The Exeter Times, 1895-1-10, Page 7a
r,
.T. EXETEB TIMES
rheople Who
Weigh and • Compare
Know and get the best. Cottolene,
the new vegetable shortening, has
won a wide and wonderful popu-
larity. At its introduction it was
submitted to expert chemists, promi-
nerit physicians and famous cooks.
All of these pronounced
a natural, healthful and acceptable
•food -product, better than lard for
every cooking purpose.
The success of Cottolene is now
• a matter of history. Will you share
in the better ,food and better health
.for which it stands, by using it in
your home?
Cottolene is sold in 3 and 5
pound pails by all grocers.
Made only by
The N. K. Fairbank
Company,
Wellington and Annlitto,
MON'ERRAIa
FOR MEN AND WOMEN.
grade Mark] OR.. A. OWEN,
THE
OWEN
ELECTRIC
BELT.
The only Scientific and Practical Electric
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Working hours or sleep, and will positively cure
Rheum ati sna. '
Sciatica'
General Debility
Lumbago,
Nervous Disease e
kel Dyspepsia,
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Ridneyr Diseases,
Lame Back,
A Urinary Diseases
Electricity properly applied is fast taking_ r7
plkce of drugs for an Nervous, Rheumatic. Kid-
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in seemingly hopeless cases where,every other
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Any sluggish, weak or diseased organ may
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before it is too late. „.
Leading naedical men use and recommend
the Owen Belt in their practice.
OV V ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE
Contains fullest information regarding the mire
of acrite, chronic and nervous diseases, prices,
how to order, etc., mailed (sealed) FR EE to
any address.
The Owen Electric Belt & Appliance Co.
49 KI NG Se. Wa TORONTO, ONT.
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MENTION THIS PAPER.
CARTERS
FIFTLE
IVER
PILLS.
;lick Headache and reeve all the troubles Mel -
%tit tociEtil,bilatollisseas.taigoo,MIlsrttiesi=ftl.
eating, Pain in the Side, &c. While their most
'remarkable success has been shown in curing
Headache, yet CAILTErt'S LITTLE LIVER rirla
are equally' valuable in Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the stomach,
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
*Ohe they would he almost pr eeless tO Meets
who suffer from this distressing complaint:
but fortithafely their ettoaness deo not end
Nava and these who once try theni will find
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they vvill not130 willing to do without them.
• But after all sick head
is die bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
Irhile °there do ndt.
, Otierreee Derpr,ip Liven Pus are very small
• and verY eiseY te• fake. Ono or twb pills make
n. dose. They ciao steietly vegetable and Oo
not41.1P0 Or puir, wit by their geetle gegen
pie e iVho is a them. to viarS sa es tg;
five or nl, See evergwhere, dr seet by mail
00.11Eil tillAl011111 CO., Nen YOrt,
111511 PCJI.• PP% 17101 real,
--ant
----,r
Perseverenet ewe itwll gwe relief, Oven,
In eases of long tie/Wing, where a mite seelne$
Oripthible end life premed eardly worth renew'
• Pornottle.25e;50e,or$L00. •
IN LONDON'S KR&
'rim PLACES 'WHERE DANGER EVER
LURKS IN THE BIG CITY,
Wm of the emu), brilliaist with lighte,
erowded with richly dressed Wenten,
girls with floating hair and wanted facies)
and men in evening dress oannot be dencrib.
"Diana ef the crossings," who its intro-
dtteed to us by George Itieritlith, relates
her IRidnight adventures to a newspaper
office, where the encounters the male mem-
hem of her own pleas, and awe:
"No, I trust the English common man
more than ever. The Ertglieli gentleman
travels on hie reputation.
"Unprotected no woman is if she it a
third-olass traveler."
Ceder the Shadow of the Towers or West.
mluster Are the Worst of the tortdolt
y Lighted' filtreele,
With Throngs of tine Degraded -Voter'
ode Peelde Should avoid Vide Part or
?Lou(*en,
Whitechapel in the respeotability of ita
exterior fails to live up to its reputation.
Its many little etreets are covered with
asphalt, and are kept scrupulously olean.
There are no sidewalks, the clean aephalt
timehea the doorsteps of the little two-storey
brick houses with which the streets are
lined, These houses, from the outside,
have the staid seriousness of a village.
The children play without danger in the
streets and the babies crawl like cater-
pillars from door to door. From the street
the interior of the houses looks dark mid
dirty. The women in the doorways seemed
to have stepped out of Dickens. The con-
spicuous thing is that the city has done its
part, and if the population did not live up
to the clean asphalt, the Euglish-man's
house is his castle, and he can live dirty in
it if he chooses.
Any one who has threaded the narrow
streets of Whitechapel alone and on foot,
listening to Cockney and Jew, without a
thrill at anything more alarming than bad
grammar or a new oath, might reasonably
expeot something from the London docks.
Here are bearded men, tattooed men,men
of. curious complexions, wearing earrings,
perhaps turbaned and scarcely a petticoat,
-
except on the slatterna in the sailors' eat-
ing houses. On the dock there is the pick
of these. The Christian child unconscious-
ly selects that whioh displays a Scripture
text, although the cook looks like a re-
tired pirate, and the dirty -fingered maid
slams down the tried eels with the flick
of an expectant three -pence in her eye, or
she will know the reason why. Yet the
street behind the stanch boarding of the
Loudon docks is as quiet as a village street.
There, indeed, might be horned cows and
hairy worms.
UNDER THE SHADOW
of the towers of Westminster are the worst
of the London slums. As applied, the
word is misleading. It is difficult to recon-
cile innocent little white streets with jail.
birds and cut-throats. Seen in the dim
London moonlight, Great Peter street looks
like a neat little village street, witch as
Cazin frequently paints. Yet inside the
lighted panes with a coin in the pocket,
one's life, it is said, is not worth a far-
thing. The police for these dangerous
districts are taken from the most worthy
and discreet of the force. The paternal
character of their office is emphasized.
They are given large discretion, with in-
structions to discourage all excitements,
and to settle all difficulties, wherever prac-
ticable without arrests.
A timely inctinnonto jlinettateilanbia..
theisrailoirera.Vouse a drab was quarrel-
ing with a man. At last she struck him
and he turned on her. The woman screamed
murder; in an instantthe houses shed their
inmates and there was a crowd. Instantly
a policeman appeared. A few words apart
to the man, a few to the woman ; one went
one way, the other another, and the crowd
as quickly was gone. Tho paternal aspect
of the affair was almost humorous.
The New Cut, Lambeth, is on the other
side of the Thames, in the region of the
Canterbury Music Hall. Timorous people,
in their inability to dissociate poverty from
crime, tell tales of danger on midafternoon.
On Saturday nighte there are to be seen
sights. At 10 o'clock on Saturday night
the street is almost impassable from side to
side.
The New Cut is not over a hail dozen
blocks long. It is bordered by gin shops,
cheap eating houses and penny shows. Ihe
street is occupied by a market. The food,
the meat, the green grocer's stuff, is sur-
priaingly good. The butchers sell their
meat at auction. The bacon is properly
distributed, as to fat and lean; the beef
American and cheap. In the eating houses
everything is a penny. They are crowded.
The favorite food is stewed eels. With
the precaution of buying a new spoon out-
side the eels prove to berappetizing. They
are covered with parsley, well seasoned
and served with a dash of pepper sauce. A
penny buys a large bowlful. Other shops
sell fried potatoes and stews and are fre-
quented by the more prosperous shoppers,
THE GIN SHOPS
are full of men and women. Many ot the
women have young children holding on to
their skirts. That gin shops should ever
have a domestic air is unthought of here.
The women gossip with one another over
their glasses as if they were teacups.
Husbands and wives, girls and young men
drink beer in the amity of a beer saloon.
At 10 o'clock nobody is yet drunk: If
there are thieves they do not steal there.
There were no brawls. The dangerous
crowd seem to be made .up of the lowest of
wage workers, spending their pennies and
enjoying the society of their fellew-crea-
tures.
flow London atonable its inimeose popu-
lation by importing food and selling it so
cheaply is the problem it alone among
cities has solved. Near Shaftesbury ave-
nue, very near the Seven Dial, now enjoy-
ing comparative respectability, is one of
those cheap midnight eating houses that
contribute so much to the comfort of the
London poor. It is not a charity. It is
carried on by the Cafe Monica in Picoadilly
dirous, and is equipped with a row of
kettles and frying pans, under the eharge
of white -capped cooks. In front of the
lower. barrier, shutting off the atoning
kettles, are the lowest outcasts of London,
the squalor and degradation of whose as-
pect can scarcely be rivaled by any oity ha
the t orld.
They are men and wortlen, many with
ohildren. . A few at on the narrew tables,
bat the majority hold out edemas of brown
paper or old newspapers for their food,
into which it is dropped, and they go out
with it. Those with families perhapri take
it home, and the greater number sit down
cm the ground and at it out of their paperg.
The stream of people pouring in balances
the streata pouring out until:midnight.
Having traversed two markets of the
parish poor, theeaded three streets of
thieves and'eaten and drnuk in wetapittly
of outcasts and seen at least 20,000 people,
of whom only a few were druek, the road
home may &Aitken throtigh Piccadilly Cir.
cus. The shame, the terror, the degrade -
The Bore at Moncton.
We had long known that that curioue
freak of the Fundy tides, the "bore," or
tidal wave, appears at Moncton, N. E.
and at Monoton only) with every tide,
twice a day. As we stepped upon the
wharf one of na, writes a correspondent,
said to the other: " See, there comes the
bore 1" and there it was, three miles away,
beyond the bend across which WO were
looking-- a long, white, level streak, tut.
ting screen the river from bank to bank.
Sighting by houses and trees along the
shore, we could measure how awif dy it ap-
proached ; and in a very few minutes it
needed no such help to see thee it oame
rolling on with the speed of a railway train'
showing the low, tumbling outline of a
broken " roller " on the beach. Nearer
and nearer, with a sharp, hissing roar, we
almost held our breath, waiting for the
moment when it should pass beneath our
feet. Ten minutes from the time we first
saw it the moment came.
Looking down upon it, what we eaw was
a head of water, as though from a broken
dam, stretching straight across the chan-
nel, and rolling, ternbling, foaming as it
raced along, just as a great breaker races
up the beaoh after its fall. Before it the
surface of the river was low, qutet, rip-
pling gently downwardtowarde the sea; be-
hbad the water level was nearly three feet
higher, and coursing up from the sea with
the speed and fury of a miniature Niagara
gorge. At the sides the foam was brown
with mud torn from the banks, and all the
plunging current that came after was tur-
bid and dark.
We watched that magic white line re-
ceding, twisting and* turning as the chan-
nel curved between the wastes of mud flat;
and moment by moment the level of the
racing flood below us climbed higher on
the piling. A group of boys who had been
playing until the last possible second out
on the flats scattered into trailing lines of
black dots making for the shore. At last,
when the white line had grown quite in-
distinguishable m the distance, we turned
away. We had seen the bore.
A COSTLY PROJECT,
whiat England Will Undertake When Her
Coal Gives Out.
The Popular Science 'Monthly contains an
artiole describing a proposed isthmus or
dam across the northern part of the Irish
Channel, the main object being to utilize
the current through this channel for mech-
anical purposes. The channel is 300 feet
demsean.grannertrge,- rnatigatnyTskestnea!atione
tidal current from the north is eight miles
an hour. As a result 50 cubic miles, or over
200,000,000,000 tons of water, pass the
point where it is proposed to build the dam
every day. The rate at which the water
moves gives each of these tong of wane'the
power of ten -foot tons, and the power
developed is, therefore, between 150,000, WO
and 200,000,000 horse power. There are
hills near at hand from which the materials
for the dam can be taken, and shipping
may be provided for by locks or by enlarg-
ing certain canals.
If the plan should be successful it would
make England practically independent of
her coal supply, but there are obstacles in
the way. .b or instance, it would be impos-
sible to transmit the electrical power pro-
duced without loss, and transferring it for
more than 100 miles is at present imprac-
ticable. It would, nevertheless, be possi-
ble to use.it in the Lancashire cotton mills,
and perhaps in the smelting Works in
Northern England. Electricity may be also
used in cooking, and if the price of coal
rose somewhat it could be employed for
heating. As an engine requires about one
ton of coal a year per horse power to keep
it running day and night, it will be seen
that England would in this new source of
power have a substitute for her entire coal
output. The cost of the undertaking is
estimated at 5100,000,000. Reckoning in-
terest at 5 per cent., this wOuld be about
three cents a year, for every horse power
produced, or equal to three cents a ton for
every ten of coal displaced. But the cost
of utilizing the force wonld be enormous.
It is doubtful whether this plan is practic-
able as yet, but it shows how groundless
are the feers of those who think that civil-
ization must cease when the world's supply
of pal gives out. Here is an opportunity
to seoure horse power enough to run all the
faille and furnaces of Great Britain.
HORSE -POWER.
How the Unit of Measuring IrOWer was
Estioniished.
The unit of measurement of mechanical
power was introduced by James Watt, and
called a "horee-power." One of the first
steam engines bent by Watt was to furnish
the power for tho pumos in the brewery at
Witbread, England, which up to that time
was supplied by horses.
The nontroot called for as much power as
furnished by a strong horse, and in order
to get as powerful an engine as possible the
brewer ascertained the amount of labor
performed by a horse by working an excep.
ttonally strong horse for eight hours without
a stop, urging the animal with a Whip until
it was exhausted, and thereby succeeded in
raising 2,000,000 gallona of water.
Considering the height of the reservoir this
laborrepresents the present unit of a niers°.
power," that is, the lifting of 168g pounds
to a height of about three feet per second.
This result, however, was obtained by
oxeeptional methods, and should not be
considered the basis of measurement of
meehanical power. A.ctually the power of
the average horse is barely sufficient to lift
Otto 70 poutide three feet iiigh per se cond,
Can't Please 'Em.
Ektiploynient Agent*-"Soine people are
entirely too particular for this world."
Friend—'(Vithat's happened'?"
Employment Agent—"That fitiioky Mrs.
'Upton has discharged the cook I aerie her,
just beoanse the nook couldn't cook."
Children Cry for Pitcher's psistorito
TO BE
A SESORAIIR.
THE BUILDING WILL BE RALE A
MILE HIGH.
Ned W1101101180 Clothe, weed and Cater
4° 'r°l/141441100, or 20,000 People, Ali
Under One Mammoth Roof,
It if( proposed to erect in New York a
mammoth building that will be
whole oity it itself, capable of holm -
hag, feeding and clothing a population
of 20,000 people. It is understood that
a site has already been purchased, and
the construction of the immense struc-
ture will begin at once. TIIE EARTH
prints a cut of the proposed building
on :this page, which is taken from the
architect's plans.
The foundations will be dug very deep
and the main piles will be wrought iron.
Iron interspersed with alominum, with glass
and with stone for pictorial effect, will be
used chiefly in the construction of the
building.
This will be a huge oval shell with a
spacious court, hotel, theatre and spiral
driving part of gradual ascent inside the
central dome. The arrangement will be
such that during Summer the sides of this
flats will not average less than $2,000
apieoe.
This item alone gives $5,000,000, or dve
per cent, interest on the erigindl investment.
of $100,000,000.
Consider, now, the l'ood bills of these
2,500 families, who will be supplied from
the great central restaurant. These 'food,
bills will not beleae than another $5,000,000
per anoum, half of which, or more, may be
reckoned os sheer, olear Profit.
(Jonsider next that all the Stores, wurhisn
baths drives, theatres, eta., in this Place
will ls'o owned and managed by the company,
and that in addition to the constant profit
aceruiug from those who live in the city
will be the etreem of
TRAFFIC) wool %TIE OUTSIDE.
For is it not clear that outsiders will coine
in floods to it plaee where not only every-
thing is cheaper than eleewhere, accerd-
bag to quality, bat where so much tremend-
out architectural beauty is set off by ouch
unimaginable splendor of electric lights,
shifting through all tints like the fountains
at the World's Fair iti Chicago?
It should be added that betides the spiral
driving park, which will be 1 :le enough
for five phaetons to move abreast, there
will be several glass and aluminum aerial
lakes or reservoirs on different floors of the
ceutral dome into which water from artesian
wells will flow. '
ELYSIAN FIELDS UNDER COVER!
These will be lined with grassy banks,
flowers and trees, and little bath houses,
looking like kiosks, will be sprinkled here
and there on .the borders. nome of these
will he so arranged that in auffithently
THE PROPOSED BUILD/NG OF THE Immo.
(A Boston Enthusiasts Idea.)
imperceptibly ascending spiral avenue can
be thrown open to natural air, while in
eevere Winter weather they can be closed
tight, if necessary.
at The lower part of the huge oval shell will
be arranged chiefly for the management of
wholesale businesees,and on the second floor
„,the employes and workers in the vast hive
will have theii-giflortiirrm
There will be hfty floors with an average
height of thirty feet but between some of
the flats there will be floors that will
contain halls and ballrooms leasable in turn
by the neighbors of this covered city so
that the probable height of the building
will be
OVER HALF A MILE.
Each one of these flats will look out on
the inner court and also on the street of
the outside world, and each will be ar-
ranged according to the accompanying cut
for a family of six or eight persons. They
will be so arranged in building the separate
outside sections thatnone of their windows
will look into those of an opposite neighbor.
The sections of the apartment turrets or
series of flats will be fifty in number.
Hence the calculation is easy that about
20,000 people can be accommodated in this
mammoth apartment palace.
The rentals of these 2,500 most desirable
wintry weather they can be thrown open
and absolutely perfect skating rinks thus
formed.
In other parts of the vast central dome
gymnasiums and chapels will be found
and, crowning glory of the whole, a magni-
ficent newspaper like the Journal will pro-
bably be published.
Like the Crystal Palace at Sydendam,
the, entirety of this city 10 e city will be
roofed Over Witkplite-gli'ettastknnet4 will
so constructed that at the pressure of a
finger this prismatic crown can be lifted
and laid aside, to allow air from heaven free
entrance, and also for hygienic purposes
there will be various pumps and fans
throughout the differentscompartments to
insure daily purification of the atmosphere.
But the tremendoup hygienic aehievea
ment of the whole will be that a man and
his family can have a Floridian or Bermu
dan climate in Winter and can also have as
much coolness as they wish in Summer.
Everything, too, that ono can possibly
desire will be obtainable in this place, for
there will be in the corridors of the differ-
ent floors miles and miles of booths and
bazaars. For ladies it will be shopping not
only made easy, but transformed into a
pictorial, artistic delight.
Everywhere that one may turn new
visions of beauty will present themselves,
and as for flowere, they will be growing as
plentifully in the corridors or streets of this
dream city as they used to grow according
to Prescott, in all the markets, shops and
streets of the ancient Aztecs.
TRAINING
--
Carried to a Remarkable Proficiency Ity
Animal Performers.
The most remarkable of animal trainers
is, without doubt, Prof, Bonetti, now in
London whose troupe of educated foxes,
geese, ducks, fowls, ravens and dogs is
marvelous. His foxes jump over hurdles
arid through hoops, they jump over ducks
and fowls, they feed with these birds,whom
it is their nature to feed on, aud they run
about the arena, with foxhounds, whom
they usually run away from. When the
children see the professor's beautifulcat
walk a bamboo bar, on which are 18 lovely
white mice, they cry "Did you ever ?" and
clap their hands in delight. °
Of the trained animals now in London
however, the Siberian bears of M. W:
Permane attract the most attention. To
see them standing on a eyeing and "talk.
ing" to their master is really killing fun.
The way they will sit down at a table and
drink stout out of bottles is an edifying
sight for any total abstainer to see. Per-
haps the oilman of comicality is reached
when ono of theee unwieldly creatures has
a lady's straw hot tied to his head and
walks round the stage on M. Permane s
arm, trying hard to kiss him all the time,
and wadding aboutwith all the gracefulness
of any mature maiden lady of uncertain
age among my acquaintances. That bear
will shake hand a with M. Permeate like a
thoroughly good fellow, but if you were t o
try to shake hands with him you would
find his heartiness a little trying,
How to get a "Sunlight", Picture,
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a
Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Nfan") te
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 &Ott St., Tororito,
toadyou will receive by poste, pretty pictnres
free from advertising, and well worth fratn.
ing. This is an easy way to dederate your
home. The soap is the best in the market
and it will only cost lo. postage to send in
the wrappers, if you leave the ends open.
Write your address (carefully,
Itorptimi lamps, dating, it is believed,
from 8000 B. a, have bee,n discovered in
the catatornbs along :the Nile,
FROZEN TO DEATH NEAR REGINA.
--
A iensband Meets Death Seeking Help for
ills Family.
A despatch from Regina, N. W. T.,says:—
The house of William Thompson, a farmer
living 25 miles north of Regina, took fire
early Satnrday morning while the family
were asleep: Thompson's youngest child
Was burned to death, auother child severely
burned and his wife badly burned about the
body. Thompson, who was perfectly nude
when he escaped from the house, hastily
placed his wife and burned child in an old
building, and started for a neighbor's. The
thermometer registered nearly 40 below
zero and Thompson was frozen to death be-
fore'he reached the house.
KENDALL'S.
SPANN CURE
41. 4,11:
THE
MOST 4UCCE8SFIIL REMEDY
FOR MAN OR NEAST.
Certain In its effects and never blistera.
Bead proofs belOw:
KENDALL'S. SPAWN CURE
nunoroisr, D. ' MY,.
nit E. is Emmett/. Co.
Gent:totes-I boegbte sPlendid bay horse some
Mine ago with a,Snavin. Igothim fella°. I need
Rendan's Spavin cure. The nenvin is gon,e hOW
and I have been oftered $150 for the tante note).
I only bad bine nine weeks, sot got ;MOM. wenn
Pworth of Bendairs Spalvin Cure.
• Youratruly, W. 3, amens&
KENDALL'S SPAWN_ CURE
Sextet, Mum, nee. 16,1818.
Dr. 13.1,1ittandtlCio.
Sirs ---X have Used your. Rendelli'n spenin cure
with good slimes for CliVbt4 htlneS and
lt 15 the best Liniment I have neer used.
Yours truly, Atom Pettitaleg.
Perttnegg' illattteihddress
Dr. D, tr. ./ZEIVI),,ta.t awitrAlfri,
tNCONUi#011 rAhLO, VT,,
Sugar Baret 'reea
Sugar barrele are much larger than the
ordinary flour barrels and. because of the
faet that sugar is a heavy commodity--thor
barrels hold about 300 pounds -:-are more
substantially made. • The accomganying
=EXPENSIVE PEEP CREST,
illustration shows one of these barrels
converted into a very convenient and use-
ful feed chest for stable USO, Such a barrel
is also handy in the poultry house for a
similar purpose. Wheae one has room, it
is well to errant) several barrela in this
way, each for a different kind of feed,which
makes it oonverdent for indulging the horses
or cattle with ocoaeional changers in their
bill of fare—a change vvhich is always
gratefully appreciated . by them. These
receptacles keep the feeds free from dust
and dirt,and vermin (marmot easily effect an
entrance save by gnawing through.
Grooming the Cows.
1 The advice is often given to card and
brush them but explicit reasons therefore
are seldom vouchsafed writes a correspon-
dent. At the beginning of winter it is
opportune to consider this subject solely
on its merits, and. if it will pay, practically,
dairymen should not neglect it. It has
been the writer's experience that it does
pay, not only in the appearance of the
animal but iu the maintenance . of her
physical economy.
In man the skin has been called 'the
third lung," and in all of the lower aohnals
it possesses important fuuctions of excre-
tion and absorbtion. With °owe at pasture,
and under the favoring influences of nature
through the summer, the need of this care
is not so much felt, but the moment that
they are stable confined and subjected to a
dry diet, they need proportionate atten-
tion. With lees exercise and an. absence
of grass feed, the skin is not so active in
discharging effete matter, and its functions
are further handicapped by the accumula-
tion of dust and excrement from stable
surroundings.
All dairymen recognize this in the care
of their horses, and groom them thoroughly
every day, but with exceptional instances
the poor °owe are not green the benefit
thereof. A card and. brush are the best
articles to use, employed as a curry comb
and brush' would be to :dean a horse. Not
merely the backs of the cows should be
cleaned, but their sides, bellies, and lege
as well. By using gentleness and care no
cow will be provoked to kick when work -
mg around her farsn-ssoehenweansusenta
ously an inveterate kicker, in which case
she has no business in the dairy.
The friction of the card and brush, besides
freeing the hair from dirt, stimulates the
skin, and draws more blood to it for its
nourishmeat. In this way hairs are
checked from falling out, the excretory
ducts kept from clogging up by the removal
of foreign matter, and a substantial aid
given to. ard maintaining the health and
vigor of the animal. This is not fancy but
a physiological fact, that the writer has
proven and seen proven to his satisfaction.
A properly compounded dieb alone will
not lend a glossy luster to a cow's coat in
winter, if its daily brushing be neglected.
Besides contributing to the health and
good appearance of the animal, the praotice
is necessary to cleanly milking.
While we may talk on how to get dirt
and filth out of milk, the consumer will
have greater peace of mind in knowing
that there has never been any dirt in it. It
is indeed a disgusting farce to be particu-
lar about straining milk, and not be par-
ticular to make the need of straining al-
most formal.
Cows should be carded and brushed at
least once a day, and there will be no hairs
or dirt, or scurf to fall into the wide-
mouthed milk pail. It has been my obser-
vation that in the common cow stable, on
the common fium, busalittle if any prepar-
ation is made for the winter occupancy of
rnilch animals. The windows are choked
with cobwebs'excluding sunlight ; the
walls, covered by lase year's accumulation
of dire, give forth an odor that is augmen-
ted rather than lessened when the stable
tonnes into active winter use. Keep the
stable more clean, and it will help to insure
cleanliness to the confined animals cleanli-
ness to the fodder, and cleanliness to the
milk. The mere material of which the
Stable may be composed does not make so
much difference as the writer is avvarer, for
his first stable was a log one and he made
it satisfaetory.
Foul warm air in a cove stable may be
even more injurious than cold pure air, but
we must combine the warmth and purity to
keep out tuberculosis, epidemics of abortion,
loss of appetite, derangement of the lacteal
system, and digeased milk. The winter
that is upon us bids fair to be a long one,
and all dairymen should strive to make
their cattle as iosensible as possible to its
effects. To clo this their quarters should
be so comfortable and healthy, and their
food so carefully rationed and regularly
fed, that the state of the season will have
but little debilitating influence upon them,
I know by experience that the close eorifine-
ment of mulch cattle through a long winter
is not incompatible with their good health
and physical vigor In the epring. A routine
of ono tsharaeter of feed, however, is not to
be recommended unless the cowe are
thriving remarkably well on it.
Having been suocessful in their nee 1 are
a firm friend of roots for the whiter feeding
of stock. .As an appetieer, 'with bright
hay they are (remnant. The trouble iti that
a large proportion of the mote that are fed
are out of condition when they are placed
before the cows, and so do not give Baths -
factory results. A withered, -wilted root,
or one oovered with dirt,.is a badly dam-
aged. one. Whether turnipt,l, inangels or
carrots, they ehmild be crisp, fresh and
oleani to be of real utility. A hot, stuffy
holm Cellar always ruins their quality.
While a SAVO cellar or properly gonstraoted
pit preserves il.
in is not the dairytaati who runs to this
fad tu- to that fad in feeding, who always
Only the Sc
Iternaln
• 3r0 TIEN= BUDSON, a the ,Aziea
$2ulth Woolo#
Xaotilx;ory Co.,
thilaclolphiN
Pao, wtto oortie
flea as follow's;
Among the
many testimon54
Alt which I see
fis regard -te caw
tain medieMs
performing
cures, cleansing
he blood, etel
one impress vat;
more than nkle
owzt ettena
Twenty year*
ago, at the age
9E18 years, Iliad
swellings come
on ray legs,
whieh broke and
became runs,
ning soros/
Our family pliro
sician could do
nao no good. and it was feared that the
bouss would be affected. At last, my
gOol old
Mother Urged Me
te tra Ayees Sarsaparilla. 1 tookthree
bottles the sores healed, and I have not
beeo troubled since. Only the scars
remain, and the memory of the
past, to remind me of the good
Ayer's Sarsaparilla has done meo
I now weigh two 'hundred and twent
pounds, and am in the best of healt
I have been on the road for the pant
twelve years, have noticed Ayer's Sar.
saparilla advertised in all parts of the
*United States, and always take pleas.
ure in telling what good it did for me,"
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. 3.0. Ayer St Co., Lowellsliaee.
Cures others,will cureyOU
oil 1111101
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2 If a person orders his paper disceintinued
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nd then collect the whol amount, whether
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dr:AD-MAKER'S
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NEVER FAILS Te 01V OATISFILOTala
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gets the most milk out of his cows. RoOte
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When Baby vow slat. ate FAME) hor C18ilin186
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,t