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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-4-12, Page 2ADOET YOUR. $I'IA. TheMethod, or Its P rodocilea. by 'fire Wenn and *Mown, * r yarns may bo divided into two t3fstinct ()lasses according tQ their R#,ethod of production—(1) reeled yarns; (2)oa.rdad yarns/. , .hese againman b sub - divided iota three class according to ;the processes they pass through atter the reeling operation. They are usually produced from the cocoon of thef m •mon silkworm, which is the larva o. the moth Bombyx mori, This was originally an inhabitant of China, but has been do- xiiestieated in Europe, and now large. quantities of COCOQns are produced in France, Italy, and the southern parts of Europe. China also exports a large amount of &ilk cocoons to Europe, as ileo does In- dia, but not in such large quantities as China. The silk math, before arriv- ing at maturity, passes through four stages, termed respectively the ovum or egg, the larva or caterpillar, the pupa or chrysalis, and the imago or moth, it also moults its shin five times der- ing the larval stage. The egg is round and has a yellow color, but when the time for hatehing is near—if the egg is kept under suitable conditions—it be comes a very dark grey, and a miero'• ecopie appearance shows the worm coil- ed up in the egg. After a time the worm comes forth, and commouces to eat the shell of the egg which enclosed it. It is then fed by the silkworm rearer on the leaves of the mulberry (Mortis alba), and rapidly increases in size until the fifth to the seventh day of its exists out of completely stet when it Gree P y ease, w 1?s its skin, and at once commences eating ravenously until it reaches a certain size, It then changes its skin again, eats ravenously, and changes its skin again, and so on—repeating these operations five times. The mouth contains two sets of jaws, and between than an underlip, which can completely close it. At the end of this Hp there is a small projection pierced with a minute hole, and through this the silk fibres issue. The silkworm con-meueea spinning by emitting a single drop of liquid silk, ;which it places on the nearest object ; it then moves its head away and draws the drop of silk into a very fine thread. The thread is then pressed against the next projection, to which it immediately adheres on account of its gummy nature. The first threads are for the purpose of fixing the cocoon, and are termed the t0 floss or refuse silk," and this refuse silk is made until there is only a small oval space, about three-quarters of an inch to an inch long, remaining in the centre of the mass. The worm then commences to cocoon proper by placing threads of silk on the inside of this in coils, each coil represeutiug a figure of 8. This inner coating is very compact on account of the fineness and gummy nature of the threads, due to the exhaus- tion of the silkworm from want of food during the spinning operation. The largest and best cocoons are re- served for breeding purposes; the ilos or refuse silk is torn off the remainder, and the chrysalides (or pupae) in them are killed, in order to prevent the piercing of the cocoons by the moths. At the completion of the cocoon, the en- closed silkworm, if undisturbed, changes into a chrysalis, and after a time the skin of the chrysalis splits and the silk moth . crawls out. The moth, after issuing from the chrysalis, discharges from two glands in its head a small quantity of an alkaline liquid, which dissolves the sericin, or silk glue, which causes the silk fibres in the cocoon to adhere to each other. The silk threads are thus loosened — not broken as was at one time popularly supposed—and the moth is able to push itself through without any of the threads being injured. ju rearerehe cocoons are arranged by in rows, so that the moth after its exit may cling to the opposite cocoon and dry its wings. The moth is of a creamy white color. The first operation the cocoons undergo after the killing of the enclosed chrysalides is the sorting. This consists in removing double, soiled and pierced cocoons, and separating the cocoons of different color. The double and soiled •cocoons—a e., the waste cocoons—are reserved for the production of carded yarns. The cocoons after being sorted are boiled with water in the cop- per basin of the reeling machine in order to soften the gum. Tho water is then allowed to cool, several loose fibres from each cocoon caught by a brush of small twigs, and shaken until one single thread from each cocoon has been obtained. Five or six of these threads are put to- gether to form a staple, and two of the staples are twisted together, untwisted, and made into two separate hanks. This twisting together tends to make the thread smooth and round. Eleven to twelve pounds of cocoons yield one pound of these reeled hanks, which are ( made up of what is termed raw silk." The method of silk spinning was first introduced into England by Sir Thomas Lombe, who visited Italy in order to ob- tain the requisite information. It is stated that the Italians were so much annoyed concerning the partial loss of their trade that they sent agents to Eng- land to poison him. The silk from the reeled hanks may be spun into three qualities, as previously stated—viz., tram, organzine and sin- gles. 'The tram is prepared by twisting two or three threads together, and is used for weft in the best and most ex- pensive silk fabrics. Organzine is pro- duced by twisting together a number of singles in an opposite direction to that in which the singles are twisted, and is need for warp in the best silk fabrics. Singles, or sewing silks, are prepared by twisting one of the reeled threads, in order to give it strength and firmness. Sewing silks are, •however, at present usually made from carded yarns. DIVOIU)L UeINNOKE PARTIES. Remarkable Useful leayelopmeutc antliSease aetoundi seg SU,pabstleas. (Loudon Trntia,) have Divore6 dinner parties in Paris o • been frequent this season. ., y (theper- sons scarda of . they invitation mention that sons to whom. they are addressed) are asked to celebrate the happy liberation of the person sending them from anun- suitable marriage. A regular formula bas sprung up which may be !safely adopted. It is not thought good t for a man who has come out of time Divorce Court with the honors of war to call his friends of both sexes tore- joice with him on the event, All that is tolerated is a private dinner. But ladies may rejoice as much as they please. The most straitlaced and ortho- dox persons see no harm in going to a divorce dinner if the inviting lady men- tions in a footnote of the card that she is suing for a religious divorce in Rome, send has every reason to suspect that her suit will succeed. This only means that she does not object, for respectability's sake, to pay 60,000 franca to the Congre- gation of Rites. 'The Court of Rome allows thirteen pleas for divorce. The most usual one now for women of rank and fortune to plead is not having really consented to be married in the church. Lady Mary Hamilton urged this plea when she wanted to get rid. of the Prince of Monaco and marry Count Festetics. The divorcee now resumes her family name, and image will soon authorise her in borrowing her family title. Thus the ai-devout Comtease Fleury, daughter-in-law of Gen. Fleurythe Horse, the late calls herself master herself Baroness Deslandes, her father having been a financial baron. She gave a dinner the other day to celebrate her ad h deliverance from Comte Fleury, and oat it f thethe so-called chede ese de (daughter bine, a divorcee who has married again), the Princesse Janne Bonaparte, and different artists and authors. The Bar- oness was educated with the late Queen Mercedes at the Convent of the Assump- tion. She goes in the Art -liberty the soul of Art), and having applied to Rome for a religious divorce, does not intend to break with the church. The divorce law le killing society. No woman with a husband worth keeping can now endure the idea of letting an- other person of her sex who is at all at- tractive speak to him. Enterprising and dowerless girls marry -any oae at all who can introduce them to rich wen from among whom they can, after skil- ful management and intrigue, secure husbands. A girl with a great fortune is pretty certain after marriage to get discontented with her matrimonial lot, and to look out for some one who snits her fancy better. There can be no peace or quietness ander such circumstances. The divorce eat is often preceded by an engagement. Curiously enough, French widows are not inclined to marry a see- ond time ; but the divorcee is nearly al- ways in haste to remarry. When child- ren aro young they do not object to this. The daughter of M. Barbe, the Minister who received 500,000 francs from the Panama Company, repudiated her hus- band to take another. When her little son heard of her second engagement, he clapped hie hands for joy, and cried, " How delightful I I shall now have two papas instead of one to bring me cakes and to take me to the circus I" Given the French character, divorce made easy seems to me an evil. $*OR MASH 1l"it04REIIII. The U.S. Statistician en This '.hems clew of telae renames AM, The Bureau of i dueation at Washing - too has done a great piece of work' in the, monograph which has just been sent out fromthe Government grinting office on „ Short Baud Instruction and Prac- tice,,, says the Boston Herald. In 1884 it published a circular of information on the teaching, practice and literature of shorthand. Twenty thousand copies were distributed, and another edition of equal size has been exhausted, The pre- sent work furnishes not only an account of shorthand in foreign countries and in the United States, but nearly the full statistics of instruction from 1889 up to the summer of 1891 in this country, with au account of the extent to which steno- graphers have been employed in courts in legal decisions had in other such ser- vices. There are thousands of short- hand aocieties in Germany, France and England and in this country, whose work is to disseminate a knowledge of the art, and the introduction of short- hand into the public schools is to be ono of the next steps iu secondary education. The typewriter is next to shorthand as a labor-saving instrument, and the short- hand systems and the principal type- writing machines have already wrought a revolution not only in the courts, but in business offices, in the writing done for newspapers, and in every department of life where writing is indispensable. Until speed can be reached on the type- writer equal to that which can be at- tained by expert stenographers, steno- graphy will take the load as a system by which the spoken word can be taken down exactly as it is uttered and made to serve the purpose for which it is de- signed. It is such an aid in all sorts of business transactions that we could no more go back to the old habits than we could 'go back to the stage coaches which fifty years ago conveyed our grandfathers across the Country. In this country the number of persons re- ceiving instructions in shorthand from July lst, 1889, to Juno 30th, 1890, was 57,375, and of this nuinber 23,325 were males and 26,005 females. All these were taught in schools and classes,. and out of the whole number 7,228 were instructed by mail. In 229 schools and classes, in which shorthand was introduced during the scholastic year ending June 30th, 1891, the number of persons taught orally was 4,150, which, with those in- structed by mail, made a grand total of 4,738. Of those taught orally 2,474 were males, and 1,658 females. This is as near a correct statement of statistics as Mr. Rockwell has been able to arrive at, and it shows the vast extent and use of shorthand instruction in this eoun- try in all the departments of life. Stenography has come to stay, with it, and the two, combined with the tele- graph and telephone, have been greatly instrumental in accelerating the pro- gress of ideas and facilitating the methods of business and the production of literature. Days of Gunpowder Numbered. It begins to look as if the days of gun- powder as a charge for the guns in the British navy were cumbered. Recent ex- periments just concluded at the govern- ment proofbuts, Woolwich, appear to prove the decided superiority of cordite, A 6 inch quick firing gun was loaded . with 29 pounds 12 ounces of the ordinary black gunpowder and yielded a velocity of 1,890 feet per second, with a pressure strain on the gun of 15 tons per square cinch. The same guns was charged with L4 pounds 3 ounces of cordite and gave a velocity of 2,274 feet per 'ilecond and a pressure of 15.2 tons. More important still, after 250 rounds had been fired there were no signs of erosion. The new substance is manufactured at the Government powder mills, Waltham Abbey, and contains 56 per cent nitro- glycerine, 87 of guncotton and 5 of min- eral jelly. The velocity of the shot along the bore of the 6 inch gun was 'cnfeulated to the millionth of a' second from the first moment of being set in ;motion. Minute as this may appear, Lieu - ;tenant B, Watkin, IL A., has invented ;an instrument whieh, it ie said, will 1mtasure fractions of time to the nine - a illionth part of a seeend. ' Limed, mitts sold in Chicago at a Higher rate than in New York,$10,000 'per square foot, as against $0,500, A quarter el an acre be the heart of the town is worth $1,250,000, 1,250,000, NATURAL WAN. Something Much Lure It Found on the Paddle Coast. The probability is announced of quan- tities of natural wax being obtainable along the coast from the Columbia River to Puget Sound. The material is known as mineral wax, native paraffin, ozoker- ite, or ozocerite, a hydro -carbon com- pound—hydrogen 15 per cent, and carbon 85 per cent. variable—and is supposed to be derived from bituminous and lig- nite coal formation by infiltration and crystallization.; generally found in the neighborhood of coal and lignite beds and in the bitnminona clays or shales. In consistency and translueency it is a resinous wax, with structure sometimes foliated ; eolor brown or yellowish by transmitted light ; a leek green by reflected light; odor aromatie, and hav- ing the characteristics and feeling of beeswax that has been lying for some timein water. It is mined in variable quantities in Germany, Austria, Turkey and England, associated with the soft coal and lig- nite beds ; in Galicia alone about 80,- 000 tons have been mined since its die- oovery there some 85 years ago, and the whole product of the United States in 1890 is estimated at about 850,000 pounds. It has been used successfully, especially in Europe, for the manufac- ture of candles, and, by refining in place of beeswax and paraffin, and ie also being introduced as an electrical insulator. AtttllltlISCM, A$ISeport arena D ulutil Bays It Will. Be Cbeau, The patent office authorities cent to Duluth a ebemical expert on an appli^ cation for a patent for a new preceec of obtaining aluminum from its oxide, says the NewYork Sun, The p r. r process; i n- eludes chemnieal combination" heretofore supposed to be imposaible, and on this ground the application for a patent was rejected, the method being termed in- operative. Three entirely satisfactory tests were made by the Government ebon><ist, and he has returned to Washing- ton. A copy of his report to the patent of nee was received here. Alter de- tailing the tests as made by himself he says that the process is operative, that it appears to be almost perfect in its results in obtaining the entire aluminum value of the oxide. Tho discoverer of this process and his Duluth associates say they can produce pure aluminum at a price considerably below that of any of the electrical pro- comes, and cheaper, bulk for bulk, than copper. Experimento have been under way here, where the clay is rich in aluminum, for much over a year, looking to the perfection of the process. It was first discovered by a German chemist with friends in this city. CANDLE POWER OE SEARCH LIGHTS. New Discoveries by a Noted Wrench Elec- trician. In La Lumiere Electrique Mr. Guil- bert discusses a recent article in which it was claimed that the intensity re- mained constant up to a certain dis- tance, after which it varied according to the loss of the inverse squares; he claims that this is an error, and that the intensity diminishes continuously ; there is no interest attached to the intensity at small distances, as such apparatus are used only for great distances ; he defines the term luminous power as the intensity of a naked light, which, when placed at the same point, produces at great distances an intensity equal to that measured ori the axis of the beam of the search light; this definition, he claims, is correct, because such lights are used only at great distances : he states that all the experimental deter - nib ations which . have been made in France and elsewhere were made at dis- tances which were greater than the (minimum) limit of the application of the law of inverse squares, and conse- quently aredis perfect accord with the i definition ; n conclusion, he states that there is really no ground for discaaslon nrr for the proposed reform. How,s Nettle Stin>Gs. Every dweller in Britain, says a writer in Good Words, has probably made acquaintance with the irritating, if not highly poisonous, character of nettle -stings, though they may never have troubled to examine the beautiful little apparatus by which the poison is effectually introdueed to their blood. It is probable that if they were to make microscopical examinations of a nettle - hair just after they had been stung they would scarcely be in the right frame of mind to discover any beauty in its mechanism ; but it exists for all that. The leaf and stem of a nettle are liter- ally clothed with erect hollow hairs. If one of these hairs is viewed under a microscope it will be seen that its free end, after tapering to a very fine degree of slimness, finishes as a little knob ; whilst in the other direction, after grad- ually becoming more robust, it sudden- ly expands into a large bulb correspond- ing with the poison -gland of the adder. The point of the hair is very brittle, and contact with our skin causes the end to snap off, leaving a hollow needle -point which readily pierces our cuticula, and pressing upon the bulb at the other end, the poison is forced throrigh the central channel and inflames our blood. The tender -handed who stroke the nettle.are stung for their pains, because their gen- tleness has only served to break the brit- tle points and render them fit for pierc- ing ; ierc-ing, but the rough -handed break the hairs at their thickest parts, where they are too stout to priek. Minard's Liniment Cares eaetrg in Cows. The addresses of a young man having been declined by a young lady, he paid court to her sister. `! How much you resemble your sister," said he, the even- ing r the same you hove . teal thefirs 1 �' ing' of , haft, the same forehead, and the same eyes—." " And the same 0000 1" she ad- ded quickly. A stranger was seized with et very vio- lent fit in a Chestnut street store a few days ago. The tailor was very much provoked about the occurrence, " I weutdn t kiek, said the policeman. It's the Bret real meal fit I ,have ower seen in your eitabiishment '• 1 say, Tom, my wife got a bar of Wide Awake Soap last week; she says it is the best she ever used for washing. 1 tried it in my bath on Saturday night and 1 tell you it beats them all for a toilet soap. You just try it. Gold Digging. Perhaps it was not an old "Forty- niner" who gave the following descrip- tion, but it was a man who knew the work in question. Like most enthusiasts however he underrates the trial and dis-• appointment involved. It's the prettiest work I ever did.. It's the fascination of it ; when you've strucl% it pretty rich and see your gold right in front pi you, when you're piling it Up, every half-hour df the day, with as nug- get, now and again, as big as a bullet to cheer you. And then when the evening comes and you count it up and find it a hundred odd dollars, just picked out 0' the earth that day, well, there's nothing Like It 1 Then, when you don't strike it, you al- ways think you're going to, next, day ; and it's just as exciting hearing, other men tell in the evening what, they've pulled out, as 'it is counting over your own. Why, I've been 'three or four months at a time without making a. dol- lar and• without a cent in my pocket, but gee-whittaker ! the excitement of it don't give a man time to think how hard up he is ! Creation's Lords and Chewing Gum. Part of the daily duty, of one of the girls in a Park row "' dairy " restaurant consists in removing from the under side of the edges of the, tables the chewing gum which has been stack there, by cus- tomers. It takes the girl a full hour to accomplish this every morning, and she has to work hard and exercise consider- able• strength, as the chewing gum hard- ens and sticks tenaciously to the' tables. She removes it with a knife: In many of the cheaper grade• of restaurants the tables are decorated on their under sides in the same way: It is the men who practise this peculiar habit, and it goes to show, how, many, of them use chewing gum.. Kinks Liniment Cares Diphtheria. IV SEtaot OP if 1111114. tee- A New Wield of Indwitty Onamed to AS1ibr4ag Ilea and efornen. It seems that+, an entirely new field of industry has been opened to the emerge - tie young man that will no doubt be emulated by the clever young woman: This idea emanated: in the " wild and woolly ont a eewible a ®womanespecially knows h ns youog her own sox well. , It is that of wife -hunting: About one hundred young eastern men, who to gone to Perry, 0. T., and differentwn to settle, arid have prospered, find life very lonely without woman's society. 0 course, as everybody knows, there are no women to speak of in these new towns Therefore, the men bave hit upon a novel plan. They have clubbed together and engaged a Mr. Emmet 'Witmer, o Berry, to come east and select wives 'fo 0 t them front e' rev n them, as their r duties p Doming in person. 'Mr. Whitmer has in his possession of thephotographs of over thirty good-looking young men, who are pining for thecharms of matrimony. He } is making a bee -line for the New England 4factory districts, whore his strange mis- sion will cause a flatter in the' quiet, orthodox New England. This is as romantie as what took place during the early days of Seattle's boom4 There was the usual dearth of women, so a ship started from the east laden with a unique freight. There were forty adventurous women on board, and they were all married, within three hours of landing. Theyy are even to -day referred to as the " ship -women," and many of themare living and enjoying the. social triumphs of their accomplished daugh- tars..—•New York World. Good morning, Mrs. Smith ; 1 have just fin- ished my washing, using Wide Awake Soap; it is the best soap 1 ever used, it washed so easily, making the clothes far cleaner than I ever had them before and it lasts twiceaslongas any other soap I ever used ; and lust feel how nice and soft my hands are. Where Carpets Grow Costly. The longer a carpet is used in the coin- ers' department of the United States mint the more it is worth: Wear and tear do not diminish its value. Recent - la a thick woollen carpet that had been on the coiners' floor for seven years was taken up and cremated: The ashes were gathered together, as if 'they were the relics of some departed saint, and by an elaborate refining process the Govern- ment reco5ered gold worth $5,500. The metal 'had been deposited there by the infinitesimal abrasions and disintegra- tions of the yellow metal while. being converted from bullion into coin; The entrance' door of a dwelling has a substantial appearance when a panel of beveled plate glass Is inserted. Tho vestibule door is exceedingly hand- some when composed of polished beveled glass of ornamental design. Delicate tints of muffled glass, with out glass jewels. are frequently used to exoellent effoot in conjunction with beveled plate for the upper portion of drawing room and windows, also for numerous other loca- tions. McCausland & Son, 78 Hing St.. West, Toronto, are the prinolpal workers in such specialties. Matte of City Refuse. The results of a test made in Eng- land show that the steam producing power of tow, and city reuse ie onethirdh that of ordinary coal, says Power:; With specially built destructors all cities could realize from their refuse a large amount of power for electric lighting, or other purposes: It is es- timated that the daily refuse of the town of Leeds, England, would give steam power equal to over 1,500 horse- power for the entire 24 hours.: Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc, Lady (entering shoe store)—I would like to look at some No. 2'e. New Boy+ (antious to show his knowledge): Tes'ln ; Most everyone looks at No. 2's f irtit. THIS COUPON WITH Your name, address and thirty cents en- closed to us will secure a box of Dr. Howard's Electric Pills by return mail. This offer is open but a short time to introduce the Electrie Pills at less than wholesale cost to you. These pills aro the bent and only perfect Blood Builder and Nerve Restorer. 'They cure all weakness, restore men and regulate wo- men, develop children. Regular price 50c. Dr. Howard Medicine Company, Brock- ville, 'Ont. Truly a 'Wonderful Gin. A' new rifle surpassing all the others in every particular is reported in the Figaro to be brought out by a French inventor. It is a magazine gun, ex- tremely light, and can fire one hundred cartridges without overheating the bar- rel. Its recoil is so slight that the sol- dier is never troubled with it, and its hundred cartridges, which are less than half the weight of the same number of cartridges of any other rifle, can be fired without taking the weapon from the shoulder. The effects of its little bullets are said to be terrific. Poi ularit The Y of Milord's Liniment. C. C. RICHARDS & CO.— Ship April lst 120 Gross Minard's Liniment_, value $2,000.00, and draw as usual. Wide Awake Soap is a solid bar of pure soap that will not vanish like snow in hot water. Try it. F. J. BARNES, St. John's. !SEAM 1,11 15 1004. NO?+] In replying to any 9f those adverties4 meats,, please mention, that paper. Uses of Haman Hair. Human hair is in great demand In some of the countries of Europe, and the supply is said to be inadequate. Our Consul in Corea points out that there is plenty and to spare in , the Hermit Kingdom. " The Coreans," he adds, " have remarkably fine heads , of hair, and they put their r combings' to a use that I have never seen elsewhere. A very large number of the saddle -cloths placed ander the packs of their ponies are made of hair woven into coarse mats or bags, and the halters and head -ropes of their animals are largely composed of the bare material.—Westminster Ga- zette. Dreams go by Contraries. A well-known Boston man Mlle me that the other night he was dreaming of untold wealth Viet was being be- stowed upon him. It was one of those beautiful dreams that the dreamer would like to, see manifested in the taugi- ble form. When he awoke from his dream, in- stead of having a fortune, he found he; was losing a part of one. There was an open window in his chamber and a burg- lar was going through his pockets, -- Boston Post. IIinard's Liniment Cares Distemper.: The Vatican is arranging a aeries of centennial fetes in honor of Pope Pius Ix. 25cts., 50cts. sod $100 Bottle. One cent a dose, 1t fs sold on t► ggu'uarantee all drapes fists. It oiired. Inei p Senn .one then► shad is tbo beet Contelel'end 0t .flute, 1 Wide awake people buy Wide Awake Soap because it is the best and cheapest they can get. Try it. Nickel in New Caledonia. It is stated that two-fifths of the to- tal area of New Caledonia contains nickel, and that a tenth part of this has been conceded to mining companies, about 12,000 square miles being al- ready worked: The ore contains frons 8 to 10 per cent. of the pure metal ; in some few, eases as much as 15 per cent:, Wide Awake Soap is a mammoth bar of pure soap. Try it. Exact justice is commonly, more mer- ciful in the long run than pity, for it tends to foster in men those, stronger qualities which make them good citi- zens. -Lowell. Dick's • Liniment cures All Lameness and Sprains Molt & Co., P. 0. Box 482, Montreal. BOTTLEDELECTRICITY For Catarrh and Pain, Want agts ,Maynard & Co.Cinoiunati.0 (IAN -PASSERS Farmers' Friend WANTED Accu b BooFOR k presenting separate scoounte for all farm transactions with yearly balance sheet, etc. Highly recommended. One agent has already sold nearly 400 copies in one county. Send for circulars and terms. WM. BRIQG19,PabUsher Toronto. GANANOQUE DRY EARTH CLOSET. Endorsed by doctors and scientists, Every home should have one. Price $6, Manuge dared by GAN. GEAR 00., Gananoque, Ont. • )(AGENTS'Ti'$NE , mand m8n dL ahe..'. lice'., 1261,ells c 6r6rr n,n,a►6,. 'MAO tnN @rad, Cate and(.ring. mm121We,.,,, ewi rC:11, NA emx 135M.6".5ria ite.P®."Z.t3..cCIAO. atch YourWeight If you are leasing flesh. your system is drawing Qn. your :latent strength. Soxnet1 jng' is wrong., 'x ake t 4-2,20ampasuro .AMIONSIEWRI. !.I31Ofl, the Creat . or Cod—Itver C;1% 1 n to give your system its need.—;: ed strength,: and restore -your healthy weight. Phys ciwx a, the world overs endorse it.: Don't be dacelved by Substitatesy Scott t5Bowne,DsUovillo,AlnDruggiots_6cc .Ito MARRY no yen Want to Correspond rot pie you or marralBe with ladle9 and gents of wealtht 1,000 de- soriptIons maned FREE. Catalogue of books, novel- ties, rubber goods. eta. for 2 -cent stamp. J. w. GUNNELte, TOLEDO, 01i10. w.. H I RS. WINSLOW'u.. SYRUPG FOR CHILDREN TEETHINO O+ For sale by all brngalets. 20 Cesnts a bottle. SURE CURE Manhood Restored Loss of Manhood, Emissions, Spermatorrhoea, Impotency, Weak Memory, Sleeplessness, Sexual Weakness and Nervous Debility posi- tively cured by Dr. DAY'S VITA TABLETS ike, SI, Ont., $Bole Agent for Canada.' Box 701, ORTHERR PACIFIC Cf -fig'. -30' R. 05-- and gore GOVERNMENT North G LA MillioHS 0! N ACOtSi,in Mitinesot4, .,len- Dakota, Wenn, Idaho Wnahington nnd;OrolCon. piFBLIGA �� TIONS, with Maps, describing line farinlni fintt;i bop, grazing and timber tangs Mullett rinEE P. B. GROAT.. oxe tis ei�aluukat` "roan FOR SALE 'fil/FraRAENItz in 'the famous Hard Wheat Belt of Mf nesota and the Dakotas. We cansell you improved or unduly proved lands in the most .productive pore tion of the United States on reasonablf4 terms. For particulars write to BES & CHADBOURNE, Brown's Palley, Tilli verse County, Minnesota. rrss PROOF ROOFING IL LU ST IR AT E D CATALOGUE FREE NiG ��N•TAL LICRQO• C MANUFACTURERS. TORO NTO Pine's Remedy tor Catarrh is the Best, Lastest to Use, and Cheapest. FARM FOR SALE. The finest and best situated farm in, the Township of Sombre and County of Lambkin. on the banks of the Sydenham River; l4+tl acres —100 acres cleared. Fine orchard and good. buildings. Terms easy. Apply to JOHN McCIOY, Namibian. Ont I 000 00 ACRES OW, LAMM for remelt the/Warr Peon & Deanna RAItA.tt.0A COMPANY in 9linnesete. Send for Snaps and. Chats late. They will be sent to yon m Address HOPEWELL CLAFt1+IIE„ Land Commineioner.8t. Paul, Mina LOST MANHOOD • NERVOUS Dnsmmrr1r, HsaOBs or Yotr, s'a, oto., positively and permanently cued•( Lane s Specific Remedy. Price, f1L00 per Box, or Six for $5.00, from all Druggisba cue by Mail. Particulars free. LANE MEDICINE CO., MONTREAL, CAN• Sold by Druggists or sent by mall, Sec, E. T. BezelttnO, warren, Fa. The sower has no second chance. If you would at first sue teed, be am:baand start with EE ' 01 lr'eaa rrsr Need Annual for LS3+t: contains the0um and subnixusoe of rho, latest farming knowl- edge. ecilre+. Every planter sivaasid have it. Sent d5•r2./:. IA.:'d.Fei-r-ydiCo.m"I" a l V4 indoor, �f� COUGH EASY BY *NAErenti Ebrs Germaf Breast Eft alsasn You cough easy and soon aro oared 01 cough. WHAT mama situ or IT. Mr. J Howe, Part Elgin says MrsGerman Breast Balsams is the beat cough medicine he has ever used. Mr. D. F. Smith. Organisms! Patrons of Industry, has no hesitation In recommend ins Eby's German Breast Delamm, the best medicine in existence far coughs and colds. Mr. Chas. Cameron. Underwood, says he got splendid remits from using Eby's German Breast Ramat and re' commends it highly. Mr. John Hepner. Manager Part Elisio Brush 0o., says l Eby's Gersnata Breast .Balsam is an indispensable necessity in hie household and reoommende i5 as a valuable remedy for Coughs and Colds. Put up in 35o. and 50c. battles. .Ask your druggists for 15. wettemoremintneranotetommetteMMEMINgszemoi Acrmotor Feed. Cutter, FOR MOE to any regular subscriber of this paper. Sce• muddler= to tog, vernscmcnt No. 1, sorra weeks past. A Circular Saw stud Swing Steel Frame.,. %Mein to aser regular subscriber of this paper as per advectimcrosuutir 'Nes, r and 3 in this series. artier extravagant ahamuil1 hoc made 'hereafter, The A811116500 Co. win distribute. SV1L1911, IN mazes for the best essays written by 5513.33033111333. the. nestle( , li answering h v f n win Gni g 9. . • tui r of 14 user o o, d girtai,li'nY 91[Onm,e m t 9t{ AN A1SI.et1'Cl,if 9 " For conditions of tom petition atrttamontran and members of penes + t t }. send Ser paasoeses t,,; the Acrmota, Co l i Ohmage, or Gs ifla: branches, at Snn It I!.�t Francisco, lianas City, Lit cob l L NeW '''''.&':.';`4. „• .. Neb., Buffet);<” dfRrlar@Nn 5Sing Cit in 'Completion. 1 -44., . FYt ork Clem wet be Ain tog. 133 , Carr+t pondoncet • ho£eer Corna•,•same pride, AC StaabItsb.Aormdtersrrnte Ipalvanizad•After-