeeme sten to bbconte torrents when the rnehi ! The chicks grow and tho hon lays only
with barrenness, onitivation is harmless
Miami a Permanent Wall and Prevents
Aceid,mtt•
In sections of the country where stones is prepared.
Ito the stream. Our rad, therefure.shattld
Or brickbrickcannot be obtained, the WIIi' ecoid Water fora Sprained Wrist. I be to keep all ground unfit for cultiva.
are Merited up with boards or timber,
and this is an important eperntinn wit. re A simple and efficacious remedy for a tion clad with forest.
sour, but feed each day's mess the day it I falls in considerable quantity. olnpar
lis. •tre sunk through sand or fritahle soil sprained wrist is to let water run lrp, Indigestion In Poultry.
we
liabletocave in. Herewith is illustrated it every morning for some m nu eS, so
a method of curbing ns fast as tate wells ing the wrist as low beneath the mouth
is deepened. It not only serve, las the of the tap as poselhle, so that too water
permanent walls hut prevents trouble and may have a good fail. After this has
b done bandage it tightly, letting
accidents from caving in while the
laborers are at work making the well. the bandage remain until the next ablu-
Havl'g aent,ind on the diameter of the tion. The sprain will be reduced in a
well, ent li ,ards of uniform length (usu- few ditys-
WOODEN 'WELT, c ,.,....
ally about four feat\• cutting or nntahing 1
in each end se shown in the engrnving.
Dig the melt square, Deming in the
boartts up'n all four sides; as it is
deepened. two :-wort strips u:•' nailed over
each evict: to hold the bowel; in place.
After water is reecho 1, or at any time,
corner nieces are firmly nailed at enrh
angle to hold the whole firmly and solid,
when the short strips niay be removed.
It is also well to make a ladder, by
simply nailing to one of the corner pieces
strips one foot apart. They will be one
inch from the curb and make a firm
and secure hold for bout hands and feet
in slaking the ascent and descent. --
American Agriculturist.
„OU :LE WITH BEES.
Indigestion is one of the commonest
troubles of fowls and one of the most
easily prevented. Grit takes the place of
teeth with fowls. It requires to be sharp
in order to grind up the food stud prepare
it for digestion. Yet how often is the
supply deficient? Crushed oyster shells
cr sharp gravel should be accessible to
ti : hens. Acidity of the stomach is the
It ba corrected
•------ result of indigestion. may
A ntaeaan -dice's^,• Bees --Then Too, by mixing very finely pulverized char -
Arc Liable to t': rataxis. neral with the food or by keeping a sup-
; noted baa zooepor of ,I#chig-au writes ply of broken charcoal in the neighbor -
to the Country Gentleman that foul bond of the fowls. One of the best
brood aniang bees now has n rival in methods of giving it is to eller a couple
bee porn:yeis. Bee 1,aratiysis may not be of corncobs once a wee in the oven and
•t new diettese, but it is only lately that then lot the fowls have thele to peel at.
it has 11ret•atled to any great extent. The feeding of charcoal is exnelient at
h hen's existence but in
,))lead occasionally, n I weighed 2,016 pounds
far latch of a better nano, It was called preees is going on.i ) ith
when they have the elements required to
make bone, muscle and eggs, and these
are found only in nourishing fond, and
not in condiments. _ _��
Live Stook Notes.
Turpentine is considered a good remedy
for lung worms in sheep.
A oamfortable house for the ducks is
ono of the first things to bo provided to
insure successful raising.
Portions of the West have bean afllinted
with what has been termed the corn stalk
disease, cattle dying after having .been
turned upon corn fields after the corn is
husked.
Nothing short of experience will teach
most dairymen the absolute necessity of
caring properly and promptly for the
young members of their herds, whioll
are soon to yoke the place of older ones
or add materinily to their number and
possibly to their producing value.
Breeding gives the profit, an is shnwn
in cattle for beef. A Galloway and short-
ltorn steer, recently raised in Scotland,
Perhaps ti; lou; rgo as 15 year it was all stares of t e 1• ; old
,, •• onaily anal at that tinie, particularly desirable when the fattening at two years a ndclon thereon hs He
was raised on pasture (no grain) w
the "nameless" bee disease. In the last Cleaning Tertniso Shell.
three or four years, particulerly in the Tori: lire shell g Tertonts, combs, etc ,
ai,th, It has named cansideral)le havoc; Ina he polished by rubbing them with
In fact, same bac learners fear that it klieriscl`oliaraoal and vratrr, using a
Mill price a :;rentor 1:.e).aeo to the per- cls n flannel cloth. Next moisten the
sult of bee -keeping then has been the
article with vinegar. Powdered rotten -
raw with foul brood. It attacks the lea' . arnr.e may be substituted for the whit,,
tar' bees instead of the brood, as is the 1 f, g y
1 ease In foul brood, and its ravages are
•
more in the spring and forepart of the A CI-IEAP B111Lf3ING
1 seam The bees attacked bane a bladi,
1 shiny appearance, are bloated,orawl from ' That: Can be 1Iaate by Any Farmer With a
the hive and hop about on the ground Pew Tools.
' until they die. When lying .upon the Although balloon frame buildings
' ground, their legs and wings often have long been accepted as abundantly
have a trembling movement. Sometimes strung and .durable, the farmer has rarely
e ly a few bees in a colony are thus acted on the suggestions their constrlte-
attacl:ed, while in others the loss from tion niters for building with his own
tine source is so groat Os to destroy tho hands small sheds, etc., quickly and at
usefulness of the colony for the pnrposow slight cost Frequently a small addition
' of honey gathering
to a hay hay just before haying is desired
There is little
• ( is of a bacteria 1
PERISHABLE PRODUCE, it is communicated from one bee to an• sion for animals would often be built If Take two young chickens, two table-
. other, or from one colouy to another, is
the utvn•^r conic. do It without expense spoolsfnis of flow, one glassful of milk,
lin Australia Bettor is Now Packed in l hull a matter Of doubt. There are gnod for extra h••lp Fat lust how to go to soma bread crunsbs and butter; take the
Plaster of Paris, reasons for believing that the disease work is the question. Tile thought of fillets and legs off; out the fillets in two
can he communicated by means of the gettiug out a frame is a bugbear to pieces and the legs in three. Dip them
There seems to be no limit to the queen; that is. the introduction of a 10051 0100 not carpenters. in milk, roll them in Sour or bread
ingenuity upon the devising of means queen from 'e diseased colony is likely Now the plan of building which coo- crumbs and fry in butter..
-for accomplishing the transport of the ; to be followed by an outbreak of the snend$ itself in the engraving requires
perishable produce of distant c11mee to ; disease. There have been a great many nods is fanning.
the E ri lisle market. A now method, 'instances of this kind reported. The in- With eight -inch posts IIM feet long,
i-
t a(ls
f �queen intoone aide
tatohealthy P on
'an is that hentn•i hewed r lase of atui a
Aosta tcoloythe s.
described i
n the trodt001in �
packing butter in a box made of six eased colony is followed by improvement; of the upper 16- lei nes, end two-inch
sheets of ordinary glass, all the edges ' in some cases by a temporary cure. For plank, the owner can erecta shed, lean -
being covered over with gummed paper• soma time it was believed that a change ti ore :tension as quickly, and substan-
The glass box is enveloped in a layer of of queens of this kind would lead to a
plaster of paris, a quarter of an insh permanent care, but this has not proved
thick, and this is covered with specially true in many instances. •
prepared paper. The plaster being a bad Climate lois a great influence upon the
conductor of heat, the temperature inside development•of disease. In tho North n0
the . hermetecally sealed receptacle re- • t•erions damage has been reported, but
mains constant, being unaffected by ex- in- the hot, moist climate of the South it
tternal changes. The cost of packing is has practically ruined some apiaries.
about one penny per pound. Butter Bees kept in iew, moist situations seem
packed in the way described at Melbourne . to have suffered the most. In -and -in
has been sent across the sea to South breeding has been blamed for the
Africa, and when the case was opened trouble, but it is more than likely its
700weaken n the
at Iiimberiy, miles from Cape Town, only inflren.ia has been Ito
the butter was found to be as sound as ecu. t:tutian of the bees,, thus making
When it left the factory in Victoria. , tints:more susceptible The mixing of
i as ..in
. hear one nn- ,
Cases are now made to hold as noel Uvea from lives scan g
two hundredweight of butter, and 40 ' other has caused a spread of the disease
hands, mostly boys and girls, aro oocu- or at least, it hag appeared that way, '
pied in staking the glass rceptacies and while in other instances no such result ;
hovering them with plaster. The top, or has followed. Comb froin an infected
lid, however, is put en by a simpie are- ' c \env harp carried with them the seeds .
che
re-
chanical arrangement, and is removed of rbc discasn, if we can believe
•
ing others •
bthe nf t 5rcheeer per cent.\ anlfreight and pool:- I peens v,. elaal and tohave bhave ceen are 1 the �disease '
ing is claimed in oomp.triean with the • with no change of bees or clement in 1
cost of frozen hatter carried in the mind short, there seems to ha a woeful lack of
turnips and straw in winter. The weight
could have been increased by high feed-
ing. .At present prices of beef in this
country the steer would havesold for $75
or perhaps mere, according to quality,
The Guernseys 08nie freine 14i 31i3a11ei'
island of the saltie name, about twenty
milds from Tereey. Tho cattle are of the
same origin, They are larger, averaging
'perhaps 950 pounds, more angular, with
a strouger appearance. Less attention
has been given to color in their breed-
ing, White markings are common; yel-
lowish fawn is a common Dolor. The
cows give milk in about equal quantity •
.rand of equal richness with that of the
Jersey, the butter having a somewhat
higher color. The writer believes it
woniti have been a gain if American
breeders had classed the two breeds as
one.
doubt that the disease but deferred because theonlycarpenter,
1 nature, but jest how in tate )lana is not at liberty. An exten- Fillets or roues.
Way.—Scientific American. 1 definite, po.,itive knowledge on the sub -
hs ant• carpenter with the old
n:a.riced frame or modern mitred Dna.
oder.
,Contagious rode -Rot In SlaAi.
The following is o od feom a V/A 1'k R FGR �%A
pamphlet by Prof. G. : rove of the
Royal Agricultural S ety 0' -ler-- '' Slow Excellent tso Can be Maclo of {
JeI+":1•ht-rut is a, •.ontaglans disease of , 'Water-tlg0t 110114').
the foot of the sheep, cotumtlt:i•:itte.1 to ; - Pasture springs become foul mud-
.henithy sheep by tletoot.tlting with disused nodes if left for cattle to drink from and
sheep end alae by feceling nil t;ri,ttnds , tramp through, Moreover, the water gets
Contaminated with the virus of the ciis- very warm in summer. Cut a barrel in
ease. Sheep after benne infected May not
show any sign of the disease in their feet
=for from ten to twenty clays. Ntvel,y'
purchased sheep with perfectly sotlfl4
feet cannot therefore, be c o0eddered t.afd
tontil the expiration of altleast a month.
foot -rot begins an.,tlio skin above and
between the claws:°'!•lir skin is alightly
reddened and covered with ;'bite grams
laced matter or 510011 warty growths.
The disease prneeeds downwards on the
int.c: side of the horn of one claw, and,
as a rule, one or two feet only are at-
tacked; very rarely aro all four feet
affected at the same time. lfllts >"d Wkl It (.4'1°i'r--
' All the sheep in an infected flock
TT LEt
s
ener
should be carefully e:aaminod. Loose and
decayed horn should bo carefully and
completely removed 'without wounding
the sensitive parts ur cutting away any
of the healthy horn. I1 is, however, most
important to get to the bottom of the
dise:aeeti parts, Caustic dressing
applied by pouring or tire
Means: of a brush or feat)
becomes covered wit "virus-e'athd the
foot shnuld be after and protected by a
coating of tar. Divan shepherds have solve
favorite remedy, bus butyr bf antimony,
h -pride of zine or etre carbolic acid
of P ,
applied lightly to the dlsetseed parts, Is
usually eifectti 1. A powder of acetate of
topper or red oxide.. of inercer, , ten parts
.of either mixed with forty parts of pow-
dorred Nlnil014 or made into an ointment
With sixty parts of Vaseline, may be
teed instead of the liquid dressing."
:4e/tiding the Pond is Y''.conofai iral.
It does rso't pay to bare an attendant
teenage a rnaltirutt or boiler, but h
v Tal an advantage to 'weld the ground
Want feeding it to ehicee that
tri he inedeef'tt for rnerkrt, It is usu-
see.. t,y' is ,ate a miztare of ground
�yltltie O te4 (*1=, :.7 kJ,tlQlh ti tatl0l,ad
yt ,a•at7z i, the wiuvle
y bA
fig --not by
whieh seen
The posts must he set 4•feet apart and
2 feet in the earth. if the spot chosen 111
"tot well drained, the holes should be
dug !,slow frost bevel and Oiled to within
two feet of the suet; ^cel the rock
orfs l)o ] 1ao
yrs on which to stana, p ' "
uprit,hts for all sides (fou' rte corner posts
:'f weight are required) are ".Spi I old,and arnanrantrd with betas of leen
flatted outer sides of these+eller' pieces , g g'
set in the earth. Inside of the u'31 lghts, I satin ribbon matching thli silk in color.
resting nn the heads of the posts, ht °titer 1 The pendant balls are of chenille to
lank is spiked, both down anal, to .the 1 snatch; or rho Ung and decorations may
p P b �.,raeaty ,rude of crepe paper in any
ked to the
For the Tea Table.
tea table
' the
,e r
nnic.
r fo
,� dainty b
cubo
such as is shown in the sketch' is easily
made, and will make a pretty souvenir.
The basket proper may be bought or
made, awarding to one's ingenuity. The
111.
I,
empire. A. pretty screen is covered with
a novel material, for screens at least.
Denim, in a dull, soft green, is used for
the body, with delicate wreaths Hud
serails of embroidery in white and shades
of yellow. Flat, gold -headed nails mem-
ment the edno. The back and seat of the
Chair shown in the sketch are Orin -
planted in tho same manner.
4,.‘
Murray L
Lan man's
FLORIDA WATER
THE SWEETEST
MOST FRAGRANT, MOST REFRESHING
AND ENDURING OF ALL
PERFUMES FOR THE•
HANDKERCHIEF, TOILET OR • BATH.
ALL DRUGGISTS, PERFUMERS ASD
GENERAL REALM.
e oi't•i Jti vertlsein[•nt.
A splendid monument of Pierre (;at.+'
oohard, geover, stands in 0 copsplonoue
position in rho eomotery• of Pere In
Chaise. It bears a pathetic inscription,
ending: --
"His inconsolable widow dedicates
this monument to his hnerth'nry, and con-
tinues the same busines at the old
place, No. 167 Iiue Mouifo ard."
A gentleman had the cariosity to call
at the address given.
"1 came to see the wido$ Cabnchard."
said the caller.
"Well, sir, here she is,"i said the man.
"I bog pardon," said the gentleman,
"but I wish to See the lady herself."
"Sir," was the Fanswer, "I am the
widow Caboehard."
"I don't exactly nndeestand," quoth
the visitor. "I allude to the relict of the
late Pierre Caboohard, whose monument
I saw yesterday at Pere 1A Chaise.''
"I see, I set," was the smiling re-
joinder. "Allow ine to ;inform yon that
Pierre Caabochard is a myth, and there-
fore never had a wife. ;The tomb you
admired Dost mea good i deal of money,
and although no one was buried there,
it proves a first-rate a ertisement, and
I have load no cause t regret the ex-
pense. What can T sell on in the way, of
I groceries?"—Tit-Bits.
bag is of silk, lined with oiled paper to
keep the bonbons from stinking
A pretty one is made of bright green
silk with wicker work in green and
etandarls. 7 he joist; grid plates rule 5)111. '
! iked blelde the t:t,ri 'I%S 111 the. Marine of the dainty calors.
p g' { • k violet and white tinted basket hag a G. Roberts in fire
nnrer tee Ilio slit-(ii:•eey, •- . violet silk nod ribbons of white; 1
Covered With novelty sidin ' ads fl 1rt o candied violets, 1
TIIE FROSTED PANES.
One night came \i -inter nes e'.essly, and legned
nganlst my A 111(101)1 01 e.
In it aThecu ;Witness
Ill all sit set
1(15 1 cart convened
ghos
Leaves and ephemera, and • taus of earth,
A1:d i'ugitives of grass .
'White spirits loosed from bonds of mortal
birth,
He drew them on the gloss.
—C. G. D. Roberts in 1tlantic Monthly.
Lacking the Altlhorify.
"I eras sorry, Willie," bis Sunday'
school teacher, "to see y )u keep your seat 1
when the superiutencien . asked all those
who wiluteti to go to hea h'eu to rise:. Don't
you want to go to heaven'!"
"I es'uh."
"Then wl)y didn't you rise?"
"Cos he didn't have 110 right to tell me
to rise, ma'am," answered Willie. "He
1
aiu't no atigel Gabriel."
!Ph
•
• WILL CJl:c'a O)•: ISELIEVE
1119r.i5ai4G11. rLU.n'3ERINO OF THE
,' lditt', HEART,
5. YSIVZI.AS', G: "'STY OF THE
°T':ht)ELT1, S:OISAOH,
i11EAI() MXdI p0 'NESS OF T'k:1
Colic 5$ IN,
BILIOUSNESS', L.''.t~1a1ESS.
„pYSPEP1IA,
And oYoa' 6X>*7r1 .,t ,lie0.s/:F0WfI
. S.) (0.5.17001 M�•ed
nee"i nevEn, Kil0nr)iYO,STOMAOHe
"•=�••�.
nowt -Loewe
L&w e
L'c \ seoarr
sr' TM11.�U TonoNr
ISUITS
OVEs1COATS
TROUSERS.
Tire Frosted J'auto,
One night carne winter' noiselessly, and
• leaned f
Aeainat my window -pine.
In the deep stillness of hili heart convened
The ghosts of all hie stein.
Leaves, and ephemera. and stars of earth;
And fugitives of grass, --
White spirits loosed from bonds of mortal
birth,
Be drew thein oil the;glass.
*C1•. 1 .Atlantic Monthly.
building is as Ilene anti 'well braced as ' )t ill to w e filled with
one can desire+. If vc'F$I:;itl siding is to
I be need, the uprights i1i'e1 steed upon the
posts, where they nfn held in place by
' spikes, and tate a-pleoes put on the
1 outside. The joists and plates, in this
`
we. have to. be pieced o: t'lde the ap' The ihnliG <Stiltd-Ant 1,1orltr of is a wbioll •ler sl ave 1.Uo czurf
{ rIgnee, for, with the sill 1.1. vs, they re- QI # tit >4 f rite , t>
Melva the vortical fieleg If flooring be
Urns, it- may bo ir,::1 au tlllll ; rs placid
on the emotion of they )•)Ostheads still tin. •
covered.
sue. '. g
1.1 h) tl-o Cater %11'S7ar5 Whiskers.
(le Ile•. c r knew liefoeey
ct"i
R1ts53nu," staid the 10:111 fu tire chair.
•'- isd you spent fourteen years in Siberia,
rrt inx rl'tiit: (;411t,y 5ir,'� o.11swerott tho batrber,
t
that suit
For S'• Jt'l?
give citmfibre to the
wearer acid Patisfl
your f rlendti;yyou bad.
t , better rr Vs.. Our r
germe$t
know haw ehdc�their
work ;I' doii 1 think
•
there re neer better:
end yet we charge no mol Wen+, others
do for inferior work. Flu idrearof' new
fall and winter samples t chocee &one,
a
t prices _bout half who, Vols 11 we to
pal' for o Footle. furnishing their own clot
1f you think that a TIv
be properly made for 54
and see our
iwork.
Tj�Our iterate am erJsl3.
EBSTE.R f.V', C>ge7.
Opposite the IN eedo((daldl B)nek,
tj< eehaea'1, dent,
a p -
ld d Work onefcmr'pa'yties
ed Su illetart not
'pot (;esti, ®all
hat •an were a
two parts': , iettt one over the spring as •
shown, and 10311• the water by a pipe
into the other',. ,placed on lower' ground.
The water beleig constantly moving
will keep fresh and cool, end cattle ran
thus drink without• selling the wtateYt:.,e
N. Y. Tribune.,`
Forests sand Wel ittali?
Garden and Forest publishes t#il4 reporlii
of several years' investigations, which'
smile up the platter by saytn(f• that, as tel'
c
lift 1 e
t v at d and forrated
edtbizmerit!a'our'
gauginge indicate the sante hotel run'eftl
for a given rainfall, but metal pititT
uniform discharge, fewer fiiidds' AMP
shorter dry periods on the forested;arekg:
Forest streams are eoneequr1:t1y, there
valuable and reliable for power, and for''
water supply they require legs atbiage-
rapacity to provide for a given d ityr
• draught. The Waters are oleo Inueh,1 ite'
likely to become muddy or ntherwigo pon•'-
tasstinated, The worth condition of hill
for eatehment is bnrrennesa. Marren'
earth le lion -absorbent. The water sena
Nieto penetrate it end oxidizesitrt fertile
being soostitnente, /bevy mine run over
the a irfaoe, wash oft all the loosb rrsnter-
tal
mid barren aarnditiotte owe begun
e_ Atm— 4111111Lesa
for eters.
A. lady 'who' )'i eery succt1sful with
pnultry writes t`11'i)lr;^ Aeneltean Cultiva-
tor that in the ef<nr't to mala )tens lay
' and ehlakens ltrnw,9iitny tsonitr`p peepers'
haven habit of feod41t1'lt' rets pe ppee, gin=
ger and prepared, stili9tltatrtie with tretrtly'
Mese of ground feed or freeetitblcs, When
tlhe birds show an incteieed• appetite
rP
end greater apparent vigor tfli f titnulent
ik' given it, still greater qct •til tars, on
the prinripie that if a little w 1.- cin good,'
lore of the same wilt do ytreitiii,,'aood:
'(me result in much cases bs that Veliltfi'tiree
bible are allowed Abundance of fdeeelm;'
litgcfood they become overfttt an& Sit'
liable to drop dead suddenly frieen'
ap'eiphxy. If hens,thry lay on fat, but d&'
der •lay eggs. If, instead of fattening'
fifndt• they have egg•m*king materiel
a1Yjsp1fed, they lay freely for awhile and
theel,break clown with disease of the ovi-
duelIter ',write paralyzed in their limbs;
Iw inel►vir All instranete digestion is im-
1,nlredfir
and the final result is loot rather
then''t 1, A little salt, a MON popper,
or teenier ether ooneiim'esitt )10l ' uheriSpt
aro used to I,' ° a rani' aster l t
d)nter mum - iO* appear „fns' su
rrtera „ f
PP i ld Volt
It the fruit nt ] 'tlitdeeolt or brrtrkfast.
Ata recent 1n1.'dfboii nnn at each 0nd
of the table held i viii elevely teethe. ',so
grapes and pears sena ebeaolhes Tl le 'y
Illte tu;it�alhu)lnarlter.
"'Would I?" exclaimer
And he strapped hie razor the building. d
All ., that - jarred tI
recl.lesS energy
efood in oblong ebonies
v-tlf�. Several sizer Care or a I. II'i
longer and wider. Theist/ Siris were 1 Sunk cid limon I'RR•ot' lint inthe
cover
03114)10(1 green and hidden iii it*O 8• into a it over the burned p so as thor-
wliuls ferns were plentlf'zH' thrust, , ewhole with bandages,using cotton -`
prtielaloing a beautiful offeut 0f Crysttli , iO •hly to O%c,h1do the air,
e)ii'hMda'd in' greens. a➢ub if posy
�, more arta tic fruit .dish oA ld theta be mil oil lrc tit;tely ben- t
e G flesh shnald bo i):aruec
flour, nnn all atr exolucted. 1it
1
(1 OU cl i
a»
1
0
• h ,
Oi
b
t
tit
nt
m
d f
o tg
0
eb
't
tt h0
cif
(! hdd �'it nnaly irons tt
CURE,
D1'AR1 t(cE •
;DvY>rN,TEl
COLIG.CRAi41i
; CtiOUEPA.1NFA' 'TUM.
eee'ele2 erele hi [Weep
&dtl{i:&
.4
house the •
s' s woo
" 1 t devised.
et/aire y )n ' cd. til
y= . �t'a'1�i�a
o i dtt§ to a,' a)ds. Mothers canner be too l
fir 1 d r children to "
ri rthing thei
eereftil: ifel earthing
putting all danger 1
a s asaible.
'0 1
orae Cir ii fickle ,1i, as far as P {
drrati'ttr�ti#
0
'iP don't titi,V1POV'e of w0m0n running for
s'dlite1 boards positions uihless they aro
Married," sd * the metal philosopher.
k etry" atingllir'4 oman is sure to be a ring
Candidate.'
"Nli?'' skid rifle Aherne,
'tl('rtt lengaglf wNnt-ring candidate.
Tliey'.4Ll1 %S oils on 1#itn.
-"'S oe/. n '+tbr' nate' dee-paper. Mrs. Paw
P�Iw,7, -
" 'o.• x'erte ttd'•tb' seethed times, but
my''liuobt►eet alitetk- goer, *net the down
on Itt' *— "26kierd.
• potatoes were selling
retie o1�'th't1 mitt, for
' a mining regions
At IaPiG'a��G%°utirrirr:" . R
in some of thil'AFittl,
$100 a sack.
When eemet& "
bar that one butane
btnhe1e of sand 18
half equate yards
,r eiatern, toren.
content and tato
r three and end• •
think.
Cereal and Tnde llerkTiihta�pleed and all pekoe
business conducted for 1MDERA F Patent to '
deceit In the immediate v`ielaityof the
and my facilities tsOT pbCSS rapk oere
invents orm�y,w1lh
,rend model, sketchp
datedption and statctiltant as to advantages el`� � I
5411*,NI ebbe rego is emote f b1` on opinion- !t ih
application ion limit end t ale called pore llI Site
atont145,attm.vdd. "It,Trte•rcltr�0 t1 "co
tainini: full Information nem tree. All ,Oce $1#M
cation Coulldsron Ke strictly MAA U