HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-8-19, Page 3THB1tI
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Fowls prefer, as well as need, cod pure,
mild water, oepeoiaily hi warm, sultry
weather,
Young oblokene may be allowed the run
of the garden, the mother being cooped, and
the havoo they melte Among innate is toe cx-
eelle t thing.
In .
K
Inflrammation of the egg organs ie goner
-
ally paneled by overfeeding, Eating the
geode of grapes, or grain affected with ergot,
isloaid to produce thia inflammation. Syme
Meme : the hen going into the noot, without
�.
laying ; having a straddling gait ; !alias;
aholleee egge, dropping eggs from the perch
er eleevvhere.
Treatment: one grain of
calomel and one -twelfth of a grain of tarter
emetic, given in oat or barley meal, If
neoeesary, a second dere may be given,
When a dealer wishes to add a knock
down argument ent to all ho has said about tho
merits of the breed of fowls he has for sale,
be urges that their flesh is of extra quality,
Now there ie no breed of fowls under the
sun, the ohiokene of which, if well fed all
their livea, will of be tender, j easy and
toothsome if kt led beim they are too eld.
And, thereis s breed that will be- plump,
s e e t i
p 1',
tender and fit fore the table unless fed thus.
Mind, we do not gay that there it: no differ -
once at all in breeds, but we say, that of
the two things, the but
and feeding, the
flatter is moat important.
The white of an egg has proved to be the
moat Eflioations remedy for burnt. Seven
or eight successive applioations of this sub.
statue) will soothe the pain and effectually
exoinde the burn from the air. This simple
remedy seeme preferable to collodion, or
even ootton. Extraordinary stories are told
of the healing properties of a new oil, which
is easily made from the yolks of hens' eggs.
The eggs are first bailed hard, and the yolks
are then removed, crushed and planed over
a fire, whore they are carefully stirred until
the whole aubatanoo is jest on the point of
outselling fire, when the oil separates and
may be poured off. One yolk will yield
nearly two teaspoonfuls of ell. It lean gen-
eral use in South Russia as a means of During
cute, bruiaee and matches.
I think the lime -duet treatment the beat
of all puree for gapes in ohiokene, It is
cheap, simple and effective. I put a whole
breed of ohiokene in a peek measure with a
bag over the top, A barrel partly filled
with airelaked lime, as dry as powder, was
turned on its side and the lime was stirred
with a stick until the whole barrel was filled
with lime fleeting in the air. The ohiokene
were put in this, with the bag over the
month ef the barrel. They wore pat into
the duet three times, not more than a min.
ate each time. They should be kept in the
measure all the time. We let one brood
stay In too long and lost five out of seven,
The windpipes of the dead chickens were
found more than halt filled with gape warms,
which made it more dfffilult for them, to
breathe, My little eon, seven years old,
treats hie ohiokene is this way suooeesfally,
The lime can be slaked with water and then
allowed to dry se as to powder. A lot of
lime thus prepared wilt last fer years fer
this purpose.
Timely Sug'gest10n8.
G. J. Rr`e{&r;'Cape May county, New
Jersey, has been very successful in breaking
a cow ef the habit of sucking herself by
painting the teats with mnoilage and then
dusting them with pure capsicum (red pep-
per). It will net sicken the cow, but she
will be entirely satisfied with one taste of
tboae teats, ,
At this season of the year pruning defen-
sive hedges, as, for instance, oeage orange,
and honey locust, is a measure of economy.
The immature shoots are now easily out,
and the work may in ooneequenoe be per-
formed in oat kaet half the time required
when the vejd is fully ripened. Summer
pruning has „ t-elidency te weaken growth,
which is much to be desired In a full-grown
hedge. The eeoend orop of young shoots
are smaller and mora numerous, thus very
materially adding to the compactness of the
mase.
Home hard at work in warm weather
need water frequently. If a handful of eat -
meal is thrown in a pailful of water, and ono
er two ewallbwe given two er three times
between morning and noon, or neon and
night, it will stimulate them to renewed ex-
ertions and keep them fresh all day. This
sort ef stimulation has no bad after effects,
as does that which men often take in the
harvest field; The work of harvesting with
self -binders is now as severe for teams as
putting grain was in the old times for men
when done by hand -labor, and it is a time
when grain feed for horses has been mostly
need np. With the labor thus thrownon
the teams they need proportionate good Dare.
We would repeat our advice to farmers
not to sleep in the same undergarments
worn during the day. It is more than worth
the trouble to take off the undershirt as
soonthe as da a labor la finished
body thoroughly with a harsh towel,
the
wel, and
pat on tinderolothes whioh are perfectly dry.
One of thf'most suoceseful dairymen we
know keeps 100 cows. He feeds hie cattle
en corn fodder, ant when he blossom, bound
and set up until cured, or until winter,
when it is removed to the barn. He gets
seven tens of this dry fodder to the acre
and oleime it is as good as the best of hay.
Wheat oontinnes to be plenty and oheap.
Let us repeat that every farmer has a goad
I home market in chicken yard. There is
no better and no cheaper food for growing
ohiokene or laying hens than your $1 wheat.
Turn it into eggs and :thickens and get $2 a
a bushel and over every time.
A Wonderful Ring.
T ere is a story. of a certain prince who
wonderful ring which prinked his finger
wrong, It
ewao
doinganything
.�• over h g
a
was given him to help -him always to troop
upright and good ; and he was told that so
long as he wore it he would prosper. At
first he set great stere by this ring; but in
time he began to be vexed at being so often
oheoked by its pricking, and so often stopped
from doini, what he wished, Ono day . he
bad set hie heart upan something that he
was yet well aware was wrong, and he was
about to do In spite of the warning ef the
ring; but it prinked him so sharply that he
drew it.off hie finger in a plosion and threw
it away, and from that moment he fellinto
bad ways s and misfortune:, and came at last
to a very sad end, Now this in only a plea.
sant story but it is meant to help us to Un-
derstand a great truth, We have all of us
;something like the prince's wonderful ring,
which chocks us when we de wrong, and
makes us uneasy, Any ono of us knows
f we say a thing that is
quite well, y g g that, i
not true, or do a thing we know we ought
n.
that w
e are afraid of being
not to do, and 8
something
found out to have done, we fools g
within us that makoa tie uneasy, and seems
to whisper to us that we are guilty. This le
ooneoienoe. Consolenoe is like the wonder=
dal ring,
was CAREFUL FAUME&
Somegentlemen from the city wont out
in the country ou a fit;hing trip recently,
and a ruin coming up suddenly they relied
their boat ashore and went to a baric, near
a farm house to get in out of the wet,
They found the farmer in the barn Hitting
on an upturned half bushel. whittling a
cob, waiting for the rain to canna eo he
could goout d kill potato u e
uan t to b e, H o d
P g e
bw
to the Hien as they eame in,, owl at their
fishing taokle down, though he,oyed them
pretty olosaly, He didn't talk 'much, bat
answered their questions politely, They
stkod all about the farming buebeess, and
he told them how things were running,
Penally he said
" T supposeyou are,, gentlemen from the"
oity, oome out here fer recreation, but 1
didn't know at first but yon might have
eeme aoheme to get me to buy something,
or make me agent for Nome patent, or that
you wanted to get me to sign some paper
that would eem innocent
enough, but
which would turn ent to be a nate that I
would have to pay. There's sharks around
here every few days trying to pick u
ere,weh
far andhave tokeep our a es and
mk y
ears about ue. I am eatiefled I have made a
mistake in pen, gentlemen, BO Iopolggiza.'
Tao gentlemen laughed at btu fears, but
accepted hie apology, and finally asked
him what course the elaerpere usually took
to beat a farmer,
" 0, they take every kind of a course,"
acid ne, as he took another cob to whittle.
" Anything to get a man to sign his name.
One a farmers name is on paper, and they
get it en to a promissory note, and into the
hands or an innocent party. I had a man
oome along here two years age, with a
patent churn, and he left it fer my wife to
try. She tried it, and liked it, and wanted
to buy it. but he wouldn't sell it. He said
he was jest' getting it patented, and he
wanted a few of the the best farmers to try
it, and make any suggestions they thought
of to improve it, and he would make the
improvement's and get it patented. He
said when it was patented, and was a sum
yea,
Dees, he had just as soon make my wife a
present of a churn, but he shouldn't sell
any, as he should put it in the hands of
some large factory to build, and he would
get a royalty. He wanted a few lettere
from these who had tried the ()burn, to send
to our member of oongrees, who had
promised to go to the patent office f ar him.
He wrote out a letter to our member of
oongrees, saying that I believed there was
merit in the churn, and I signed it. How
the deuce he get my name oil of that letter,
and put it at the bottom of a note for two
hundred and fifty dollars, I don't knew, but
I had to pay the note, and my wife has
never got the churn. Bat the eliokest
thing that farmers ever got took in on was
Bohemian oats. About ten yearn ago a
man came along with a baking powder can
fall of ease without any hulls on—just the
plain meat of the oats. Ha said he was an
agent e f the German government, and that ene
farmer in every township could buy a bushel
of the oats fer five dollars, if he would °entreat
not to sell the prop of hull -leas eats to any-
body but the authorized agent, and he was
to agree to pay four dollars a bushel. The
idea was te cants a monopoly in hull lees
oats, He jest mentioned it to me, he said,
that I might think it over, and in the mean-
time he would make some inquiries ae to
my standing. Well, for a week I dreamed
of nothing but Bahamian oats, and by the
time he came around aga'n I was as ripe as
the eats, and I wanted ten bushels. He
said he would have to communidate with
the general office bete ha nems sell me
mere than one bushel, but he didn't knew
len the could arrange it se. I could have a
oounty right, and bethe only man in the
county who could raise the oats. He said
he hated to let one man have such a ahenoe
to get rioh, butihe had struck three or four
farmers that had no standing, and he
wouldn'tlet them have a kernel of the oats
for love or money, and as he had get to go to
Iowa soon he might give me the county, but
I must net may anything about It, He
would be baok in a week, and by that time
he would know if I could have the county.
He might have let me have the earth, if
he had waited another week. Well, to make
a long story short, I bought fifty bushels of
oats, signed a oentraot to sell to nobody but
him, and I got two farmers to sign with
me as security, and the next spring I sowed
the eats."
" What did you get!" asked one of the
fishermen, as he looked out of the barn door,
and found that the rain had cleared off,
" Get 1" said the farmer, as he rose up
;and kinked the half bushel measure across
the barn. " I got a fair crop of common
oats, with hulls on, which I sold from the
thrashing machine for twenty cents a bnehel
The oats he sold me were common oats, with
the hulls taken off, and I paid him five dol-
lars a bushel for them in cash, and the oon-
traot I signed, turned out to be a nate fer
five•hnndred declare, endorsed by two ef the
best farmers in town, and I paid it."
" Well, he spoke the truth when he said
he diln't like to see one man get too rioh,"
said ene of the fishermen, "bat I should
have supposed he would have oome round
the next year and bought your crops, as he
promised. But I suppose you violated your
contract by selling the oats to other par-
ties,"
" Come around again," said the farmer,
";He would have been lynched. Why I
found that he had :mid Bohemian oats to
ever fifty farmers in thio "township, and in
the county I don't know how many farmers
took the bait. You can't imagine hew I
felt, after hugging that secret to my heart
all summer, and watching the oats grew,;.
to"eee them _ head out just like ordinary
oats, and when it came •over me that I had
been sold, and was not going to be rich, but
poorer than ever, I was aotually sink fer a
month. The dootere called it nervous pron.
tration, but it was Bohemian oats fever,
that's what it was."
" Well," said one of the fishermen, "the
rain is ever, and we will go out and see if
the fish will bite as well as the farmers,"
and they went off, while the farmer was
mixing some patio green in a pan, and look-
ing as though he had rather feed it to the
man who sold him the oats than to the pe -
tato bugs.
Children Earnin; Money.
Children cannot begin tee young to earn
money. If it is only a little—one egg for
every dozen they find, pay fer carrying the
milk, a few cents per week for washing
diehea, or bringing in the wood, or coal or
e • so much for everytowel the
kindling
hem; or they may keep hens of,their Own
or a i or care for their own calf along
with the other cattle—how m oh. mere in-
terest
n
terest they willtake1 There are an infinite
number of ways in which a child can earn
money, and that, too, without paying him
for his little kindnesses to the home people,
either; and, then, he has 'an almost inex-
pressible feeling of pride and independence
when he burs something with his own earn-
inge, 'There is no bettor servant in the
world than this stmt► money ; but to be of
most use, it must be rightly m,anagedi and
Only experience can tench that lesion pro-
perly,
`l OOMg IN WITaLIAN,"
A Charitable head igeat's Uttle habenae,
In 1866, wbioh was almeet before the
Canada Paolda Railroad wale thought of, the
writer of thle watt encamped on Beaver RM.
er, in the Canadian North -Went well up In
the 1 othilii of the Rookies. Six of ea,. who
were prospeoting, hunting, and taking things
pretty easy for July weather, eodupied a `
large cabin whioh had been itudt and
de.
ed some time before. From this cen-
tral point small parties branched out and
were gone for several days at a time, We
had no trouble with anything or anybody
until, after we had occupied the plane coven•
Leon or eighteen days,a bad spell of weather
pame`on and drove all the detached parties
iofor ehelter We wellheeled in the
matter of firearms, and there was something
like
A TllmtraAND DOLLARS IN GOLD
among the nix. For. 000k we- had an old
:soldier hadbeeng
o , disohar ed from the
regular army afterr long aeryio
e.
0 a morning, it being the third day of
the bad weather, and the rain still falling,
Joe, our geek, went down to the forks of the
Beaver to meet a canoe whioh we expected
up with proviefona, The deer of the cabin
was shut, and there was a bit of fire on the
hearth at which some of the men were
moulding bullets, and over which a kettle
of pork and beans was boiling. Twe of the
gangwere playing Dards, and a third was
reaing, while I was examining some miner-
al speolmene. In this state of affairs the
deer softly opened, and in walked a young
man about 23 years of age. He was emoeth-
faoed, red-oheeked, and had such a smile on
his phiz that the eight of him would have
set anyone to grinning. He looked from
one to the other, as if to melee sure that all
were present, and then stepped baok and
opened the door and called,
"Come in, William, they are at home."
A abort, etout, ugly.faoed man of ` forty
pushed hie way hie shut the door, and stood
with hie back to it. That he was a herd
pill no one could doubt attar looking into hie
face; that he meant bueines: was apparent
from hie having a revolver in either hand.
Had
SOME ONE YELLED " INDIANS 1"
I think the aix of us, eaoh with a revolver
ready to shoot, would have been out doors
in twenty seoonde, Here we all sat as dumb
as o stere and as helpless as snails, fer we
realized that it was a " stand up."
" Naw, gents," said the young man show-
ing hie white teeth as he smiled, " 1 want to
raise a few hundred dollars for an orphan
asylum in the States. I shall expect each
one of you to contribute. If any gentle-
man should ao far forget himself as to pall
his gun,, my friend William, who shoats
beth -handed, will promptly attend to hie
ease."
It was only after this little speech that
we fully comprehended what was going on'
William kept every man of us under his eye'
with his two plating ready for service, and
we were oewed. I knew that the average
man will feel contempt for us and smart
that he would have done this er that had he
been one of the six, but he is mistaken.
Under like circumstances, unless he was a
fool, he would have tamely submitted.
That red-cheeked boy,, as we were net long
in oonoluding, was a road agent named Cel.
Lae, and the man Wiiliam had j natly earned
THE NAME OF "BLOODY BILL."
Only six months before they had held np the
Mariposa stage, in which one of our number
was a passenger.
"Come. gents, time is money -with ns,"
said the Colonel as we sat staring at him.
" Here's my cap, who chips in the first hull-
deed!"
un-dyed1"
He held it toward me, and I dropped In
fear twenties, whioh was all I had. The
next man came dawn with $200 ; the next
with $150, and by the time the last had con-
tributed the Colonel had $800 in his cap,
In tranaferingit to his pocket he counted
the money, and as he put his oap en his
head he said t
" This will go a geed way toward making
the little orphans happy. I don't want any-
thing else, gentlemen, and wa will now take
our leave. I would advise you not to fol-
low, though of course yon can aot your own
pleasure. I wish you geed morning."
The two banked eat and shut the dear.
whioh swung out instead of in, Scarcely
had it closed before we made a rash, bat
they. were still too smart for ne. They had
braced a log against it, and there was only
ene window' in the house. Before anyone
had volunteered to crawl ent of that the
twe fellows had made good their escape,
In going away they met our gook en his
way baok, and the Colonel handed him a
flask of whiskey and asked him to present
it to us with hie oompliments. We took
the trail and pursued it for several hours,
but we had seen the last of them.
A Faithful Animal
A very strange and pathetic 000nrrenoe
has just oome under observation at Tiffin.
Last October'little Freddy Luiz, eon ef Mr.
and Mrs. Luiz of Tiffin, was taken suddenly
ill and died. He was a kind and loving
bey, and had for a pet a little terrier dog,
to whioh he was very kind. After hia
death the deg chewed signs of great grief,
orying and howling piteously. Since the
death of their loved son the parents have
regularly visited hie grave and strewed
flowers and dropped tears upon` the little
mound, The dog always accompanied
them, and at the grave would show unmis-
takable signs of grfef. A few days ago the
family visited the grave and the deg did
net return home with them. Late in the
evening the superintendent of the ceme-
tery, Mr. Clouser, caw the dog lying en
his young master's grave howling piteously
would
and tried to drive him away, but he w
not go. He laid there until the middle of
the next day, when he was finally driven
away with great effort,
A Short Outfit.
When Ethalinda Do Wiggs (visited her
ooneins in the country last week, ono of
them said
" Linda, don't you want to help me piok
peas this morning 1"
" I'd like to, dear," replied Ethalinda,
"but I am net properly dressed for pioking
peas,"
" Why, how is that ?"
" I forgot to bring a pea -jacket with me.
Discovery.
.
AS
Startling Cover
A startling and important discovery was
made when, after long and patient experi-
ments, the combination of Nerviline was
reaohol. A grand victory, indeed, for the
g er ready, prompt, ef,
suffering have
at band, Do you
talent, and cheap remedy
know that for 10 Dente you can bay a trial
bottle of Poison's Nerviline and test its
great power over pain of every description f
Polien's Norvlihte cures chills, pain lit the
atomaoh, side, and back, rheumatism ; in
fact all pain, Sold by druggists and country
dealers.
In the .Good Old Ootoily Times.
(fF`ront tits Penne ivanfe Gazette gt I719.)
$ oma ti ine elnoe six convtoted eervanta, viz.,
four white men, one, white woman, and one
mulatto man, living with several mestere on
Railpahanuook River, combined together to
run away, and a000rdlvgly stole it boat, went
down the river to the bey, and proceeded to
the mouth of York Rater, where they met
withan of m
d an and hi o i
s a mall sloe
a b n a
P
going to carry oorn from one part of the bay
to another, They formed the men and bay
to surrender the blimp and gave them the
boat which they had. Then they proceeded
in the sloop to ward New York, but, by their
unekilfulneaa in navigation and oontrary
winds, they were kept out ao long that they
were almost perished with hanger. At
length they were met by Capt. Long in bis
Majesty's ship the—. Phe convicts told
the Captain a formal story that they nailed
from London In a ship bound for these porta,
but were unfortunately met with by pirates
on this coast,
who took them and theirship,
etriPPed them of all, and turned
them (poorr
creatures) adrift in that little sloop, &o. The
Captain had oempesslon on them, took them
en board, ordered them to be better clothed,
and fed, and so proceeded toward Virginia.
Meantime one of the man -of war'e Ballon
rummaging their little sloop, feud some
sorewe and rollers, who Immediately inform-
ed the Captain of it, and told him that as
these things were used in no other °pantry
than Virginia or Maryland for roiling tobeo.
oe, he believed these people were runaways
from thence, and had Imposed faleehoode on
him. The Captain thereupon ordered one of
them (', young man of better countenance
than the rest) to be brought to him, who,
upon examination, contemned the whale story
of their running away, and taking the poor
old man's sloop from him. They were ae-
oared, and when the fillip arrived in Virginia
were delivered up to justice, committed to
prison, and were last w eek tried at this city
by a Court of Admiralty. were found guilty
of piraoy, and all nix reoeived sentence of
death..His Honour the Governeur, through
his own olemenoy and the Intercession of
Capt. Long, has been pleased to reprieve the
young man above mentioned, and one other,
and the rest,, viz,, two white men, one
white woman, and a mulatto man, are to be
executed in a few days and two of them hung
in chains, viz., one at Rappahannock River,
near the place whenoe they ran, and the
other at York River, near the place where
they committed the piracy. This a000nnt
we thought proper te publish, in hopes It
may be a means to deter others from such
wicked conrees, lest they should fall ander
the like unhappy oiroumetanoes,
" Vioe Versa."
" Let me see some of your black kid
gloves," said airy Snagge to a olerk in a
eters. u.Thane aro net Inc latest etylee, are
they I'' when the gloves were produced.
" Yea, madam," replied the olerk, ., we have
had them In stook only two days." . "f
didn't think they were, because the fashion
paper says that blank kids have tan atitohes,
and vire versa. I see the tan etitohes but
net the vice versa." Tne clerk explained
that vice versa was Latin for seven battane,
and Mrs. Snagge bought the (loves.
" Dinna Be Fear's 1"
The following lnoident is said to have
occurred at a repent volunteer encampment.
Ona misty night a sentinel walked hie al-
lotted number of paces with martial steps,
all nnooneofoua ef danger. But a stealthy
tread strikes en hie ear. He stops short in
his march, brings his rifle te the charge,
and In a stern voice demands—" Who goes
there 1" From out the, gloom comes a
shrill, calm volae—" Dlnna be fear't ledger ;
t'e jlat me 1" ao an old Roman, with a baa•
ket ever • her arm, confronts the aeteniehed
warrior.
In a Store.
Lady—" Your store has been reoom-
mendedto me as having some very nine milk
parasols."
Clerk—" Yon pet ve has got 'em. Oar
new parasola threw, everydinge is dot line
in de shade."
Coining tome` to' Die.
At a peried of _life when budding woman-
hood requires all her strength to meet the
demands nature makes upon it, many a
young woman returns home from the severe
mental steal* 'ef'school with a breken•dewn
constitution, and her functions disarranged,
to go to an early grave. If she had been
wisely counseled and given the benefit of
Dr. Pieroe's "Favorite Preeoription her
bodily development might have kept paoe
with'her:mental growth, and health and
beauty would net have given way to deoline
and death.
Col, Knapp, of Carson, Nev., going sud-
denly into his ohlaken yard, found a dead
fox lying on the ground. It' was still warm.
He took it into the house, and his wife held
the bedy in her lap while the children
played with it. Some one opened a window,
and the fox jumped from the startled wo-
man'slap and made a leap for the window.
He fell short, and was captured. It was a
remarkable exhibition of "playing 'pop
earn,"'
A Free Fight.
The great reputeion of Briggs' Electric Oil
is such that it sas in:.uoed unprincipled per-
sons to adopt other names as near like it as
possible. The proprietors of Brigs Eiectrim
Oil have the name and style of the E.ectrio Oil
registered both in Canada and the United
States, and no one can use it but themselves.
Others hearing of the success of Brigge' Eleo-
lectrio Oil have adopted other naives similar,
suoh as "Eclectric Oil," Electron Oil," &o..
and are striving to induce the public to buy
them instead of the genuine Electric 011.
In fact so determined were they that they.
brought a suit at Law, in the High Court of
Canada, to deprive Briggs & Sons of their
right to control the some but the Courts and
the Minister of Agriculture at Ottawa fully
sustained their registered trade mark.
Briggs' Electric oil cures Rheumatism, Neu-
ralgia, Sprairs and Bruises, coniplainta arris-
Ing from Colds such as 8o•e Throat, Cough,
Asthma, B ronchitis and difficult breathing.
A favorite drink ef the late Bavarian
King Ludwig was white wine in which vie.
lets had been well steeped. He also was
very fond of champagne poured over white
vielet..
Young or middle-aged men :naming from
nervous debility, loss of memory, premature
old age. as the result of bad habits, shezild
send 10 dente in eta:lope for large illustrated
treatise suggesting unfailing cure. Address
`World's Dapenoary Medical Association,
Buffalo, N, Y.
Ratbite are becoming so abundant or -
tions of Colorado that it is suggested that
the Legislature offer a bounty fer rabbit
noel it, to prevent them from overrunning
and leying waste the whole country.
Chronic nasal catarrh --guaranteed cure-
Dr, Sage's Catarrh Remedy,
one todro-
a
Mn, Henry M. Stanley has a p p
aoval to lecture throughout England.next
utumn on Afrioan,tepies,
Don't nsa any meso nauseous rnegatives such
ea Pills, Salts, &o.when you can get in Dr..
Carson's Stomach Others',a medicine that
moves theBowell gently" eleanaing all incur.
plet from' the eyrtem and retitle -flag the Blood
Mire and pool. Great Baring Medicine 60 ate.
A CITE, FOM I►BUMIMENNES$;
opium, ;nlorpnine, ohloral, tobaoc0, and
kindred habits. The medicine may be given
in tea or coffee without the knowledge of
the person taking' 11 ,it 80 desired. $ nci Sp mere le
In etanlPp, for kook and toatiwotelate from
these who have been caked. Address. M. HO
V. Lubop, 47 WeilingtouSt, Eist, Toronto,
Oat. Cat this out for future reference. The snow DIM* 1iskina Powder "o„ ':B*Ragi0! e
Waco writing mention tbiep aper,
ACuel hpeddlertlu an ht
a horse were
attacked y swarm
of bees belonging to a
prospective customer and severely etnng.
• Ade, 29$
reM$N—Tit6S-and toe ladles—ae O
anvasee
good' AY. KasxHDYToron o, Out,
ANA SAN ,MA,CIIINBI—ALL SIZES—LATEST
intveniea • r z
pm to, b apkea band qa vo for attach•
o' p
R to penia; coal, cheap and durable; send for
circulars. JOHN QtradHe & 00., Carleton Plage,
Ont.
GENT$ WANTED—IN EVERY TOWN AND
county, for the Q. K. Parer and slicer. Best
thln
county,
au rens � 81 ht •Banal* a1
4 � K t e e e n n
g , R10
receipt Hen 1 0
p o1 p 6 . Q. D. DAY, Agent,
40 Vence :80., we/onto, Ont.
'pEPREBEN
TATIVE In each county
to sell "Pro -
°L y44441aod BsPgleal"—a bAok on
Love, OourG
ship, Metrimooy and kindred themes. Write for
otroulare. International Book rad Blida Howe,
Toronto, Ont.
AGENTGENTS FOR NEW PARALLEL FAMILY
S
type, splendid maps, herniate'
lliuotrati n ; contains 4 00
o e, R 0 gueetioneand answers
on Bible Tooios ; liberal terms. International
Book and Bible House, Toronto, Out.
L1 CUOOL Teachers ,Ya Students 'Attention 1
1.i Daring Hollaaya a special ooureo of private
!eevon, by highest: Mestere, will be given 8ohool
Terminus and Students, on Shorthand, Drawing or
Painting.- Ail who can ehouid come. Send lamed!.
ately for special Dimmers Taa Moos SHORT.
RANDERS' ACADEMY, Arcade, Toronto.
ID700Acre Farm -$500 00 Acre Farm
1 mile from fundelk-100,000 acting
playa, 15 conte; 110.000 5 cent male; instruments
ialf•priae. BUTLAND, 87 King.st. W., Toronto.
THE POPULAR
Story Paper, The Fireside Weekly. Sixierial
stories by the most talented au thors in each issue.
A number of interesting Complete Tales of Love,
Romance, and Adventure, Choieo Poetry, Short
Sketches, Household Recipes, Science, Wit and
Humor, etc., contained in each issue of The
Fireside Weekly. do, per cop ; or, with 40 If
the most desirable songs of the day, 32,00 per
year' six months and 20 pieces music, $1; three
months and 10 pieces music, 500. Subscribe
now. Agents wanted everywhere. Liberal com-
mission. Sample copies free. Tai. Filename
'tVnlnu.Y, 28 Colborne St., Toronto, Canada.
MONEY TO LEND
--ON--
Productive Town, Village & Farm Property
D. MITCIIELL McDONALD, Barrister.
a Futon Block-- Toronto Street --Toronto.
WANTED 1M.IIEDLATELY.—Two HUNDRED
1 V Stuaentefor Shorthand. Bookkeeping, Artth.
mettle, Writing, Art, and all Commercial and English
omen, eto. Privete lereone day or evening. Special
Terme. All graduates helped in procuring good pnet.
bone. Addrese at once, THE TORONTO BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 37, 80, 41 Adelaide 8t. East, Tomato.
lDiBENCn4GR'd' Shorthand and Business
Institute. Toronto, This is the oldest and
Manic Shorthand and Typewriting School in Can-
ada. Its Teachers and. Lecturers are men of length-
ened practical experience. Special lnduoemente dur-
ing eu nmer menthe. Poeitione secured graduates.
Shorthand book, tousle. Curespondenee invited.
AGENTS !—YOU CAN'T FIND A BOOK THAT
give. better eatiefaotlon or that yyou can make
money faster with than "World'. Wonders." Sells to
allclasses—Christians and Infidel., Catholics and
Protestants, old and young; old agents who have
not canveseed for years are going into the field with
It; 0. F. Jenkin. sold 128 the first week ; J. E . Brave
eaves "The first week with " Wonders" netted me
one hundred and sixteen dollars." A good chance
for unemployed persona ; outfit free to actual can -
miners; write for terms. Mariner, Gaaasrsoa rf
Co., Brantford.
Hams, Breakfast Bacon.
Our goods are of the Finest Quality, Fall Flavour
and Seganoured. Silver medals awarded ns for pact
eevon years for excellence of once.
JAS. PARK & SON,
Ont.'
Toronto,
1 .DIVER &,C °
ELECTRO &STEREOTYPERS .
TORONTO.
MERIDEN BRITA N!A CO.
MANUFACTURE ONLY
30 I AT 313
SILVER - PLATED
.w- . _ _it. 33.
GEusiuossto11eg
Guelph
ONTARIO.
The '!ChirdSohelaide Tear bogies Sept.lot• 1alron''
age drawn !rent Tits STATEB,asn5aoVlraae. Young
MOD and o0y a. thnrougbly revered fo' eurloeap ppar.
Oahe. Gaaduates .erataontly eaooesatui. Praotfoal
work. Moderate rides and etralght dealing eharao'
teras the 10,118atl. n Ladles Admitted. For Infos.
of
mttioa Addroea M, MC1l
eoRfdlCK, Principal.
BRANTFORD
COLDWATER RICE STOIC }I
NEVER FAILS,
ASK FOR THE
GLOBE Washboard
KEPT PYALL GROCERS
MANUFACTURED 13Y HAMILTON
WalterWoods&C? &TORONTO
ARMSTRONG'S PATENT
BUGGY& CARRiAGE GEARS
haeto arri
C e
ON OUR
Improved^
EUREKA"
Gear.
LIGHT, STYLISH, STRONG, DURABLE -
AND THE EASIEST RIDING BUGGY,MADE.
As now improved the "Eureka" Gear is free from
defects of any kind, and is meeting with a readyeale.
Made to milt open or top bugles and pheetooe. For
sale by all the Leading Carriage Builders. Send for
our deaoript!ve price list. J. B. ARMSTRONG
M'F'C CO. (LD.), GUELPH, CANADA,
J.L.J ONES
WOOD ENGRAVER
10 KING ST EAST
TORONTO. a
1
R.SPENCE&CO.,
consumers will find it to their advantage
to ask the trade for our make of Filey and
Rasps. Re -Cutting a Specialty. Send
for price net and terms.
Hamilton, - Ontario.
co
Send for Catalogue.
TENTS, FLAGS, HAMMOCKS,
AND_CAMPING GOODS.
Macnair's 169 YONGE .,
TorontoST. -
in.Every enquiry cheerfully answered.
MILTS
FINE
COLD
EXTRACT
TRUE
FRUITS
rLAvtisl
DAL LEI('S
FINE ,GOLD
EXTRACTS.
ABSOLUTELY, PURE
FROM SELECT; FRUIT.
SOLD EVERYWHERE'5
Alan Line !Loyal Mail Steamships,
Sailing during winter from Portland every Thnrh
day and. Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and In
summer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool,
calling at Londonderry to land mails and passengers
for Scotland and Ireland; also from Baltimore, via
Halifax and St. John'a, N.F., to Liverpool fortnightly
during eummer months. The steamers of the Glee.
gow lines ,all during winter to and from Halifax,
Portland, Boston and Philadelphia ; and during gum.
mer between Glasgow and Montreal weekly;Glob
gow and Boston weekly, and Glaagow and Phlladel
Artistic Designs, combined with phi' fortnightly.
For freight, panage, or other Information apply M
A. Schumacher dc0o., Baltimore ; 8. Cunard & Co..
Halifax ; Shea & Co., St. John'a N.F. ; Wm. Thomp.
eon & Co., St. John, N. B, ; Allen & Co., Chicago i
Love & Alden. New York ; H. Bonrlier, Toronto;
Unequalled Durability
and Finish.
a 3KYllltO�il +
4::•lt1t. inane, Kao & Co., Quebec; Wm. Brookle, Phfiadel
Shia; H. A. Anon, Portland, Boston. Montreal
MANUFACTURERS AND MILLERS WILL SAVE MONEY BYS1NG
MoColl's
-
Try It once end yon will nee no other. — — Every Barrel Guarantied.
We are the Sole Manufaetnrers of the Genuine Cardin.
or Also Cylinder, Engine, Wool and Harness Oils. "se
McCOLL BROS. & CO., TORONTO.
Try Our Canadian Coal Oil, "SUNLIGHT" Brand. Finest in the
Market.
NEW HARRIS AND MAMMOTH
STEEL DOME HOT-AIR FURNACES.
A
0
0
faa
The Ibost Effbotive, /!lean, Dttraide and Eeonointeal!heaters in the Market let, , arming
and ventilating, Oburohes, Reboots, Pubilo Buildings, Stores and Private Reeldenoee, Simple In oonetruo.
Mon and easily managed, capable of giving more heat with lees coneumpton of fuel than Iwyother beating
apparatus. i?l'Abaoluiely Gas'Plght."1kA Eight rizee'"Itarris" ,. and [oar sizes Mammoth"
are made and can be sot either in Brick or Portable form. Oorreapondenoe solicited, For Cateleg¢ee and
farther information,ddrele
41 II
111111130i;
tit