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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-1-21, Page 7cCO
CREAtram
P' tY
rkieLslaVii
RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia, Sciatica,
LEArrnbago, Backache,
Irieadache,
Toothache,
Sore Throat,
Frost Bites, Sprains,
n ats and Dealers everywhere.
Bruist4.., Burns, Etc.
Bold by Bru
Fifty Cent • bottle. Directions in
a uguages.
iME MIMES A. vaGELEa C0., Baltimore. Md.
Canadian Molt: Zwonto, Ont.
CONSUMPTWNI
c Itinea posIthe remedy for the Above disease; by RS
.nie thousands of nese of the worst kind and of long
stogihlz hero been ourcd. Iadeed so strong is my falai
In Its eacaoy, that 1 will oond TWO BOTTLES raze,
win, a VILITABLE TREATISE OA this axes° 00 5113
su Carr 1050 15000 send aw their EXPRESS and P.O. address
T, 1..SLOCUM, M. J86 ADELAIDE
S -r., EST, TORONTO, 'ONT.
att.LE TTs
PURE.
POWDERED
i,LIREST, STRONGEST, BEST.
Ready. for nse In any quantity. For making Soar
S
0fleflthg Water. DistnfeetIng,,and a hundred. otlin.
uses. A. can equals 20pounats balsocia.
Sold by All Grocers and DruggIste.
V.. W. (ErS:Ci3C.°EgroW, rX4Dx-castat=
ids, Piles in their worst form
sinelas, Inflammation, From
ands and all Skin Diseases.
N EXTERMINATOR
—moms—
los Rheumatism, Neuralgia.
P ins in everyform.
" holesale br F. F.DallY &Co
Ant 00 ootee, at t.0. olela ornetk,
rabidly nett Iteoveubly, by Ibma el
either sex. 'buoy. or *id, sod ht 0501,
own lowdaltoot Imsret Om. Iter.Any
0 ton 40 1110 o Lev to lege,,
abut on. No risk. You tau devote
sour time to 110 work. fli0 la All
WOUCIO1 $1111.03, to rmy-wollwr.
25 to cm: est asst. see ereons,
we. We can turnieli you ter me.
No spec to exploits Item 01,5
,t(.10., Lt9U0T,, SILLS.
0ONIAL
WAY
NADA
.ween tho West and all
or 3t. Lawrence and Bate
retina) of Quebec; also for
ick .21hva Scotia, P eine° Edward
to ntslan ds , axi dliewf oundlem (land
000,
xpress trains leave Montreal an d Halifax
ally (Sundays excepted) and run 'through
sithoutebarige between these pointsin 23
hours end 11 minutes.
The through express train cars of the DI-
V:replant:0 Railway aro brilliantly I.ghted
by electric:its- and heated by steam from the
locemotive,thus greatly increasing the com
fort and safety ot travellers.
Now and elegant buffetsleoping and day
oars are run on through express trains.
AGRICULTURAL.
Winter Care of Sheep,
Galen Wilson, in the Country Gentleman,:
tells bow Mr. Peter Dubois winters hiesheep.
He feeds them nothing but bright oat straw,
except occasionally grain is added from
April to grass, The straw is run under cover
from the thresher. It is fed in hunks, a,
quarter more than the animals will eat up
clean. Before feeding, the refits() is thrown
out for bedding. The animals first.pick out
the chaff„ empty heads, leaves, joints and
any fugitive stalks of hay and, weeds, Now,
as to results : The.ewes have good, strong
limbs, and he very seldom loses one. They
are small Marino sheep, and average eight
pounds of wool. They are never constipated
like timothy -fed sheep, and come through
the winter in good condition. Possibly he
might get more wool by feediug hay and
grain, but this is doubtful. He certainly
could not get a better quality of wool.
Mr. Wilsoa concludes : "Seven years
ago 1 bad 2n lamb' to winter, and
no hay. I fed barley.straw freely and a
little less than two cents worth of barley
per week, when barley. was 50 cents a
bushel. Two of them never got a mouthful
of grain. They would. not go to the feed -
trough. When first turned to pasture in
spring, every one of them was in so good
condition that a local butcher wanted to
buy them for immediate slaughter. These
lambs were snow -eaters, and would not
follow a good path 60 rods to water. There
are several witnesses to these facts and my
position is impregnable. I have no sheep to
winter now ; if 1 bad they would get good
straw (preferably barley straw) and a (Dar-
ter of a. pound of grain each per day." There
is a great differeuce in straw. Late -cut
timothy hay is by no means as good as
early -cut oat orbarley straw. We presume
Mr. Wilson would prefer toprepare his own
straw to feed—and if a few kernels of grain
were left here and there, it is hardly likely
ho would object.
reeding the Stook na 'Winter.
Canadian -European Mail and
Passenger Route.
pssongers1or Groat itain r the conti-
nent by leaving mono eta on teriday meaning
will join outward ma.ilsteamer at Halifax
on Saturday.
The attention oftishippers is directed to the
superior facilit 155 offered by We routo ler
the transport olden r audgenerol merchan-
dise intended fortheRasteirn Provinces and
•
Newfound
anclprode
]
ket.
VOW.
about th
rates on a
.N. WE A TaTERST021, ,
WesternFreight &Passenge Agent
931tossinHonseBlock „York t Toronto
D POTTINGElt,
Chief Superintendent.
Railway Office,Moncton,
J an la t 91
and; also or shpments of m ein
intended for tne European mar;
ay be obtained and information
'its); also freight and pesseuger
ionto
HE EXETER TIMES.
spnblisned every Thursday morn naaat
TI IVIES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
gain -street ,nearly opposite Fitton's Jewelery
Store,Exeter,ontaby John White di sons,Pro-
prietors.
naTns or ADVESTBIZIO
*rstinsertion, per ......... 10 cents
subseeneo tinsertion ,per ............. cents,
&insure insertion, advertisement s ehould
is sent in notlater than Wednesday morning
0=3'08 PRINTING DEP ARTMENT is ono
DI the largest and best equipped in the County
Huron41 I work entrusted 10 111 will receive
air prontu t tteution:
4(4
• Decsions Regarding News-
papers.
' tAnynerronwho takes a paper regularly fr om
the est -office, wluither directed in his name or
• ano oraeor whether he has subscribed or not
a is responsible for payment.
2 If a pore orders hie lamer discontinued
ho must pay ail arrears or the publisher may
:lend it until the payment is made,
Ws then collect the whole amount, whether
thessapee is takenfrom the office or not.
3 Es suits for subscriptions, the suit may be
0, instituted in the place where the paper is pub
lishecl, although the subscriber may reside
hundreds of miles away.
4 The essurta have decided that refusing to
take iseveagapers or perioaicals from the post -
oilier., or Asfuovhig and leaving them uncalled
or is Wave fessio evldence of inteMannal trend
0.
appearance of their combss, which should‘ be
bright and, red. Where the comb has a on.,
sickly color, and a kind of flattened appetxr-
ance, no amount of feeding cat care will foA,ti
the laying of eggs as long as these, condi,-
tions exist. Again the legs should be smooth
and clean and free from scales or the ap-
pearance of spurs, both of which indicate
that the hen has passed the laying age. The
cock should be brought out of a different
flock and be as purely bred as possible.
The principal causes of failure in egg pro-
duction are believed. to be : First, keeping
hens that are too old; second, breeding in
and in, or a failure to introduce new blood
from sources entirely outside of one's flock,
and third, keeping the flock too long iu the
same rune,
Tho two nest important times ot the year
when changes hi the animal system* make
feedingan important and critical work are
the Spring and Fall. In the first the ani trials
are changed from dry feed to fresh grass
And any sudden ohange will produce suffer-
ing or disease in the systems. Another
Change is in the fall, when they are taken
from the pastures and the open fields to the
dry Winter fodder and to enelosed stables.
Any sudden radical cliange is bad for the
;dock, and in accustoming them to the new
Winter life, thisshould be borne in mind.
The animals should have the run of the
pastures when their own health, and. not
the good of the grass lands, is considered,
until late in the fall. Late pasturing is
generally injurious to the pastures, but this
can be overreached by selectingsome grassy
field that is going to be plowed up next
Spring for corn. Turn the stock into this
field, and they can do no harm. Letthem
remain out through November, and often up
to Christmas time, keeping thorn in only
daring excessively cold, days. The animals
do not get much nourishment from these late
pastures, but nature gradually limits their
amount, so that they can be taken from
green food to dry fodder. As the food grows
less plentiful in the grass fields, increase the
amount of dry fodder given to them in the
atablee. The exerciee which the stook gets
in the Fall of the year by being turned loose
in the pasture fields is also quite an item for
consideration. It keeps their systems in
good condition and makes them ready for
standing the enervating influences of con-
finement duringthe wintry days.
Night sheltering, however, should be be-
gun very early, for the nights of the Fail
are always inclined to be so cold as to tax
the strength of the animals. As soon as
they are given night shelter a little dry
feed shouldbe given to them morning and
saight. This can be increased very gradu-
a"-k-ae until the pastures yield very little
grass. Then a good amount ot dry food
must bo fed to them. They will eat very
little dry food so long as the grass is of any
length and sweetness. Their own dealt for
dry fodder will regulate the matter largely,
for they will come to the stables at night
hungry if the grass haanotbeen sufficient to
nourish their systems. The dry fodder
should be out, and bran or grain mixedwith
it to make it more palatable. It is only by
such -gradual intelligent transformations
from green to dry fodder that the health of
the stock can he preserved. There is no
strain brought upon their systems, uor any
sudden change. Tho Winter health of the
stock depends so muoh upon the early con-
dition of the animal when first sheltered in
the Fall that this practice ought to be uni-
versally adopted.
Feeding for a Object.
We must have an object in view when we
feed cows, and should keep that object
steadily in view. If we make butter our
choice of feed -should include those kinds
best adapted to the purpose ; if for milk,
then we should feed those feeding stuffs that
produce the greatest yield of milk. While
some cows will give a good yield of milk,
says the Stockman, if fed on ahnost any kind
of feed that is soand and palatable, their
yield can be improved iu both quantity and
quality if feed better adapted to the making
of milk be given. For instance, some COWS
fed on corn -meal and hay will do well in
milk -giving; substitute some linseed meal,
bran or middlings in place of part of the
coru-meal and the yield of mill: will be in.
creased. If we are feeding for butter and
the cows are fed a grain ration of bran alone,
then the addition of corn -meal or cotton-
seed meal will pay well in the increased
richness of the milk, The price of different
kinds of feed must always be taken into
consideration ; it may pay better to feed a
ration stet quite -so good for the purpose we
are feeding for as some other more expensive
one, but the difference in cost may be so
muoh in favor of the cheaper one that the
feeding o! it will be the proper thing to do.
We earl almost always make up a ration
that will answer our purpose and yet not
have it too costly. A small quantity of a
certain high priced feed added to another at
a lower price may make the latter of much
more value than if fed &one. Always keep-
ing in mind our object in feeding, and
watching the markets, we can bay to better
advantage than if we merely buy the oheap.
est feed we can get without regard to its
adaptability to our purpose in feeding. Ex-
perience, !minded an experiments, will seers
teach us how to feed proiltably.—Parsz
Fisk/ and Stockman.
E. P. SMITIL
. With the Dairy Conunission,
Prof. Robertson, who has been visiting the
butter making factories established hi con-
nection with the dairy commissioner's work.
ing in Oxford County, says that the cheese
factories have been altered and equipped for
the manufacture of butter during the winter.
The farmers of the district are according a
most enthusiastic support to the project at
Mt. Elgin, where T. J. Dillon and J. W.
Hunt of the dairy comtnissioner's staff are
in charge, and twenty farmers furnish over
7,000 pounds of milk daily. The milk is
run through an improved centrifugal cream
separator, and the skim milk is immediate-
ly delivered to the farmers to be carried
home in the same cans. At Woodstock the
cream -gathering plan has been adopted to es-
tablish acomparison between two methods of
guidance in future years. About 250 pounds
of butter were made at the Woodstock cream-
ery on the day it,was visited. The quality
of butter in both cases is pronounced by the
Dairy commission as excellent. It will be
shipped to the British market, and Mr.
Robertson confidentlyaffirms that it will sell
as high as the finest Danish butter.
He considers the poSsibility of developing a
trade in thefresh made creamery butter
that may equal in excess our great cheese
trade is an active one for all who are seek.
ing to promote a better condition of affairs in
agriculture. The altering of cheese factor-
ies into creameries for manufacturing butter
of uniform excellence during the winter pro-
mises to gain for our butter a reputation and
trade quite equal to that which has been
won in cheese.
Prof. Robertson was the guest of the New
York State Dairymen's Association early in
the week at their annual convention held at
Owego, N. Y. The new venture of winter
butter making may win for us a similar ac-
knowledgment in that article of product. --
Empire.
Why Hens do not La.
From the direction given in poultry Jour -
mils and by manufacturers of specifics for
egg production; many persons start out with
the confident expectation of uninterrupted
success in raising chickens and eggs, to find
at last that the business has for some reason
become unprofitable.
In purchasing hens for laying, particalar
attention should bo given to the color and
...SOONG ICEPERGS,
ATraveuer Talks very Pleasantly Oriffis'
Alaskan Trip,
Dr. Parker, a Boston, who has just re-
turned from a trip to Britieh Columbia and
Alaska, gives the following account of his
journey. Says the Doctor: Think of sitting
down to a breakfast of juicy stakeesand roll
in the month of .August with icebergs all
around you Impossible as this May seem
to Le, 1)r. M. G. Parker 'says that be ate
several morning Meals under those dream
-
stances this sununer, and ,heartily filtijOyed
himself, too. That was in Alaskan waters,
That territory was purchased by the United
States in 1867 from Russia t for the suin of
S7,500,000. In some sections of the States
there is a great deal of talk over the pur-
chase even to this day. When the doctor
left Lowell in the middle of July he went
to New York, -where he was joined by Mr.
John R. Reed, of Charleston„ S. C. and
the two sailed up the Hudson river, across
Lake Champlain, thence up the St. Law-
rence, across Lakes Huron and Superior,
where at Port Arthur they took the cars and
after a pleasant journey over the conti-
nent and through the Rockies, reached
Vancouver, in which city he found con-
siderable enterprise, and a place of great
future promise. A week was spent in the
cities around Puget Sound and then they
took passage on tho steamer Queen at
Tacornalor the Alaska trip. Dr. Parker then
says of the journey : The steamer that was
to be our hotel for the next 14 days was a
strongly built craft, about 500 feet long and
with a cabin capacity of 250 passengers,
We were a merry party from all parts of the
country, warmly clad and ready for any-
thing. We were soon steaming out on the
Gulf of Georgia, and after a delightful voy-
age arrived at the first place in Alaska ter-
ritory, Fort Ton€as. As we go up the
Clarence Strait to Fort Wrangle, the seen
-
cry begins to assume a grandeur that keeps
us on dock the greater part of the time.
From Fort Wrangle we go to Juneau, and
land opposite at Douglas island, where in
the Treadwell gold mine we see the largest
stamp mill in the world. And now as we go
further north wo begin to pass the glaciers,
great fields of ice coming slowly but surely
from the mountains. At Tnku glacier we
obtain a supply a ice for the steamer.
Finally we arrive at the Muir gla,cier, which
is an abrupt wall of ice a mile and a quarter
wide, 300 feet above the water and 2,000
feet beneath the surface ; with white
munacled top from long exposure to
the sun, but of a deep, brilliant blue,
where the last iceberg has broken off.
This process is constantly going on. Ice
falls on an average every live minutes,
The straits aro now full of icebergs,
some of them the size of a house, others
half a mile in extent. Their colors aro
brilliant in the extreme. On one side they
are from blue to white, on another emer-
ald green to white, while a ray of the sun
comiug through another icy prim shows
all the colors ot the rainbow. The steamer
works its way cautiously among them, fore.
ing a passage where none is clear, for the
hist boat was obliged to tnrn back at this
point. Although we are surrounded by ice
the thermometer does not register below 35
degrees and the water, shelteged by the
mountains, is as smooth as glass. The sun,
too, is very kind at this season of the
year, for it shines from 3 o'clock in the
morning until 9 o'clock at night. The vege-
tation is worthy of notice. We have al-
ways been led to suppose that in Alaska
there is plenty of moss and a few stunted
trees. This is true in the mountains but in
the valleys everything grows luxuriantly.
The trees grow to a height of 200 feet, clover
leaves are the size of our oak leaves, and
berries are five times their usual size. I
have also gathered flowers on the top of a
glacier, when they have found sand enough
in which to grow. As we travelled north
we found the bays full of uhales, seals and
bay salmon. The Indians have an ingeni-
ous way of shooting a seal. They tie their
oanoe to a detached piece of iceberg, and
thus concealed push it near enough to
the animal to be able to hit it. At
Fort Simpson we found an Indian
band that played God Save the Queen
and Hail Columbia, and at Shiro, we
attended a full dress bali in the town hall.
In Glacier Bay we were treated to a mirage
twenty miles in extent. Chilcat was the
point farthest north that we reached, and
here we found the natives living on fish, ber-
ries and sea moss. We returned south by a
different route, stopping et Fort Wrangle,
where we had previously left Sir Richard
Musgrave hunting bears. We found bini 00
the lookout for the steamer, and when we
asked him if he had any hick, he pointed to
four heavy skins. There is not one of us
who will ever forget that pleasant trip. It
was one every person anxious to see the
grandest scenery of the continent, that along
the line of the Canadian Pacific Railway
through the Rockies, should take This
route is certain to become a veiy popular
one with tourists and the travelling public
generally.
Practical Hints to Dairymen.
An open Winter is a blessing to cows if
their owners are slack eueugh to boa',: open
:stables.
Some of the shipping stations are
getting so much milk that they have a sur-
plus, which they are working up into cheese.
Many village people who buy their milk
slur the Manila, cow, but by those who have
tried her, especially those who have large
farnihes of children, she is pronounced a
decided success.
When we have cheap cattle-toocl, a good
grade of cows, and high prices for dairy pro-
ducts, dairymen can lay up money for a
rainy day. These conditions largely exist
at this period, and those who have to buy
butter, cheese and milk should not begrudge
dairymen their good luck, for it is richly
merited through past seasons of low prices.
Which is better, to take your milk to a
creamery whose butter sells for 30 cents per
pound and above, or to manufacture it at
borne and get 25 cents therefor? If you
think best to make the butter at home, why
not adopt the creamery plan and get the
creamery price?
Liston attentively to all that you hear in
the institutes this Winter in regard to
dairying. If you wish to reject any of the
sentiments as unpractical, that is your
privilege, but the bulk of the institute talk
is golden grain that you cannot afford to
throw away.
Ordinary cows do not yield butter in
Winter that has a natural golden huo, deep
enough to satisfy the buyer's eye, so it is
expedient that a little commercial color be
added to the cream.
The amount of work entailed through the
Winter care of cows depends on how you
begin in the Fall. If you do not make a
thorough preparation, and then carry out an
organized plan, you will find the caro of
cows very laborious and the result unsatis-
factory.
Have the stable warm, keep the caws
bedded from the start, and clean the drop-
ping from the stable at least once a day, and
you have reduced the time to be afterwards
spent in keeping the animals clean and com-
fortable to a minimum. There is always
less real work about taking care of mileh
animals properly than there is in the neg-
lectful, slovenly way, whore a general dig-
ging out becomes imperative after a length
of time.
During this open Winter weather do not
commit the mistake of turning your
meadows into a barnyard for the cattle.
Thousands of dairymen in the past have
been making just such grave mistakes, and
what is worse they are still continuing in
the error. The grass crop of 1892 will suf-
fer thereby, and the Winter milk -flow of
this present season will be curtailed by the
bad practice. Then why continue a custom
so replete with damage to the dairy in
terests?
if you use a tbertnometer in the house to
gage the temperature of the livingnoom by
why not hang one in the cow stable and
give it a casual glance now and then? The
litt'e quick silver tube would give you some
telling points on the comfortable or un-
comfortable condition of the stable.
Don't drive the cows out two or three
times a day to drink ice-cold water. They
need the water, but its freezing tempera-
ture and their exposure to Winter blasts is
contrary to their comfort and profit. This
applies with great force to cowsthat are in
milk at this period of the year. If you
seek profit from Winter dairying give your
cows all of the water they will drink, at a
temperature as far above freezing, but be-
low 70 °, as you can secure. Water that
can be made to run into the warm stable
answers the purpose admirably. This gen.
erally eau be done with less e pense and
trouble than by artificial heating.
Don't trust an inexperienced hand to take
care of your dairy, because it is Winter,
and you can get his help by giving him his
board. It wouldn't be any wonder if it
would be the most costly board -bill in the
end that you ever paid.—[Gaonsa E. N sv-
Kals in American Cultivator.
Sioinceyesighetl !
If an S, and an I, and an 0, and U,
With -an X at the end, spell Su;
And au E, and a Y, and an E apell I,
Pray, what is a speller to do ?
Then, if also an S, and an I, and a G,
And an H, E, I), spell cide,
There's nothing much left for a speller to do
But to go and commit siouxeyesighed.
--Paearson's Weekly, kindness of Isidor
Furst, N. Y. City.
,as
Ho Por the Desert.
Oh, ho for the wild, woolly West
Ye tender, conic forth and invest ;
Come fly up the flume
In the real-estate boom
Among the financially blest
Ob, ho for this woolly, wild land
Of the lava -beds, desert, and sand,
Where the ox lies tark,
And the coyotes bark,
And the horse is too small for his brand 1
The bragesman rules over the train,
The sage -bush is lord of the plain,
The prairie -dog kneels
On the back of his heels,
Still patiently praying for ram.
So balmy and mild is the air
That the redskin needs only to wear
A cool tomahawk,
And a handy scalp -lock,
With a feather or two in his hair.
Then ho for the desert so blest,
In the heart of the wooly, wild West,
Where all things consume
With perennial boom --
Ye tender, come forth and invest 1
(The Century
Mrs. Brown —" It's foolish for your father
to sleep during the sermon." Little Johnie
- "No, it ain't, rria. It's only toolish fcr
him to wake up when the basket is going
around."
An electric device for clearing a track of
obstructions is among the newese ideas. It
consists of a triangular steel folding frame,
over which a net is stretched. This is plac-
ed on the front of a locomotive, and can be
opened at will, catching the obstruction
upon it. An additional arrangement is a
scoop to drop on the track. rhe recent
tests were very satisfactory.
The amount of the Paris fnnd over which
the two Irish factions are fighting is 3173,-
000. It was subscribed mostly by the Irish
of America in aid of the home -rule move-
ment and for the support of evicted tenants.
It was deposited with the Monroes in Paris
by the trustees of the Irish Parliamentary
party—Parnell, Biggar, and McCarthy. Mc-
Carthy is the only surviving trustee. Be
has sued for the funds, pledging himself to
devote them to the use of the Irish evicted
tenants. Mrs. Parnell has sued for them as
heir-at-law of Mr. Parnell, In her suit she
has employed an attorney attached to the
British Embassy at Paris, and this has
aroused the ire of the Irish ationalists, who
are, moreover, desirous that the money
shall be obtained for the evicted tenants.
All, around it is ari ugly mess.
It will be noticed hpw tenaciously our
contemporary clings to the hope of better
tinsee. ' But the trust is illusive, for, unfor-
tunately, even a revival in ship -building
would be but a drop in the buck -et, im-
plying as it would, a growth of
imports rather than of exports. If it were
English geode that were being carried in
English ships all would be well, but it is
foreign goods shipped outward through
English houses and foreign goods brought
inward from foreign houses. ' If the mother
country could retain its status as the world's
distributing mart all might yet be fairly
well, but every year, lierman shipping in-
terests, for instance, are growing, signifying,
all too plainly that in the time to "mimes
European goods will be carried in European
bottomand American goods in American
'bottoms.' And, then, what? If 'British
statesmen continue to wilfully shut thoi:
eyes to the inevitable, the Future will all
too plairily answer for itself.
•
Ten
Reasons
For the Wonderful $uccest;
of Hood's Sarsaparillal
the Most Popular and
Most Extensively Sold
Medicine in America.
Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses great
I medicinal merit, which it positively
demonstrates when fairly tried,
2 It is most economical, being the
only medicine of which 4‘ zoo
Doses (Inc Dollar" can truly be sake
3It is prepared by a Combinatior2
Proportion and Process Peculiar to
Itself, unknown to other preparations,.
and by which all the medicinal value of
the various ingredients is secured.
4It effects remarkable cures where
other medicines have utterly failed
to do any good whatever.
5 It is a modern medicine, originated
by experienced pharmacists, and
still carefully prepared under their per-
sonal supervision.
6 It is clean, clear and beautiful in
appearance, pleasant to take, and
always of equal strength.
my It has proven itself to be positively
1 the best remedy for scrofula and all
blood disorders, and the best tonic for
that tired feeling, loss of appetite and
general debility.
0 It is unequalled for curing dyspepsia,
Cgo sick headache, biliousness, catarrh,
rheumatism and all diseases of the kid-
neys and liver.
It has a good name at home, there
rd being more of Hood's Sarsaparilla
sold in Lowell, Mass., where it is made,
than of all other sarsaparillas and blood
purifiers combined.
n Its advertising is unique, original,
11 honest, and thoroughly backed up
by the medicine itself.
A Point for You.
If you want a blood purifier or
strengthening medicine, you should get
the best. Ask for Hood's Sarsaparilla,
and insist upon having it. Do not let
any argument or persuasion influence
you to buy what you do not want. Be
sure to get the ideal medicine,
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $I; six for 05: Prepared only
by 0.2. 310013 & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
100 Doses One Dollar
N'ever broken,
—Kabo. The "bones" in the
B. & C. corset are made of it
—warranted for a year, too.
It's a corset you can wear
a few weeks, and then get
your money back if it doesn't
suit.
But it's pretty sure to suit
—else it wouldn't be sold so.
For sale by J. A. Stewart, Exeter.
ERRORS OF YOUTH. Nervone De-
-1 Ity, Seminal Losses and Premature Decay,
and permanently cured b'
30es not nterfero with. torusna occupation
nct fully resteres lost vigor and insureeverfect
10.n11ood, Price. 03 per boa.
Solo Proprietor, H. SeBorTEtD, Bobo.
aid's Drug Store, 11w STREET, TORONTO.
pore
UW
PROM Stomach and Liver ,xerange-
A. ments--Dyspepsta, Bilious' assa, Sieles
Headache, and Constipation—fireetsafe
and certain relief in
Ayer's Pills. In all
cases whena ca-
thartic is imeded,
these its are recom-
snended by leading
physicians.
Dr. T. E. 'Hastings,
of Baltimore, says:
"Ayer's Pilis are the
best cathartic and
aperient within the
reach of my profes-
sion."
Dr. John W. Brown, of Oceans, W.
Va., writes: "I have prescribed Ayer's
Pills in ray practiee, and find them ex-
cellent. I urge their general use in
families."
"For a number of years 1 was afflicted
with biliousness which almost destroyed
my health. 1 tried various remedies,
but nothing afforded me arly relief until
I began to take .Ayer's villa."—G. S.
Wanderlicla, &ranters, Pa.
" I have used Ayer's Pills for the past
thirty years, and am satisfied I should
not be alive to -day if it had not been
for them. They cured me of dyspepsia
when all other remedies failed, and their
occasional use has kept me in a healthy
condition ever since."— T. P. Brown,
Chester, Pa,
"Having been subject, for years, to
constipation, 'without being able to find
much relief, I at last tried Ayer's Pills,
and deem it both a duty and a pleasure
to testify that 1 have derived great ben-
efit from their use, For over two years
past I have taken one of these Pills
everynight before retiring. I would not
willingly be without them." ---G. W.
Bowmau, 26 East Main et., Carlisle, Pa.
"Ayer's Pills have been used in my
family upwards of twenty years, and
have completely verified all that is
claimed for them. In atta.eks of piles,
from which I suffered inany years, they
afforded me greater relief than any rued -
kiwi I ever tried."—Thomas F. Adams,
/lolly Springs, Texas,
Ayer's Pills,
PREPADED BY
Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa.
0010 by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine.
CENTRAL
Drug Store
FANSON'S BLOCK.
A full stock of all kinds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on.
hand. Win an's
Condition
the.1est
in the mark-
et and always
resh. Family recip-
ees carefully prepared at
Central Drug Store Exeter
Cr LUTZ.
SCIL44111kN--1511.Ete°CEtil'Sor
A
A pamphlet of information and ab -
street of the IATIVITMORillgUOTIto
Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade
Warts. Cur.rghts, sena 16rea.
Adams U & .
361 Iireadway,
New York.
54
DuRpOCK:
•VIP LLS
A SURE CURE
Tort BILIOUSN ESE, CONSTIPATION,
INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS, SICK
HEADACHE, AND DISEASES Ott THC
STOMACH, LIVER AN D BOWELS.
TREY ARE MILD,THOFIOUGH AND PROMPT
IN ACTION, AND FORM A VALUABLE AID
TO BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS IN THE
TREATMENT AND CURE OF CHRONIC
AND °ESTIMATE DISEASES.
SHIL011'S
CONSUMPTION
CURE.
The success of this Great Cougli Cure is
without a parallel in the history of xrsedicine.
All druggists are authorized to sell it az a pos-
itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can suc-
cessfully stand. That it may become fellOWB,
the Proprietors, at an enormous expense 510
placing a Sample Bottle Free into every Line
in the United States and Canada. If ybu have
a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis's use 11,
it will cure you. If year child has Iskia Croup,
or Whooping Cougla use it promptly, end relief •' •
is sere. If you dread that insidious diseeaa -
Consumption, use it. Ask yoneDreggist for •
SHILOH'S CURE, Price /0 CtS, 5o tte: and
$1.00. If your Lungs are sore or Zack lame,
use Shilola'!... ??orous Flask; Pricti-U ets,,
00.4 a aaataasa...... ast . ases easaaa,