HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-7-3, Page 2AGRICULTURAL;
The ManiWllo Cannot Lana!,
There are scores of individuals wo really caul
adore,
And the chiefest of the number is the very try-
ing
rying bore
Who, waren you're fcaliug jolly and a little fun
kwould Hoke,
Will see the point until you diagram roux
coke.
itis eyes T.ssume a vacant stare until he think:
awhile
With great deliberation, then he done a fader:.
smile.
Oh, itwould bo a pleasure just to write the
epitaph
And bide away the shadow of the mat who eau.
not laugh.
How like a biting frost that chills the roses In
thei • bloom
Are sombre individuals who wear a cloak of
gioom •
Who cannot comprehend the worth of just a
spark of tun,.
Who shrink from joy ;and pleasure as the bats
avoid the min,
The deeper, sober thought within the heart
should have apiece.
But let gold laughter now and then the cures of
lite erase;
Away with lbimwhocannot siftthekernelsfrom
the cbatt'i
ashes world could wag along without the man
who cannot laugh.
Why He Didn't Stay Out West.
A young man who went west filled with
enthusiasm and a desire to +t o aw np with
return-
ing
d his friends 1iy,r
the country surprised
ing home after an absence of several weeks.
Bo said that while he was out land limiting
in what he thought was the garden spot of
a boarded-upclaim
America, he came across
shauty. On the boards nailedacroesthe door
he foundtbis inscription, which. accounted
far his unexpected returu :"Fore miles from
a nayber. Sixteen miles from a postofis.
Twenty-five miles from a raleroad, A hun-
dred and atey from timber, Two lrandred
and fifty feet from water, There's no tktawe
like home, We've gone et st to spena the
winter with my wife's folks."
veil to Canadianas 1 o United States farm -
es : Heretofore, in all parts of the world
•te farmer has been uo match for his adver-
try. He has never held his own against
he soldier or the priest, against the
,ulitieiaxtor the statesman. In axuient times!,
.e was the slave ; in the middle ages the •
orf, In the nineteenth century he is the
'ave, the serf, thepeasant or the proprietor,
cording to loeatiou. American farmers as
• class are face to face . with a crisis, They
axe subdued a continent and •furnished the
.,av material far our factories, bread for
•peratives, and manhood for our civilization.
d'
How to Keep Butter.
Butter can be kept good tor sic menthe,
but when compared with fresh -made, gc ed
butter, the flavor that attraets attention in
the market is gone, and it sells away down,
If for family use, butter limy be made and
kept, and the daily deterioration will be so
gradual that one does not notice the chauge
unless he accidentally gets his mouth tilled
with some choice made, fresh butter. In
making butter to keep I would not use lac.
There is are difference between icing intik
and cream, and cold storage for butter after
it is made, and we all know that cold stor-
age butter will not keep any considerable
lengthoftime after being taken out of the
cold. I would not use ice, or only enough
to cool the water in the tank clown to about
50°. Ice•raised cream is for present•use
butter, unless our: has cold storage and only
removes enough at a time for daily needs.
After moderate salting (one-balf ounce of
salt to the pound, for long -keeping butter,
is far preferable to an ounce), make it up hi
pound cakes, by preslture. Wrap each one
m fresh muslin cloths. Take a new barrel,
or half barrel, soak it out well, and make a
brine as strong as possible by dissolving fine
dairy salt with boiling water, When this
brine is cold fill the barrel with brine and
butter, set iu a cool lace where the temper-
ature will be as uniform as possible; keep
brine over the butter and the conditions for
keeping will be as nearly perfect as can be.
Experiments now goh, r forward are fast
leading to the conclusion that the use of ice
when water at 50 0 can be had, is about un•
necessary, and not only as much butter se
cured and as fine flavor, but the keeping
qualities will bo actually better, Where
the milk is not sold, but the skim milk fed,
the plan is very simple. First, the milk is
brought to the dairy room as fast as possible,
so as to cool as little as may be, and as it is
strained into the cans hot water at 125 0 i$
added to the extent of one-fourth its bulk,
so that the milk shall mark 100 ° , and the
cans sot at once into the water, andprocced-
ed with the mune as if ice was being used.
The fall in temperature by this process is
ample to get all of the fats, assisted as they
are by the more fluid condition of the milk.
I more than half suspect that the sudden
cooling of milk down to 45 ° with ice, or
making it more fluid with water, and reduc-
ing the temperature down to 55 ° or there-
abouts, amounts to about the same thing—
holding the formation of lactofibrin in the
]till: Fn check and giving the fat globules a
freer and less obstructed passage to the sur-
face. If it turns out that the double water
plan is all right—and in the winter it cer-
tainly is—then the average dairy woman
who does not always have ice, but who can
lay her hand at any time upon a dish of hot
water, can with an inexpensive tin pail and
plankbox creamery, have a show for equality
in butter making, and her liege lord escape
the expense of an ice house and the job of
filling it, and so have more time to discuss
the /'depression of agriculture."
PERSONALS.
Miss Philippa Fawcett, daughter of the
late Professor Fawcett, the blind English
philosopher and statesman, has taken the
!ugliest educational honor yet won by a
.soman at Cambridge University. She is 1,500 miles north, The remarkable reports',
twenty-two years old, and her mewed in that white travellers have brought home of
mathematics far surpassed those received by the mineral riches of Mashonaland, of the
any man at the recent examinations, healthfulness of this elevated region, and
--- its adaptability.for white immigration, have
beautiful album,bearingthe signatures aroused much curiosity to kuow more of the
A beat it
of ninny of the most distinguished person. ahnost unexplored country, and the story of
they have sustained the nation's credit ages hr this country and England, and con- the expedition will be widely read; There is
Ftlr their hard earned dollars, rescued en. ages
drawings by a few eminent artists, a newspaper correspondent with the party,
has been presented to M. Pasteur, the emir- and he win toll all about the long journey
salt chemist, as a testimonial. It was origin- anti discoveries in the laud which was one
' it
gbonesof contention 311 rias recent un.
of the
c successfully carried through by
axed andt andPratt Airs. Priestly, the wife of the distinguished pleasantzlessbet veen E anoan d Por mga1.
English plmysiciaa, For many years Du Clhailha's stories of his
travels in Africa were discredited, to a large
Ludwig Lewerstrom, "the black rider" extent, because he reported remarkable
who for twenty four years carried all Prince 1 things about gorillas and dwarfs, which
Bismarck's ofriutal messages between the many learned men declined to believe. A
t1 iihehu Stresse and the Palace Tinter den few months ago dwarfs like those he de -
Linden, and retired from duty at the sante i the
regibed were ion he visited, end otheriscovered ls recent t lex of lora-
time with his master, has been taken into a
Caprivi. As
the service of Chancellor Von Caprivi. have completely relieved Du C slain
he cares for the transmission of from the undeserved stigma of drawing the
formerly,
allt,'hnxzcellor'a long bow ill his descriptions of life iia the
documents that pass from the
ptalaee to the imperial Library, African forests. Probably no famous tray-
eller of recent times has suffered more than
vented, is beginning to apply moreaccusate-
ly to 'ast regions in South America than to
Afrilfp
The first expedition of the British South
African Company left Cape Towel in April
for ;kiashonaland and the Illatabele country,
langered liberty with their conseientious
!allots and defended time and . again the
tars and Stripes es with-
their • loyal
body. ody
+'goru8 m �j, strong in character, strik-
ng in
individuality, lovers of home, Massive
n common sense, fertile in resourt!es, devout
pelievers in Providence, the farmers of
America will zievcr allow themselves to be
werwhelmed by the fate that sunk the til-
ers of the soil in India, hi Egypt, in Europe.
From all parts of this land farmers are
coming together. Organization and co -opera -
.ion are the wonderful ideas that have
'wakened them as never before. They are
;rasping hands with a grip that means same -
Mug, comparing ways and means, uniting
upon ends to be gained. They demand for
:iietnselves and their children an education
.•quaff to the best. They insist upon a fair
o' 'ear a nl st . •
.liars of the profits of Ahlmeml i rr u r},
ittimiug that no state can long exist in wheel:
:he tillers of the soil hear most of the burdens
red share little of the blessings of advancing
civilization.
But they are in danger of malting mus -
:ekes in the struggle • that shall turn back
the progress of the mov ernent, They demand
Leaders. To supply this demand is the im-
perative duty of the educated farmer.
Whatsoever• of bodily vigor, mental power
old moral heroism the educated farmer may
have acquired from ancestors, eollege or
university, he will need that he may conse-
crate it to the great work of streugtheuing
his brethern the farmers of America, so that
;hey shall ever remain an immovable femmda-
tiou of this the only republic whose empire
has not been readily undermined.
Oro= s Abroad.
A London paper says; "Reports as to the
apple ert?p to be expected this year are most
idle ting. The cold night+ of May have
lone some harm, but the ;!ports are prima -
pally concealed with caterpillars, Somerset
stud Devon seem still to be exceptionally free
from attack. Cheshire, West Sussex, Here.
fordshire and the neighborhood of $outnalnp•
ton report great ravages, From Swanley we
learn that where applications were well
tlhplied to the trunks of trees the crop
promises well. France reports apples, pears
inti cherries a fair crop- -nothing else good;
Belgium and Holland, the same as to apples
ted pears only; Germany repnrtsapPples and
plums bad, and cherries only half a crop,
the summary of the whole ,eport is that
:harries are batt all round, plums very short,
!and that fur pears we shall have to rely on
foreign supplies."
-When Heifers Should Breed.
A. W. Cheever in answer to a question as
When heifers should breed says:
1. My preference is for the heifer to
calve at about two and a half years. This
will call for service of bull at twenty-one
months. To calve at two years old, as some
advise, is taxing the immature system too
heavily, and is likely to diminish size and
vigor, and if followed for several generations
would reduce the size of the breed. On the
other hand, if heifers are not allowed to
calve till three or more years old they may
develop size of carcass and thebeef-making
qualities at the expense of milk production.
much
in each
Ofindividual case
course
would depend
u on how the heifer was kept.
A. poorly ept heifer may be smallerat three
years than a well-bred and well cared -for
would be at two.
When
heifers are allowedat two
to calve
and a half years or younger they should, be
kept farrow a sufficient time to allowthem
to attain good size before having their second
calf. Treated in this way, heifers begin•to
paytheirkeeping at an
early age and may
ae the best of cows.
2. If a heifer is sufficiently mature her
first calf will In as valuable to raise as
later ones, as these may be weakened some-
what by late milking of the "dam. The
heifer, with her first calf, has not been re-
duced by milking. A calf from a young
heifer will be smaller at birth than one
should be from a mature cow, but if the
stock is vigorous it will make up for any
such disadvantage.
3: This is a disputed question, and with
evidence to support both sides. I should
never hesitate to breed a. pure=bred female
to a pure-bred male because the female had
at some former period been bred to a male
Ornamental Vines.
"Trees and flowers are not enough with
whieh to adorn and beautify our surround.
hers \abl AHCe of
1 1t,a , we must have vines, an lxhd
vines. A house without vines is like a bird
without a mate ; it wears a look of desola-
tion." 1''o dower garden is complete without
•a few graceful climbers. The C'oboca is a
rapid and elegant climbing annual. It is a
native of hlexieo, named from a botanist,
llern•hardez Cobo. Tho variety known As
:'oboes Scandons is best known. It has
large, ball -shaped flowers, and requires a
I•ieh, moist soil. As it takes a long time for
the seed to germinate, it should be planted
early in the house or hotbed, ami trans.
planted. The seed should be put into the
ground edgewise instead of laying thein clown
tint. 'When flat seeds are thrown down care-
lessly instead of puttiug them in on the
edge, many of them decay instead of sprout-
ing. It can be grown from cuttings rooted
in water or sand, kept in a warm, sunny
place. It is a good vine for the house, fes-
toons beautifully, and will do well where gas
and coal are used.
There are said to be over 200 varieties of
clematis, most of then; hardy climters, and
many blooming profusely the entire season.
they should have a rich, deep soil, and be
protected during the winter. They do best
where they can have an eastern exposure
and are partially shaded from the midday
sun. Give plenty of water and a frame to
ran on. Jackmania is a great favorite and
largely cultivated, has largo purple flowers.
The well known varieties, American White
Clematis, " Virginienne," is a very desirable
acquisition to any garden, has clusters of fine
Flowers. The Alexander, with reddish -violet
flowers, and Henrye, with large, creamy -
white flowers, are among the best of the new
varieties. There are many varieties of
climbing honeysuckle. Hall's Japan has
pure white flowers, changing to yellow, is
very fragrant, and a goof bloomer. Dutch
honeysuckle, or monthly fragrant, blooms
all summer. The Chinese wisteria is a rapid
climber, growing from 15 to 20 feet in one
season. It grows to an immense size, and
is covered in May and June withlong clust-
ers of pale blue flowers.
The American climbing trumpet vine is
very hardy, hast scarlet, trumpet -shaped
flowers ; blossoms in August.
The bitter sweet, a native climber, is a
shrubby vine that grows wild. over hedges
and small trees by the roadside and in the
forests. It grows from seeds, or roots can
be procured from the woods. It has glossy
leaves and
g
e
ta a beautiful orange, berries c
in autumn, which are prized. for Christmas
decorations. The vine is very hardy and
bears transplanting. In Massachusetts it is
called Roxbury wax work.
the most desir-
r'avine is one of 1 e s
The Made z
from tubers
• 1 climbers. Itispropagated
ab a cl p,
and should be plantd out as soon as the
ground is free from frost. It has thick, glossy,
green. leaves, 1 es and often climbs 4
0
teet. It does better in a sandy soil, not too
rich. In the fall it is covered with clusters
of white, sweet scented flowers. The bulbs !,
should be taken up in the fall before the
ground freezes, and kept in a dry cellar.
these also do well as house plants.
The American ivy, Virginia creeper or
woodbine, sometimes called five -leaved ivy,
is a rapid -growing: deciduous vine. It needs
no trying, but will fasten its tendrils to a
well or smooth surface. It has five -lobed
leaves of a handsome green, which change to
scarlet and crimson as the frosts come, which
m>,kes it very ornamental.
English ivy is an evergreen vine and pretty
'.or covering rock -work, walls or arbors. It
that was not pure bred. I believe the Altos readily, and is much used for covering
chances of offspring being influenced by the louses.
imagination of the dam and her surround-
ings are quite as great' as by* any connection
with a sire of previous offspring.
he from the ill-founded incredulity of in -
Tire German Emperor has summoned be• telligent readers, and it must be particular.
investigation
fora biro for zmhavatlh,atrctn a young negro ly gratifying to him to see that important
pr•i ,ee, known as Alfred hell, from the (.'ale- johunals which had called him unreliable
eroon country, West Africa, who had been atonow admitting that the progress of know -
sent to Bremen to learn the trade of a car- ledge has justified his deseriptions.
u
petite; and avtzo is alleged to have joined al ..
gang of Soeialists and Anarchists. If hell . 1'a1 -Off Star.
should turn out to be really a Socialist he
will not be allowed to return to the Caino It is difficult to conceive that the beauti-
eroons, for fear of corrupting the natives. ful dog star is a globe much larger than our
sun, yet it is a fact that Sirius is a sun
times ore mighty than our own,
Kaiser W illiam selected a dinner at Kon- 1
many
sl lendid star, which, even in our most
iaaherg for delivering his conception of kirl powerful telescopes, appears as a. mere point
ship in the following speech: It was here, ` of light, is in reality a globe emitting so (m-
in the palace church, that his Majesty the ornlous a quantity of light and heat, that
late Emperor William I, again proclaimed were it to take the place of our sun, every
before the whole world Inc kingship by the creature on this earth would be consumed
gra.e of Gott This Kinship by the grace bits burning rays.
tai lied' expresses the fact that we Holten-t y Sirius shining with far greater lustre than)
zollerus accept our crown only from heaven, any other star, it was natural that astrono- I
and are responsible ta heaven for the per- tiers should have regarded this as being the
fornhanee of its duties. I, too, am animated nearest of all the "laxed" stars ; but recant
by this vidat-, sial am resolved to act and to investigation l o d- t.
h • „ or the lytances of thestars
govern on this principle. I has shown the t the nearest to us is Alpha 1
Centauri, a star belonging to the southern
It will not the surprising if the report latitude, though it is probable that Sirius is
proves suis that Manley rs going back to about fourth on the list in order of distance.
Africa next year as Governor of the Colo For though there are about 15 or 20 stars
State. King Leopold has been particular y whose distances have been conjectured the
happy in the Governors who baste represent. ' astronomer knows that in reality all of
ed Ihini on the Congo. De. Winton who them, save -three or four, lie at distances too'
su::ceeded .Stanley, and Jannseus, the pre- great to he measured by any instruments we I
sent ineumiiont, have both hone muck to have at present.
repla-:e savagery with order and good gov, Astronomers agree in fixing the distance
eminent. But after all there is no name so
of the nearest star At ,.,, 22
,Oi)O,OOO,Qil0,000
intent on the Congo as that of Stanley, andmiles, and it is certain that the distance of
it will be a boon to the State if this ishan' Sirius is more than three and less than six
of wonderful energy is in command waren times that of Alpha Centauri, most likely
the new era which the railroal will in. I about five times, so that we are probably not
traduce is ushered in, far from the truth if we set the distance of
Sirius at about 100,00)1,000,000,000 of miles.
Mr. Isaac Pitman of Bath, England, the What a distance is this that separates us
father of Phonography, has opened an office from that bright star ; words and figures
at 3 East 1 4th street, New York, for the sale •themselves fail to convey to our minds any
of his shorthand books. The system of Pit- adequate idea of its true character.
man is, to•day, practically doing the short- I To take a common example of illustrating
hand -writing of the Euglislh-speaking world, such enormous distances : It is calculated
the systems of Ben Pitman, Graham, lien, 1 that the ball from an Armstrong.100•pouucler
son, and others in use in America being only) quits the gun with the speed of about 400
alterations of the original Isaac Pitman 1 yards per second. Now, if this velocity
system. There are, bowever, a great many ' could be kept up it would require no fewer:
students and. writers of the "Isaac" style than 100,000,000 years before the ball could
(which has now been broiiglit to almost abs! . reach Sirius.
lute perfection in England), and these wilt t •
now have a rallying point, and be able to
keep er rcpport with the latest development Batter in England.
of the original Phonography. Normandy butter is losing its footing in
the English markets. Between 158.3 and
The greatest man of letters now living in 1887 the annual export to England fell off
Scotland 1s probably Davol Masson, Pro- by nearly 32,000,0001. That the cause of
fessor of Rhetoric and English Literature in this decline is the fraudulent adulteration of
Edinburgh University"-' He is best known the article is admitted by a syndicate of
by his "Life of John Milton and the His- butter merchants of Northern Franco, who
tory of His TIme," although the is the author have recently issued an appeal to their
of a number of other works that have countrymen to endeavor to avert this dis-
brought him fame. Professor Masson Wag aster to the trade. The fraudulent admix -
acquainted with Douglas, Jerrold, Dickens, turo of oleomargarine is said to be extensive-
Thackeray, and Carlyle, and is said to ly practiced at Caen, notwithstanding special
resemble the last-named in personal appear- laws lately enacted on the subject. The
syndicate referred to propose that the butter -
makers shall be compelled to impart to the
fatty substances used as substitutes for but -
The Educated Farmer.
The following remarks by Prof• C. S.
Walker of Massachusetts apply equally as
once. He is au effective lecturer and orator,
and has made himself prominent as an advo-
cate of woman's right to higher education
and participation in the learned professions. ter some coloring matter, so that its presence
Although sixty-eight years old, he is full of may at once be apparent to the eye.
fire andvigor.
The mistress of a sewing school, Miss
Bromberg of Odessa was brought before the
Out of Indian Seas.
The Indian marine survey steamer Investi-
court because she used her class . rooms for gator, which returned. to Bombay lately
general instruction. The detectives had from a surveyimg cruise, has sent a rich
tound in her school thirty little girls with zoological collection both fromn the shallows
books in their hands learning to spell and and the depths of the Indian seas to Calcutta
to read: Miss Bromberg pleaded that slid Museum, where specimens are now being
knew not that it was wrong to teach the grouped and arranged for distribution to
children letters, since her school was licens- specialists in Europe to be determined and
ed and she employed a licensed teacher to described. The fish and crustaceans are
instruct them. Bat the Judge informed her being reserved to be classified here. Some
that she was guilty of .misdemeanor, for her very productive hauls of the trawl were
establishment was licensed only as a sewing made m the depths of the Arabian Sea, the
school, and she had no right to teach her takes including may specimens of deep-sea
pu rias anything but nerdle work. On account fishes and crustaceans. Especially worthy
of her poverty and ignorance of the law, ' of mention among the latter are two new
however, he inflicted upon her the mild fie' forms of lobster, a great variety of prawns,
of ten roubles. • —_ and some gigantic creatures of the woodlouse
tribe, closely allied, if not identical, with
The news from Uganda that Mwanga is the remarkable creature dredged by the
on top again in that distracted country will United States steamer Blake in the Gulf of
gratify all who are interested in African Florida several years ago.
progress, for his success means the predoin-
inance of white influences, while his brother,
Kalema, is nothing but the tool of the Arab
slave dealers who have been doing their
worst to drive white foreigners from Vic-
toria Nyanza. Uganda is the natural cen-
tre
from which civilizing
influences should
spread over Central Africa. Itseo le
have large capacity for improvement and
were unusually advanced in some respects sheet of white metal, about two by four
longbefore theyever saw a white man. The inches, is ' punched' into the rough Aitlfnes
coutry will cntinue to attract attention, i of five pens. These are then ' worked' out
outlines. The hole in the
'. into complete u
't' thefair fairest portion of tro i
Serle because 1 as e p p
cal Africa, and also because it is one of the middle of every pen -point, sometimes an
most inviting
fields for white enterprise.
eighth
of
an inch long
and a 16th wide,
'pierced.'
orhe on is then
is then cutThe s
P
Iannealed and raised,' the latter process
Lord Salisbury said in hisLondon speech ech
geveng the relief effects on its convex sur -
the other day that nearly all the attention of fae. It is then ' hardened,' ' tempered,
the Foreign Office was at present occupied 'scoured,' ' ground,' 'slit' at the point and
with African matters, and he had been fn- I ,I varnished' before it is the pen -point of
formed that the proper thing in after-clinner commerce."
speeches nowadays was to talk of nothing but
' s unex-
plored
ne
Africa. South ,America, -with rt vast x-
plored regions, really has cause to feel jealous
of thereponderating attention given to
Africa. `two or three explorers have recently HAMILTON, June 26. William M. Souter,
one of the young vol
emerged from the almost unknown depths of
volunteers for the China
northern Bolivia and western Peru with a inland mission field who wentfrom this
fundof information about these ,countries end 'city with Rev. J. Hudson Taylor, died' at
their people that could scarcely be equalled Shanghai on May 23, of pleurisy. This
Africa. Theymakes the second of the Hamilton contin-
in novelty now in any part of A r gent whose deaths are chronicled—the other.
found one tribe that believed' the accounts been J Ialnilton.Racey.Previous to his
they had eard of white men we another remarkable people who do not know'' departure for China. Mr. Souter had been
what -drunkenness is, and another whosefav- ! studying for the Presbyterian ministry: He
If yon cannot be happy in one way, be in orite weapon is the ,blow pipe. Senor Fry was the son of David Setter, and his brother
mother, and this facilityof dispositionwants tells of Indians who wear pigtails and whose is Alexander M. Souter, of the firm of Mal
out little aid from philosophy, for health, language seems to resemble the Chinese. 1 colm &: Souter, in this city. Deceased was
end good humor are lmost hwhoa e affair. Some peoples were found to be particularly i twenty-seven years of age.
alany run about after felicity, like an absent primitive, living almost wholly onwild fruits
f r his hat, while it as in his and to count'above three. " The , Don't try to drowo your sorrows in a jug ;
nanhunting ot
nand or on his head. Dark Continent," .phrase that Stanley in- tioubles are great swimmers.
Making a Steel Pen.
" The ordinary steel pen of commerce,
which a steady writer will wear out in a
couple of hours of hard work," said a manu-
facturer, " goes through a dozen distinct
processes before the crude metal is convert-
ed into the polished pen -point. The flat
Death of a Missionary,
for Infants and Chaldron.
' a1Castoriaissowellatlaptedtochildrentbat Castorla cures Colic, Constipation,
trosorum uditassupeliortoany nmscaigtion soar Stomach, Dktrrhonh bkltacation.
Imogen to me.” Ytii141v'orms ves sloe and ;cotes di.
8. A. Arouse, lf. D. , � P. i�
,
esti n
g o
1Ul
111 So, Oxford St, Brooklyn, :i. Y. Without ilgjurious medication.
TUE CENTAUR Corms -y, T1 Murray Street, X.
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CREAK TARTAR
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GOING TO CALIFOR1IA
VIA ¶LRB
Santa. ,nta fe itoute.
n,,
IAC c n C
...... nu' Slen 615 Wed Thu .oat
Ar. 1't.e,nwts Cit, 1`:�i it. lo. lion Tues ;Thur Fat Snit
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k
t 0
gat !ruse. i,3a si
t a 'rues
.n
., a.i
Ph
u £!n
r r
1
Ar. Trinidad , ]l:]S a• ►. T s tY 1
n uo ed ,Fir 1,11' idea
Ar.Iaas Vega'. I6ijip,,n. Tues Wed Thu .Fri - Sat
kSat Itlon
Ar.Athugeurgne 1;SO a. In. Wed Thar Fri Sat lSun Tues
Ar Isaratoue.••, 'It:95 a. fu. Thur Fri Sat ;.gun ;Mon wed
Al-. Los augeles 14:20 p x1. rhur FA Sat ,Sun .fon w*d
As ban Dago. 9;i0 , m• Thur 15r, _ _
P t ,.ak u
b u !f
an 'tied
You get the only line of thr tush ears without change Chicago to Lo
Angeles, and you save 27 ]tours time,
OFk'IGki-74 GIi;ISWOLD-ST., DETROIT, s1ID11.
GEO. B. fiIL1I AIN Passenger Agent!
PUREST, STRONCEST, 8ESto
CONTAINS NO
ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES,
or any injurious materials.
E. W. GI LLETT, Tenons, oxer,
r.
WertCSL?rDAATXDSCTALAS&
TUB EXETER i.I 1EUa
is publl:mod may Thursday morn ng,at
TI MES STEAM PRINTING NOUSE
daia-atreet,nearlyopposite Fitton's Jewelery
dune, Bzeter, Qnt.,byJohn White Sone,Pro-
nrietore.
Aimee or Anvon,T($r.(Q
eirstiasertion.perliae 10 cents,
'tech subsequedtbetiertton,per line 3eetca.
To IAanre .iusertiou, advertisements should
it swain not latter thou Wednesday morning
Our3Oil TBINTINC ItFPARTaiENTis cue
1 the largest and best equipped in the County
f Buren, .Ail warkentruatod to ns will receiy
91• proraptatteation.
Decisions Itegardiug News-
papers.
enys r°e,aiert ourehpooa,whhdi e°d ola is ni
another's, or whether he has aubsoril,od or Aot
1' reap ousiblefor paymeut.
2 If &person orders Sia paper discontinued
boxuustpay all aaroars or the publisher ma7
tootiaue to Bandit until the payment SE made,
sed than collect the whole amount. whether
the paper is taken from tno efface or not.
8 In suits for sabsuriptiouo, the suit may be
natttuted in the place where tee paper is pub.
biked, although the subscriber may reside
hundreds of wiles away,
4 The courts have decided that refusing t
take newspapers or pcliodicala from the post
offIco,or reaming and leaving them uncalled
or is prima facie evidence of int ontioua]frau
Dt° FREE :,• oy1y�st it i ��
at!
old 'nth
• .; 1 •. Avon 0000000 SSSSSld ural
watt n
lu o
�... � w rad, l erfect
tlmokeoper aysrraatetfhaury,
*Orta 001.0 honing use,
Bolt Adtoa'and genes staan,
with works and eases of
equal value. ONE ruasoale
each lucidity esu seam ono
_ free, together with our mgr
and valuableaneefuon,ebold 4
ARAmeta Samples. `Throe simpleton welt
as the watch
n red do Is to show when we send py*0 t those who call—your
friends end neighbors and those ahnu1 on—tltatahrays results
i 0 valuable trade for u,, which holds lora oae when ansa started,
and thus wo ere repaid. We pay all (sprees, freight, aro. After
you know 011, It you would Ilk* to go to *refit fur us, you can
ro
earn !ut 1520 to 1500 per wish and upwards. Address,
Stinson d: Co.. Ilus 612.1Portiand, Maine.
The Most Successful Remedy ever deicer.
eyed, as It 1s certain In its effects and doer
not blister. Read proof below.
KENDALL'S SPAYIN CURE.
Omer or CRAtersd A. stanza.
Bnszoan or
CLEVELAND BAT Alta Taenia Sala Homan.
Et 1W00D, Us, Nov. 20,1224.
Da. B. 3 Emu= Co.
Dear Sirs: I have always parehated Soarlretr
da11's Spavin Cure by the half dozen bottles, I
would like prices in larger quantity. I think it is
earth.one of the best liniments on earth. I have used 11
en
my stables for three years.
Yours truly, Cols. d. St1'DEE.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE.
BaooxixN, N. Y., 'November 2, ISS8.
Du. eta. SENDALT. Co.
Dear Sirs :I desire to give you testimonial of my
good o inn of your Sendali's Sparta Cure. I have
'used lc for 1,amenosn, Stiff Joints and
spaying, and I have found Aasure cure, Icordl•
ally recommend It to ei her:amen.
Yours truly, A. H. GILBERT.
Manager Troy Laundry Stables.
KENDALL'S SPAYIN CURE.
SANT, WINTON Coocrr, Onto, Dec. 19, 1828.
Dn. D. J. KENDALL Co.
Gents : I feel !tiny duty to soy shat I have done
with your Eendall's Spavin Core. I have cured
twenty -lave horses that had Spavins, ten of
Ring Bonet nine afflicted with „iii Head and
seven of Bio Jaw. Since I have bad one of your
books and followed the direction, I have never
lost a case of any kind.
Yours truly, ANDBEW TtraNsa•
Horse Doctor.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN "CRE.
Price $1 per bottle, or six bottles for $5.. • 'rug.
gists have it or can get 1t for you, or it wilt.. ,,'it
to any address on receipt of price by the pr ^ h,•
tors. Ds. B. J 3XNDALL Co., Enosburgh Fahls, v,
SOLD. BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
USE .sSBRpyO
FRESH
ASK
GROCER
ir, ATHEM
los \)
//''''��I�'
C.lL-1.PEARSON 8c
1 A M0RE,MD.
KANSAS,
TEXAS,
OKLAHOMA
COLORADO,
UTAH,
NEW MEX1C0
CALIFO R NIA,
ARIZONA.?
OREGON,
And all points west of the Miasour Rive
via the
Santa Fe itoute
FROM CHICAGO.
For particulars and ticke s see your
Barest ticket agent, or address
GEO. E. GILMAN, Passeoger Agent,
74 Grstavold so, Ddtroib, Mioh
GEO. T. NI0I10L30 v,
General Pall. an t Tioket A;eat
Topska,FCaudaa .
9 CordslN ffl HOURS
Runs Easy
NO BACKACHE.
a
0SE ALAN. Write to eserlpptive Catalogue
containing testimonials fro amines or people who
hero sawed front 4 to 9 cords dol 25,000 now eucCest'
fully used. Agency can be : here there is a.
vacancy. A NAW INVENTION for 'ling14saws sent tree.
with each machine; by the use of this ool everybody
can file their
own saws nowth
ut It, iAdap r than e
greatest expert, can without it, Adapted to all `
crossave-cut rone.a
we.. Eye Id '
l one an owns re n saw B. A
hour dealeroort write telarman l FOLDING SAWING-
Caned* MA,
S or write t3AWINH. •MA• i.
CHINE CO. Pan
SOS to,811 19. Canal St., Oitioa¢o,1
*59T18 0018108
MILES am ED
oarn0Y3lY&
l
TO
.".. ..., - those w y g
,...tl. and thee* around yen.' Thfle
AYE." ginning of this s7rertiee
h ..�. shows the small. end of the
*cope. no 'ollow!' f out :r les the Appearance of it.todu
One of tate
Bk18T Tel-
o s 1n
eec o
fl, oqu
'world. curto i !mode e o
Unequaled-end •d..e-d is tntrod'uca!o
Superior geode we *rill seeding
•i;to0tiga garo5 h, each locality,
rOnlythose Who Wrj
*inhere. o
e ti e n make -
toes n e e a pure*
thernI is Allyou 05have g ode 18
return ti to AM, our , oda to
Ad call= our as
!Soca
about the fiftieth part of its bulk. itis n rend, double size t
scope, as largos la easy to carry. We 10111 also eltow you how
can make from $13 to$l0 n day at loan, (menthe dturt,with
out experience. Bettor write at once. We pay all exprcas charg'
Address, H. HALLET 5 CO,. 50* 5*80, i'ORTLA•D.
Q 18 CRANE LOVE STORIE
a
package of goods wort
two :dollars to manufacture, and a .lark
IOOp Picture Book, that win surely put yo1
On the road to a handsome fortune. Wriijt
quick, and send de. eilvor, to help pay $o
teage. Mention this paper.
A. W.1>;l1NIVLYt X,•srm.wth, IC S.