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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1895-12-13, Page 6Sabsezibera who do not receive their pane regularly will please notify us at once. Cecil at the office for advertising rates. TIIE EXETER ADVOCATE. THURSDAY', i)EC. 12, 1695. The Week's Commercial Summary. Toronto 31-2 per .cent. debentures are nttaahenged in London at 101 1-2. Prices of Ontario wheat have been re- iiuoed one cent, Farmers along the Northern now get 65o for white and 64e Por red, The earnings of the Canadian.Paoifio continue to show increases. For the third weak of November they inereased 246;000. The deposits in the Government say- hugs banks for the month of October were .816,871, and the withdrawals for the lame time $$94,592, being an excess of $80,721 in withdrawals over deposits. The balance on hist October was 817,612,881, against $17,698,60'2 on 80th September last. On the 31st of October, 1894, the balance at the credit of depositors was 1117,454,000. The visible supply of wheat in the United. States and Canada increased 1,895,000 bushels for the past week, and 4he total is now 62,221,000 bushels, as against 88,97 4,000 a year ago. The am ount on passage to Europe inereased. 140,000 bushels last week, the total being 26,800,000. A year ago the total was 56,960,000 bushels. The English visible supply decreased 600,000 bushels during the week.* There is no decided change in the tirade situation at Toronto,' Generally speaking, business in wholesale depart- ments is quiet, and the orders of a sort- ing -up character. Some improvement is expected, but, judging from reports, we are inclined to believe that the turnover will hardly come up to anticipations. The prices of leading staple goods are un - .hanged, and in some instances very firm. Payments are said to be satis- factory. There is a good export trade in apples and hay, but the wheat market is dull with the tendency downwards. The movement of wheat east from. Manitoba is large, and in consequence of abundant supplies, the outlook is not bright for any advance in price. The offerings of hogs are large and increasing, -which accounts for the decline in prices. The beef market appears to be thoroughly demoralized. Forequarters of fair beef sell at 1 1-2e to 2c per Ib., and it is hard to get rid off even at these prices. It is not more than six months ago that beef sold at the highest prices in Toronto for many years, and in that short space of time prices have tumbled to the lowest. Unequalled.—Mr. Thos. Brunt, Tyen- ,dinaga, Ont., writes : "I have to thank you for recommending Dr. Thomas' Ec- lectic Oil for bleeding piles, I was troubled with them for nearly fifteen years, and tried almost everything I could hear or think of. Some of them would give me temporary relief, but none -would effect a cure. I have now been free from the distressing complaint for nearly eighteen months. 1 hope you will con- tinue to recommend it." Here and There. The Indiana man who is seeking his eighth divorce must have been sorely henpecked. Dr. Bradford was a Now York dentist, He gets six years for counterfeiting. Even itis pull couldn't save him. It is said that Emperor William is one of the best marksmen in Europe- He is also quite a good target for American aaewspaper wits. It costs the Spanish Government 250,- 600 a month for quinine for the troops in Cuba. And still Campos' men are shak- ing in their boots. TOPICS. OF A WEEK. The Im orteet Iverxts in A Few Words For Buoy Readers.. CANADIAN. Kincardine's tax rate ie $5.88 per head, Chesley will have monthly cattle fairs. Cardwell election takes plane December 24. Preston will geek incorporation as a town, The new dooks at Thessalon are. com- pleted. Orillia has peitioned for a police mag- istrate. Woodstook's new market is openfor business. The Barrie tannery last year paid. 29,000 in wages. A free dairy school will be established at Winnipeg. Terra ootta brink into be manufactured at llarton. Farmers about Oshawa are going into specialities. The G. T.R. pay roll at Allendale is $7,- 000 a month, Berlin has a Y. M. C. Association and an orphanage.. In the last two years Berlin spent 121,- 000 for sidewalks. Horseless carriages are to be manufac- tured in Hamilton. Woodstock put up $100,000 worth of new buildings this year, There were more hunters than deer in Muskoka this season. A Collingwood man got six barrels of apples from one tree. A Sparrow Lake former last week dug 660 barrels of potatoes. In Essex county some farmers have had to draw water 20 miles. J. Black,, Fergus, recently shipped a thousand lambs to England. It is estimated that Muskoka had 10,- 000 summer visitors this year. Preston has erected 275.000 worth of new buildings during the last year. Leamington will nave a 210,000 income per annum from its natural gas. At Port Colborne the water in the canal is lower than it has been for 35 years. A farmer in Manitoba raised i,,000 bushels of onions onan acre and a half. A Pioton canning factory has sent a million cans of fruit to the North-west. The danger of another outbreak of the recent trouble in Low is considered immi- nent. Miss Daisy Macklin, Stratford' s first female physician, has begun practising there. A buyer in Aurora refused to buy 200 bags of potatoes last week at 12 1-2 cents per bag. The Government orders that wherever hog cholera exists the entire herd shall be destroyed. There is talk of extending the Lake Erie & Detroit River Railway from Simooe to Niagara Falls. In a scientific exchange a writer claims that it is an easy matter to distinguish between a thief and a kleptomaniac_ It its ; only an inspection of his bank se- aiount is necessary. The two children of Mrs. Riles, of Ten- nessee, who is 100 years old, though they are aged, respectively, 78 and 71, have never married. Mrs. R. must have been a very good mother to keep her family together so long. The Chicago man who lost his red hair and is now trying to get the surgeons to graft him with a new growth of the saiao .olor will disgust the wigmakers, but he is entitled to considerable credit for ad- hering to the hue that nature intended for him. It may be only a trifling cold, but neglect it and it will fasten its fangs in your lungs, and you will soon be carried to an untimely grave. In this country we have sudden changes and must expect to have coughs and colds. We cannot avoid them, but we can effect a cure by using Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup, the medicine that has never been kno'wn4 to fail in curing coughs, colds, bronchitis and all affections of the throat, lungs and chest. There never was, aMl never will be, it etniversal panacea, in one remedy, for all ills to which flesh is heir—the very nature of many curatives being such that were the germs of other and differently seated diseases rooted in the system of the patient—what would relieve one i11, in turn would aggravate the other. We leave, however, in Quinine Wine, when obtainable in a sound unadulterated, state r remedy for many and grevieus ills. By its gradual and judicious use, the frailest 'systems are led into convalescence and strength, by the influence which Quinine exerts on Nature's own restoratives. It relieves the drooping spirits of those with whom a ehronie state of morbid despond- ency and lack of interest in life is a disease, and, by tranquilizing the nerves, disposes to sound and refreshing sleep— impartsto the action of e vigtt� , t blood, which,. being stimulated, courses through- out the veins, strengthening the healthy animal functions of the system, thereby making activity a, necessary result, strengthening the frame, and giving life to the digestive organs, which naturally demand increased substance—result, im- Troved appetite. Northrop 3t .Lyman of oronto have given to the public their superior. Quinine Wine at the usual rate, and, a^'ed lay the opinion% of selonti ts, this wine a roaches merest perfection of h Pp 1 soy in the -market All clruggiste sell it. never pays to oto a day's work for the It,a py y devil no inattor what he may offer to pay ' drawn Upon you. The bank his d W p0 failed long ago. Major Gourdeau has withdrawn his res- ignation at the request of the Major-Gen- eral commanding. The question of a public library will in all probability be snbinittedtothe citizens of Ottawa at the municipal elections. Grain barges down the St. Lawrence, owing to low water, are carrying from 8,000 to 4,000 bushels less than the ordin- ary cargoes. During the sealing sesaon of 1895, now ended, the Canadian fleet secured 72,413 seals. Eight vessels of this fleet were lost with all on board. The city of Toronto has contracted for the winter coal supply with a Buffalo firm at a much lower rate than that tendered by the local dealers. In the Kingston penitentiary are two men, father and son, each under sentence of seven years, the former tor kiling a man, and the latter for killing a cow. As a sequel to the Dutton, Ont., fire in- quest, A. D. Urlin and his son were ar- rested on Tuesday, charged with having set fire to a building owned by the former. The three young children of Mr. Henry Gangel, a well known farmer of Gladstone district, Man., were burned to death last Saturday night in the absence of their parents. Shortie, who,,is in the Beauharuois gaol under sentence of death for the Valleyfield murder,' is as indifferent as ever. He eats and sleeps well, and never says a word to the guards about his fate. The directors of the Ottawa and Gat- ineau railway want to lease every un- claimed lake between Wakefield and Des- ert, some forty in number, and to make the Gatineau distriot .a sportsman's re- sort.. The secretary of a School Board in Erin township sent the following reply to an applicant for the school: "Pure name is not in it, yure sal.ree to hie, you should have sent a 3o. stamp as I am 80. out yures truly." Commandant R.Booth, of the Salvation Army, appeared as defendant in the To- ronto Civil Assize Court in ten action for 25,000 damages ter libel. The plaintiff' is ex -Brigadier Alf. de Barritt, who had charge of the army in Canada previous to Mr. Booth's arrival here. At a meeting in Montreal of the Finance Committee of the Canadian Pacific rail- way, Mr. Shaughnessy, vice-president. sub- mitted the plans for the new east -end sta- tion. It will Dost threehnndred thousand dollars, and is is expected to be completed within two years. A proclamation has been issued, sub- mitting the Scott Aot to the electors of Westmoreland, N.B., on the sixth of Jan - nary next. Moro than one-fourth of all the electors of the county recently pelf•, Moiled that they be given an opportunity to pass again upon .the measure. West- moreland bas stood by the Scott Act since 1810. Sir William Kingston on Saturday night accepted the Conservative nomina- tion for Montreal Centre in the by-elec- tion for the House of Commons. In ac- cepting the nomination Sir William Hingston Said ho did not enter upon this as a party contest, as he believed that the present was a time when partyism should be sot aside and patriotism take its place, A deputation of clergynien andlaymon, representing the joint' committees formed for the purpose of suppressing race -track I gambling, waited upon :fir Charles H. Tupper !friday afternoon at the Queen's p hotel, and urged the elimination from the f orlminal cask of the proviso permitting betting on incorporated moo -tracks, Sir Charles intimated that something alight be done to limit the duration of the moots, bot did not hold out much hope that the entire request of the deputation would be complled with U>erreht? STATES. 'The Germans of the United States num- ber three million*. Burglarproof oars are now parrying the mails between New York and St. Louis, Mgr. Satelli will be elevated to the Car- dinalate at Baltimore Sunday, December 15. The School Board of St. Joseph, Mo., bas voted to expel any boy who smokes cigarettes. In the Birmingham district, Alabama, there are 10,000 more men at work than at this time last year. Tha telegraph wire used in the United States wouldgo around the world some- thing like fifteen times. Philadelphia makes its own gas at the cost of W7 cents a thousand feet, and it is sold to consumers at 21.25. Pennsylvania produoes 100,000,000 tons of goal every year—more than half the output of the entire country. The largest ball in the United States is said to be in the wigwam, in Chicago, which will seat 20,000 spectators. The United States Congress opened Monday at high noon. President` Cleve- land sent down his annual message Tues- day. Virginia negroes own 211,000,000 of the $308,000,.000 worth of real estate and im- provements in the state reported by the assessor for the year. The United States Consuls in Canada interpret the reoent presidential order re- specting Consular offices as meaning that they hold office for life or fault. A spar 114 feet long without a knot or blemish, 48 inohes in diameter at the big end, 29 inches at the small end, was run into Lake Whatoom, Wash., recently. Telegraphic communication with Mil- ford, ilford, N. Y., was out off for four hours the other day by a tame bear, which, after climbing a telegraph pole, tore down the wile. The suit of Mrs. Zella Nioolaus Ruh - mann against George J Gould has been settled out of oourt by the payment to the plaintiff of something like five thousand dollars. A Minnesota judge was due in court at a town some miles distant. He adjourned a referred case to the ear, heard evidence en route, and granted the petition before getting off the train.. So much fruit has been raised in Cali- fornia this season that the local markets have been glutted, and in San Francisco tons of nielons,pears and plums have been thrown into the sea. Jadge Arnold, on Saturday, in Phila- delphia, refused to grant Holmes, the murderer of Pietzol, a new trial, and sen- tenced him to death, The ease will be taken to the Supreme Court. According to the latest and most com- plete estimate the'American women who have married foreigners of title and rank within the past twenty-five years have taken to Europe 2133, 393, 000. For several years a woman has driven the stage between Manoelona and Bellaire, Mich. She handles the reins as well as any man in that region, and has never had trouble with stage -robbers. Dr. Canines, of Atlanta, has just tre- panned the skull of one of Hagen - beck's lions, Two of the animals had a fight on the Atlanta Exposition miaway, and one threw the other against the cage with force enough to fraoture its skull. Mr. T. J. Humes, Columbus, Ohio, writes : "I have been afflicted for some time with kidney and liver complaint, and find Parmelee's Pills the best medi- cine for these diseases." 'These pills do not cause pain or griping, and should be used when a cathartic is required. They are gelatine coated, and rolled in the flour of licorice to preserve their purity, and give them a pleasant, agreeable taste. FOREIGN. Two English missionaries were recently murdered in Madagascar during a riot. The repent illness of the Pope was due to the lack of vitality, which condition is increasing. Seventy bodies have been taken from the ruins of the cartridge factory at Palma Island, off. Majorca. • Thirdolass dining cars are now to be tried on the Great Northern railway be- tween London and Leeds. • Alexandre Dumas, the French novelist and playwright, died in Paris Wednesday. He was seventy-one years of age. The marriage of Princess Mand of Wales and Prince Karl of Sweden will, it is understood, take place in London in June next. A London society paper says that the Duchess o York is a very dutiful wife, and always consults her husband on mat- ters of dress. The funeral of Alexandre Dumas took place in Paris on Saturday, and was un- ostentatious, in accordance with the wishes of. the deceased author. The British Admiralty is said to have obtained complete soundings from British merchant vessels which have repeatedly passed the Dardanelles. France has solved the problem of apply- ing the rule for compulsory military ser- vice to priests by assigning them to am- bulance work. In theconstruction of the new battle- ships fireproof wood .is to bo employed. The process of fireproofing consists in for- cing sulphate and phosphate of ammonia into the wood by hydraulic pressure. A despatch (roan Shanghai says it is re- ported there that no railway concessions have been granted to foreigners in China, and that the Chinese Government intends henceforth to keep railway buildings in its, own hands. A despatch from Beyront confirms the report of the grave state of affairs existing in Syria and Palestine, which places are flooded with Turkish soldiers, bearing the significant green flag of the Prophet in- stead of the Turkish flag. Jabez S. Balfour was sentenced Friday in London to fourteen years' penal sert+i- tude, and Brock and Theobald were gen - tended to nine and four months respeotive- ly, for frauds itt connection with the Lib- erator group of institutions, The promised firmans granting extra guardships to pass the Dardanelles are not forthcoming, and the situation is again grave. The guardships are gathering near the mouth of the Bosphorus, and a pas sage may be ferried by warships if the per- mission isnot soon given voluntarily, Dyspepsia and Indigestion. -0. W. Snow & Co., S racuse. writes "Please send us ten gross of pills. We aro selling more of Parmelee's .fills than any other pill we keep, they have a groat reputation for the ouro of dyspepsia end liver complaints," Mr. Chas, A. Smith, Lindsay, writes 1 arrnoloo's .l ills are an excellent medicine. Aly sister has been troubled with severe 'headache,_ but these pills have cured her," .A.NOTIIER INVESTIGATION. • TIIE LONDDON ADVERTISER LOOKS INTO THIS HATTER. Mr. Robert. Bond, of Blount Brydges is Paid Total Disability by an Insurance Co. and Recovers From Bright's Disease. Another great cure has been wrought by Dodd's Kidney Pills in the ease of Mr, Robert Bond, of Mount Brydges, Ont. We olip the following from the London Advertiser of Nov. 2: This case is of so remarkable a nature that it is worthy being referred to at length. Mr. Bond was for years a sufferer from Bright's disease, which finally be- came chronic. He consulted a dozen or more physicians, who pronounced his malady inourable and assured him not only that.he was totally disabled, but that his pilgrimage through this life would not be of long duration, He oarried an in- surance polioy in the Provincial Provident Institution; of St. Thomas, Ont., and the physicians representing the society were so satisfied after examination of their patient that the tale of his years was about ended that they reported him totally dis- abled, and on Maroh 21 last the society paid him 2600 on the strength of their physicians' report. The Ensign, the paper published by the P.P.I,, in its issue for September, 1891, contains a statement of "Death and Disability Claims Paid in Eleven Years:" In this statement appears the following; Bond, Robert (disability), Mt. Brydges, 2917, 2600. March 21, 1895. Dodd's Kidney Pills are not only all that has been claimed for them in the past, but the most remarkable of any that have been placed on the market for the cure of a disease from which so many are suffering and from which so many die, Five Mundred,Toapots. An American woman, returned per- manently to her native home after a long residence in Japan, says that her chief sorrow in leaving the Mikado's land was due to the fact that she had to give up her collodion of teapots. "I had over five hundred of them," she wails, "every one a gem, and it took ane days of thought and choosing to select the fifty I per- mitted myself to bring home with me." PURSER JOHN MACEDWARDS, Of the C. P. It. Steamer Arthabaska, Says That Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Pow- der is the Best Remedy in the World. To the thousands wh.i have enjoyed a trip on the beautiful Canadian Pacific steamers, few men are better known than the purser, Mr. John MaoEdwards, of the Arthabaska. Sailing, however, has not been all joy to him, as he has been a suf- ferer from catarrhal troubles. With others, fortunately, he at last found relief, quick and effective, in Dr. Agnew's- Catarrhal Powder. So pleased has he • been with this medicine that, Good Samaritan like, it is a practice of his to send supplies to friends whom he knows have been afflict- ed like himself. It never fails to give re- lief in ten minutes, and aures permanent- ly. Sold by druggists. Sample bottle and Blower sent by S. G. Detohon, 44 Church st., Toronto, on roeeipt of ten Dents in silver or stamps. Sofa' and No Farther. "Yes—" It was late at night and a dense dark- ness filled the room. "I have turned highwayman. Only a few short hours ago 1-" The moon coming from behind a cloud. allowed its rays to lighten up the gloom for an instant. "Held up two people." Laughing merrily the sofa turned to notice the effect of its just, but the dark- ness had come again and all was silence. CHOICE SITUATIONS. . Does IDPay to Get A Good Business Edn- cation? W. C. McCarter, Principal, Duluth Business University, Duluth, Minn.; W. Irwin, bookkeeper and cashier, Covenant Mutual Insurance Co., Toronto; Miss Minnie Tonkin, stenographer, Barber & Ellis Paper Co., Bay street,' Toronto; W. S. Woods, manager, New "York Business College, New York city; R. A. K.11s, penman, New York Business College, New York city; E. J. Shaw, principal, Bliss Business College, North Adams, Mass, ; Melvin Hammond, reporter, "Globe", Toronto; Miss Ada Jo!inston, stenographer, John stark & Sons, Bret;ers, Toronto; ‘0. W. Layeook, bookkeeper, Michigan Railway Supply Co., Detroit; Wm. Mo intosh, commercial master, Bliss Business College, Lowell, Mass. ; Frank Foster, shorthand teacher, New York Busi- ness College, New York city; Miss Emma Mullin, stenographer, Samson Kennedy Co., Toronto; J.J. ci,rnold, foreign ledger keeper, First .National Bank, Chicago: H. Malott, manger; J. Phillips, Show Case Mfng. Co., Detroit; J. J. Goodwin, chief clerk, Pinkerton Detective Agenoy,Phila- delphia; E L. McCain, Penman, Brook- lyn Business College; D. McGregor, stenog- rapher, Chicago and Rook Island Railway Co., Chicago. Those are a few of the thousands train- ed by Messrs. Shaw & Elliott, who own two fine Commercial Schools and each college bears the name "Central Business Col- lege"—one school is located in Stratford, the other in Toronto. We understand that some of the students in the above list re- oeive salaries of over one thousand dollars per annum. It certainly pays to get a business education if you get it in a good school,and we oan'recoinmend the Central Business College of Toronto and Stratford to all our young Canadian friends. The courses of study are right up to date and very practical. These two schools enjoy a wide -spread popularity and deservedly so, They have the reputation of being the best in 'Canada. Write to either shool for a handsome catalogue. Didn't Want Money. Man With The Slouch Hat—Will you tell me the location of the mint ? Citizen—Tho nearest mint for dollars is in Philadelphia, but I imagine you are from l entucky, and you want to find the mint that makes the julep, Man With The Slouch .flat—Shake, stranger—shake, and point the direction. The Michigan Supreme Court has dee tided thathaving the jaw bone fractured while matting a tooth drawn is not an awl - dent ;+" the Pennsylvania Supremo Court has ruled that "beef stew is not soup ;" tho United States Supreme Court has handed clown a decision that "the tomato ig a vegetable." Ono by ono all the . great questions of the age are being b the judiciary. (3f Gourso. "Do you belong to the opera cam. pi ny ?" asked the festive balcl.hoad, “Of chorus,' chirruped the gay sou- brotte. Tiro Electrician at flay. "#,An eleotrioian who arouses himself by devising odd applications of electricity, whittle may 01 may nothave practical Na1ue, tells, ohemiets that tiehas a much better plan for removing the glass stopper from a bottle than the usual holding of the bottle neck for awhile over a Bunsen burner. This method is open to the draw - Wk. that the bottle must be held in a horizontal position, and the fluid may easily be spilled out of the bottle. The up- to-date improvement is an adjustable clamp with coils of platinum wire em- bedded in a strip of asbestos attached. The clamp, which is connected to a bat- tery, is put' on the nook of the bottle, the current is turned on, and the glass Is brought to a desiredbeat. This is, in feet, an adaptation of the eleotrotherm, or heat- ing pad, eat-ingpad, which is now used in hospitals in lieu of hot water pads formerly in vogue. Andther novelty of this resourceful elec- trician is an eleotrle annihilator of moths, flies and mosquitoes. It consists of an in- candescent electric lamp planed inside a large globe, which is coated externallly with a mixture of honey and wine, or any other seductive sticky mass. The windows and doors are to be olosed, the blinds pull- ed down, and the room is to be made as dark as possible The current is then turned on, and in an hour the insect life of the room will be found stioking to the glass. globe. The final instructions are to "remove the victims with hot water and set the trap afresh A GRATEFUL LETTER A PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND LADY SPEAKS FOR THE BENEFIT OF HER SEX. Had no Appetite, was Palo and Easily Exhausted --Subject to Severe Spells of Dizziness, and Other Distressing Symptoms. Tignish, P.E.I., May. 80th, 1895. To the Editor of L'Impartial: Dear Sir, —I see by your paper the names of many who have been benefited by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink. Pills. I feel that I ought to let my case be known,as I am sure that many women might be bene- fited as I have been For a number of years I have been almost an invalid. I did not know the nature of my malady. I bad a tiredfeeling, being exhausted at the least exertion. I had no appetite and was very pale. I sometimes felt like lying down never to rise, A dizziness would sometimes take me causing me to drop where I would be. During these spells A. DIZZINESS WOULD OVERTAKE ME. of dizziness I hada roaring sound in my head. I took medical treatment but found no relief. My husband and father both drew my attention to the many articles which appeared from time to time in your paper concerning the cures wrought by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. At first I had no faith in them, in fact I had lost faith in all medicines and was resigned to my lot, thinking that my days were num- bered in this world, Finally, however, I consented to try the Pink Pills. I had not taken them long before I felt an improve- ment and hope revived. I ordered more and continued taking the pills for three months and lmustsay that to -day I am as well and strong as ever and the many ail - m ants which I bad are completely cured. 1 attribute my complete recovery to the Dr. Willams' Pink Pills and hope by telling you this that others may be benefited by them. Mrs. William Perry. After reading the above letter we sent a reporter to interview Mrs. Perry and she repeated what she had already stated in her letter. Her husband, William Perry, and her father, Mr. 3. H. Lander, J. P., and fishery warden, corroborated her state- ments,—Ed. L'Impartial. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo- ple make pure, rich blood, restore shatter- ed nervus and drive out disease. They cure when other medicines fail and are beyond all question the greatest life-saving medi- cine ever discovered. Sold by all dealers, but only in boxes the wrapper around which bears the full trade mark. "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People." Pills offered in loose form, by the hundred or ounce, are imitations and should be avoided, as they are worthless and perhaps dangerous. Live Stock Notes. A yearling sheep that has been carefully attended to will sell in the market with as much profit as any other animal that is ,kept on the farm. Eggs from hens 'that are fed largely from slops and refuse are not as good for cooking purposes as those which are laid by hens having a liberal ration of Dorn or wheat, arid of the two, corn makes the richest eggs, as it adds to the fat content and gives the oontents of the shell a con- sistency that makes it especially valuable for baking and kindred uses. A meat ra- tion also adds to the value of the eggs, and it is because duoks are such ravenous hinters of frogs and the many insects on land and water that their eggs are profer- red to all others by bakers and confection- ers. Guinea eggs are specially rich in this quality and are better for baking and matting icing than those of almost any other fowl. The production of good eggs is a comparatively new idea and it has not been discussed half as much as its merits deserve thatit should be. In feeding skim milk to plgs much more Can cart be made of it if it is fed with a grain ration. Skim milk is, excellent for growth; but it is not a complete ra- tion. A very little linseed meal voeked to a porridge and stirred with it snakes It as good a food us whole milk, eitherkr growing or fattening embattle. If this is supplemented with °lover, either out for sowlna or for pasture, pork can be maclo cheaper thus in summer than on any other kind of feed. On most farms the calves got more than their share of milk, so far as profit is concerned, If the calf is mere• ly fattened :rot voal 11 will not pay to keep 1t long after it has passed tho age required by law to "sake witoiosomo veal, The mill: 11 will require attar that age will yield better returns If judiciously foci to grow- ing pigs. Some part of the skUn milk should always be saved for the hon.. It isr one of the best egg -producing foods. WILL, NOT PERMIT DELAY In Cases of Heart Trouble—How to A.* Quickly. What to do till the doctor comes issa good thing to know, andeis urgent in easell of heart disease. ' Keep in the house Dr.. Agnew's Cure for the Heart, and, it will be found to exceed the skill even of thea skilled physician. Many letters are in the Possession of the proprietor of this men - eine, showing that death would have en - snot!. from heart diesase had it not been: promptly token when heart spasms had manifested themselves. It Is a remark- able speeiflo for this one particular pur- pose, and in ninety-nine oases out of is hundred, strong as the statement may seem, will aura heart disease, 'either in its incipient stages or the more ohronio. '.'his Was in Boston. "When Lot's wife looked back," said the Sunday school teacher, "what happened to her ?" "She was transmuted into chloride of sodium," answered the class with ons voice. A Fellow Feeling. "D'Auber mado quite a hit with Lis new picture 'Sympathy.' " "Didn't see it. 'What was the idea re "Simply a blind man making his way' through a crowded street." "Humph ; How did that typify eya- pathy ?" ,'Why a fellow fueling, you know."— Buffalo Courier. His Faux Pas. Tom -Is Harry a good dresser ? Dick—Gracious, no ; he doesn't knee anything; I've seen him wear a lay -dowse collar to a stand-up party. HAVE YOU ` TASTED SALA CEYLON TEA Is Delicious. Sold Only in Lead Packets. WANTED by every person roadie^ this paper, Grocerieo and general supplies for home use. Write to uo f price list and buy your winter supply from 20 to 50 per cent cheaper than you are now paying for your goods. A11 new goods and at wholesale prices. Note address: A. H. OANNING, Wholesale Grocer, 57 Front Street East,. Toronto. A Blizzard! A Hurricane! A Cyclone! A Tornado! Wouldn't be enough to extinguish E. , B. Eddy's "Flamers,, when lit. The best "fight" for smokers in these high autumn winds Mads .uly by Tho E. I. EERY Co. eseatttee HULL. c Belting. Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers•. Order Your Supplies of OAK TANNED LEATHER BELTING from us. We supply four grades, suit- able for all classes of machinery. Every- thing in above lines at Manufacturers' First Cost Prices. Lowest Prices for Cash - • TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY, 44 Bay Street, Toronto. Two Schools Under One Management,. CENT 011 TORONTO AND STRATFORD, ONT. Unquestionably the leading Commercial, Schools of the Dominion; advantages best in Canada; moderate rates; students may enter at any time, Write to Dither school fort chanters and mention this paper. SHAW & ELLIOTT, Principals. Ore of Life F'ourid et Last, Vito -Ore is very properly called Ore oft Life. It was discovered by Professor Theo., Noel of Chicago, Geologist. This ore makes an elixir which 1s Nature's Great Remedy for the Cure of human ills. It will reach the nidus of human diseases wltec drugs and doctors' nostrums fail.. It is nature', great restorative, to which nothingis added. It is pure• as it -comes from nature's aboratory. Sold only on ?Urea. orders or through local or agents. Price 31 a package, or three for 82.50. Sent repaid to anyart of the lobe, on receipt of price. Send for Circulars and lull particulars to Vitro -Ore Depot, 1140 Adelaide. street west, Toronto. J. JOHNSTON,NGeneral Arent N. u. 41 TOA• T'IEND THE NORTHERN' BUSINESS COMM Vol' tither a $usiness or Shorthand Course. Nd ora, should 8,rpect to succe,d without,, good business train. inn . rl.naoiutcerncnt tree. C. A. li Idminz Owen Saus4 VEIAVVI1IN(t 11011 TXt13 VRfN'I'tI1t-- L1' Typo, X: xogsas, Inks', lloatl -lrlii Newspt ora,Sterrotpo MattorJLoctro- tfin 1'n raviu , T XnO 'Yl1l ;O• JNILY,'Torono and Winnipeg.