HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-3-21, Page 7x
d'aomar A. Tohso
A Common
Affliction
Permanently Cured by Taking
AYL3.RS :1:11÷:1
-
aparopore
A OAR.DRIVEWS STORY,
"I was afflicted for eight years with Malt
Rheum. During that time, I tried a great
many medicines which were highly rec-
ommended, butnone gave me relief. I
was at last advised to try A er's Sarsa-
parilla, by a friend who told me that I
must purchase six bottles and use them
according to directions. I yielded to his
persuasion, bought the six botttes,',and
took the contents of three of these bot-
ties without noticing any direct benefit.
Before. 1 had finished the fourth bottle,
my hands were as
Free from Eruptions
as ever they were. My business, which
s that of a cab -driver, requires me to
e out in cold and wet weather often
without gloves and the trouble bas
never returned "-- TnOatas A. Joints,
Stratford, Ont.
'Ayer s� arsa arilla
Admitted at the World's Fair. to
Aver's Pais Cleanse the Bowels.
1
,URF
CON STI PATI O N,
G'BiLIOUSNESS,
s -DK SPEPSIA,-
C HEADACHE,
EGU LATE THE
ONE PILL. AFTER EATING
INSURES GOOD DIGESTION..
PR10E25 CTS.THEDOD9S ti o4(1;, o
THEEM TER TIMES.
�IaUnbtlsned everyThurariay mooing, tis
TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
blain-Weet,uearly opposite Fitton's Jewelery
btoie,Exeter, Ont.,bydolru Waite da Sona,Pro-
orietora.
RATES OF ADVL3425S5NO
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To insure insertion, advertisements should
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o lthe largest and besteq uipped in tee Comity
oilIuron,Adl workeutruate.t to us wtltreds:la
norpromptatteution:
DeesiOns Regarding News-
papers.
siAypersonwho takes a paperreyutarlyfro a
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2 If a person orders his paper discontinued
boniest. pay alt arrears or the pnblishor may
ontinne to send it until the payment is made,
nd then collect the whole amount, whether
o paper is taken from the otllco or not.
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ished, although tire, subscriber auty reside
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4 The conies have decided that refusing to
aknewsp.apery or,,ario.iu:.cta fro.n toe praw
ilie.orreniaving and toavlrii 8a.) a 110
eprimafauie evil anal of iateutian.>,t fraul
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very that cure the worst eases of
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by over -work, or the errors or ex-
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iolutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other
TaLATMENTs have failed even to relieve. old by drug.
nista at $1 per package, orsix for $5, or sent by mail oa
eoeipt of price by addressing THE JAMES MEDICINE
• +. Torante. Ont. Write rovt nnmhl,1. p.r.rin-.
Sold at Browning's Drug Store, Exeter.
BEANS
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A'I'ost Card will do it.
Age of person or
case irnmai:erial•
ORAL S11 CLOTHE
134 Kinn Sr, WEST
TORONTO • • • CANADA
What He Hart.
r•'
Mrs, iii ghst le -.$ave yon anybleached
g Y y
oysters ? ..
Dialer -No, hit but we have some
r bleiiched: initple sirup, with all the maple
taken out of rf•
GANAAA,
The total of the Toronto Board of Werke
,.estimator for the year is $1,448,054.
The entire medical staff of the Ottawa
General ,�oepita1 has resigned.
A large;, 4'10neut of Manitoba butter was
made on Mo ss'tiy to England.
Ottawa proposes to 'pend forty-five
thousand dollars t,' improve its fire protec-
tion.
Mr.. John Crowe has presented the
Guelph General Hospital with an operating
table.
The estimated expenditure of the Handle
ton Police Commissioners this year is
$46,000.
Shortie, the ValloyfieId murderer, was
taken to Montreal on Saturday, and lodged
in gaol there.
The Finance Committee 'of the City
Council of Houlihan have struck the rate
of taxation at 11) mills.
The Montreal Hookey Club defeated
Queen's University five goals to one in Sat-
urday's game for the Stanley Cup.
It is oxpeoted that the new Sault Ste.
Marie canal will be open about a week after
the commencement of navigation.
Simeon Gagneau was instantly killed by
the breaking of a large circular saw which
he was attending in Shoed's mill in Dover
Township.
J. G. GauJaur, of Orilla, champion of
America, offers to row any man in the
world for $2,500 a aide over any course in
America.
Mr. John D. Ronald of Brussels, was ac-
quitted of the oharges of attempting to
bribe members of the Tweed Council at the
Belleville Aseizea.
Luella Larey, the young girl charged
with poisoning a child of Mrs. Pearson's of
North Grimsby, was acquitted at the As.
sizes in St. Catharines.
The fourteenth annual meeting of the
Canadian Pauifie railway will be held on
the 3rd of April in- the company's head
office in Montreal.
Controller Wallace halt decided that
electricity comes under the head' of unen-
umerated articles, and must pay a duty of
twenty per cent.
The city cf Winnipeg and the Manitoba
Government propose spending $200,000 in
making the Red river navigable from Lake
Wiunipeg to the city.
The thermometer at MaoLeod,N• W. T.,
on Friday was above ninety degrees in the
gun. There is no snow whatever there,and
the rivers have been open for ten days.
Mr. Fred Charles, aged 40, a married
farmer, living one mile north of Burford,
was engaged in drawing and cutting timber
in the bush on Saturday, when e. tree fell
and killed him.
The Londonderry Iron Company's bleat
furnace was lighted at Londonderry, N.S.,
on Thursday. The steaks of ore, fuel, and
limestone on hand and contracted for are
sufficient for twelve months' work.
The Rev. J. W. Annie, pastor of the
Queen's avenue Methodist church, London,
Out,, died on Thursday from brain disease,
by which he was stricken down about two
weeks ago. He was 45 years of age.
A bill will be introduced into the Ont-
ario Legislature during the present session
which will so amend the Act governing the
Agriculture and Arta Association as to
practically abolish that institution.
John Stone, the Grand Trunk conductor
who was arrested some months ago on a
charge of defrauding the Grand Trunk
rally? eyr againab whom a true bill was re-
turned, has sold his property and run away.
Neil Heath, B. A., late vice-principal of
the High school, Victoria, B. C., who was
suspended for six months for using Language
disrespectful to the Catholic doctrine of
trans -substantiation, has committed sui-
cide.
Mr, Foster,the Finance Minister,received
on Friday a cheque for five thousand dol-
lars beim Sir Donald Smith, to be applied
to the Thompson memorial fund. This
brims the amount of the fund up to thirty-
one thousand dollars.
It is likely that the venue in the Valley-
field murder will be changed from Beau-
harnoia to Montreal, which will be more
convenient for all parties concerned in the
trial, and Montreal gaol will be safer for
the prisoner than Beauharnois.
In view of the refusal of the United
States Congress to vote the indemnity to
the sealers agreed upon, the Dominion
Government is now urging the Home au-
thorities to decline to assent to the en-
forcement of the sealing regulations during
the present year,
Mr. William C. Carmichael, whose moth-
er lives in Markham, was returning with
the bankers' hockey team from Woodatook
to London. He stepped off the moving
train when approaching the city, and was
found with his skull fractured on the track.
He died on Sunday afternoon.
Walter Kelly, the man who assaulted
Station Agent Smith of the C. P, R. at
Sutton Junctiou,is under arrest at Sweets -
burg. He told the whole story of how he
was hired to do the job by saloonkeepers.
Kelly has waived extradition.
Thee. Brown, 69 years of age, who was
arrested at Montreal on Nov. 16th last tor
assaulting his daughter, committed suicide
at the gaol by cutting his throat' with a
razor. The prisoner had been in gaol five
times before on various charges.
order -in -Council has b
nen
passed
declaring that booms consisting of ticks
end chains, when imported into Oauade
United States for th
from the eur
ase of
confining or towing to the United States
logs or timber of Canadian growth, are to
be free from duty as long as Canadian
booms are admitted into the United States
duty free.
With regard to tlrachargethat She Grand
Trunk railway, by paying a high comtnis-
aion, on all prepaid passengers routed by
way of Montreal,is attracting transatlantic
business to Montreal, to the detriment of
New York and the steamship companies
whose vessels sail into that port, Mr.
Seargeant, the general manager of the
Grand Trunk,says there is not the slightest
grievanuo as amatter of fact, and that
their action has been upheld by all their
colleagues in the association.
GREAT BRITAIN
H, M. 8. Nympha hae.been ordered to
Honolulu.
Lord Reniiolph Churchill left an ebtete
of about £76,000.
Mr. fleury Asquith, the Imperial Home
Secretary, is euchring from influenza.
Severn 'weather has returned to Great
Britain and the northern part of the Con-
tinent.
Sir Henry Re.wliution, at one time pre-
sident of the Royal Geographical Society,
is dead
On Saturday the Marquis of Queensberry
Was committed for trial pa a charge of bevy
ing libelled Mr. Osear Wilde,
GreetBritain expeota to be abic to with.
draw a battalion of British troops from
Egypt during the proeeut year,
Sir William Seoveil Savory, P. R. S.
Surgeon•Extraordinary to the Queen, and
late President the Royal College of
Surgeons, is dead.
Sir Joseph Dodge Weston, Liberal mem-
ber of Parliament for East Bristol, is dead.
He hail been sufferingfrom influence for
some time past.
Some of the Pittsburg coal mine owners.
have yielded to the demand of the men for
aixty.nine omits a ton, and four thousand
minere have returned to work.
Mr. Geo, W. Smalley, the well-known
London correspondent of the New York
Tribune, has been appointed American
correspondent of the Loudon Times.
Seven miners were killed on Wednesday
morning while descending the shaft of the
Mail -Beach lead mine, near Shrewsbury,
Shropshire.
A plasterer named Taylor, living at
Lower Tooting, near London, out the
throats of his wife and six children on
Thursday morning, and then took his own
life.
Theiestimates
Brit eh navy for the
ensuing year are £18,701,000, being £1,-
334,00C more than the estimates for 1894.
A number of new vessels will be con-
struoted.
Up to this time one hundred thousand
dollars has been promised in response to
the appeal for five hundred thousand
dollars for the decoration of St. Paul's
cathedral, London.
The North -German Lloyd Steamship
Company will begin a fortnightly service
with fast steamers in April, between Que•
bee and Montreal and Manchester, by way
of the Manchester ship canal.
The Imperial Colonial Office says the
report that Major -Gen. Herbert, cox,
mender of the Canadian militia, was about
to resign in consequence of disagreements
with the Dominion Gova;'ument, is untrue.
The deficit in the Imperial Postal Tele-
graph Department for the current year is
estimated to be $2,700,000, or an increase
$300,000, although the groes receipts from
telegrams are expected to show an increase
of $450,000.
There has been a heavy fall in British
imports from Canada. During the month of
February, as compared with the oorrespon•
ding month last year, they declined from
£49,457 to £25,266, and for the two months
of this year there is a decline from £222,506
to £103,393.
The Bankruptcy Court at London decided,
that many of the liabiiitiea of the firm of
Wynne & Son, solders, whose failure for
from £300,000 to £400,000 was announced
on Tuesday, are breaches of trust. According
to the court's decision, an inquiry into the
transactions of the firm will be necessary,
and criminal proceedings will follow.
In the British House of Commons Sir
Edward Grey, replying to Sir Richard
Webster and Sir George Baden-Powell, said
that when the Congress at Washington re-
fused to make an appropriation to settle
the Canadian claims for Behring Sea seizures
and thereby rejected the decision of the
arbitration agreed to by the representatives
atParis,the Imperial Government instruct-
ed the British Ambassador at `Washington
to urge a resumption of negotiations.
Searetary Gresham. stated that he was quite
prepared to resume, and the convention
when signed would be submitted to Con-
gress for confirmation, but unless an extra
session was called nothing could be don -
until December. The President and Seoree
tary Gresham expressed great regret at the
delay,
UNITED STATES.
The Gerry Whipping -post hill was passed
unanimously on Thursday by the New York
Senate.
It is expected that the medals and diplo-
mas of the Worlds Columbian Exhibition
will be issued about May or June next.
Judge Barrett, of New York, has granted
an absolcte divorce to Alva E. (Mrs. Wit.
Liam K,) Vanderbilt, giving her the custody
of the children.
•
The fifty-third United States Congress
adjourned on Monday at noon, without
passing the bill providing mcney for the
payment of the Behring Sea awards.
Mr. E. J. Ralph, contracting freight
agent for the Buffalo, Rochester & Pitts-
burg Railroad, was found dead in his room
at the Tower Hotel, Niagara Falls.. Death
was due to apoplexy.
George J. Gould says the statement that
Count de Castellano ever received a penny
from the Gould family is a falsehood from
beginning to end. That he ever made such
a proposition is equally untrue.
The cane of Harry Hayward, oharged
with the murder of Catharine Ging, of
Minneapolis, Minn., came to a conclusion
on Friday afternoon. The jury brought in
a verdict of guilty of murder in the first
degree,
to mer Longfellow,
Tho a a starting from
Cincinnati to New Orleans with a hundred
people on board, struck the channel pier
of the Chesapeake & Ohio bridge. The
vessel went to pieces and eight lives were
lost.
The five -storey flat house, No. 370 Col-
umbus avenueNew York, was burned on
Tuesday Al;l the tenants escaped, with
the exception of one helpless old woman,
Mrs. Kennety, 60 yeara of age, who was
in the excite e t
forgotten m n ,and atter the
flames had been extinguished was found
burned to death.
It is stated in Washington that a syndi-
cate of American capitalists are invoking
the assistance of Russia, France, Japan,
and Hawaii in laying a cable from the
United States to Hexon, This syndicate
will endeavor to block the Vanoouver
cable.
It is understood that the Washington
authorities have removed the restriction
placed two years ago upon the transporta-
tion of Canadian cattle across United
States territory to Portland, The oattle
can now be carried to the seaboard after
inspection at Montreal.
Commercial advices from the United
States are of a more encouraging nature
thio week, The improvement is due acme -
what to better weather, but apparently
more to the adjournnione of Congress.
There has been an increased demand for
lumber and. building materials generally,
including larger orders for atruatural steel
and iron. In the South cotton factor -
les are more native, and staple dry
geode are in improved demand. Foreign
woollen goods ale attracting more attention,
and competing with American goods of
similar grade. The London wool market
is etronpor. Bessemer pig iron unchanged,
and luirlbor is advancing. The indwarial
eitnatiou does not improve, and strikes at
Pittsburg are adding to the industrial
depression, thus decreasing the spending
power of the people. American stocha, are
generally weep in the London market.
GEnE11Ah.
The French President is suffering franc
influenza,
f# o
A .
Leopold Ritter von Secher-Masoob, the
iveii•known German novelist, is dead,
The Egyptisu Coutleil of State has de•
Pitied to extend the railway to Aasouan.
The French have seized the Island of
Noesivey, on the south-west met of the
Inland of Madagascar.
The Prince of Walca' Britannia was
defeated iu the Cannes regatta on Thursday
by the new Scotch cutter Ailsa,
The difficulty between franc() and Sen
Domingo has beou settled through the
good offices of the Spanish Minister,
A Russian Imperial decree has been
isaued abolishing the use of the knout for
offenses committed by the peasantry.
In order to avoid the spectacle of the
Reichstag holding aloof kora the celebra-
tion of Prince Bismarck's eightieth birthday
on April let, the Easter recess will begin on
March 30.
The Emperor of China has completely
vindicated Li -Hung -Chang from the charges
brought against him. He has been fully
restored to favor, and accredited as peace
envoy to Japan,
Consul General Penfield, stationed at
Cairo, Egypt, in a report to the United
States Department of State, allows that
during the year 3,352 vessels passed through
the Suez Canal, an increase of ten over the
preceding year.
Several boys confined in the Naumberg
reformatory have bean arrested for
strangling two of their companions. They
committed the murders that they might
be sent to prison and escape the cruelties
to which they were subjected in the re-
formatory.
A NOTED CRICKETER
Tire Career of the Veteran Canadian
Cri dieter, the Bev. T. D. Phillips.
The Rev. T. D. Philips, a familiar figure
for many successive seasons on the cricket
field in Canada, and Dilate years in Chicago,
I11., can claim the unique distinction of
having began his long orioketing career in
1845, and judging from all appearances he
is good for several more seasons of active
service. He is the son of the late Rev. H.
N. Phillips, of Niagara, Ont., and was born
April 16, 1833, at Bristol, Gloucestershire,
Eng., that being the county of W. G,
Grace, the champion cricketer. 1,21845 he
was brought by his father to Toronto, Can-
ada, where he was educated, graduating in
1855, with high honors, at Trinity College.
During his. college days he diligently prac-
ticed cricket, and quickly became a profi-
cient in the game, playing in a Toronto
team as early as 1848, and being selected
for the first time in 1854 as a member of the
eleven that represented Canada in the
annualinternational contestwith theUnited
States. He captained the Canada eleven
in the annual contest with the United
States in 1858 and for several subsequent
seasons. In 1874 he captained the Ontario
eleven in a cricket tournament at Halifax,
N.S., where personally his success was
great, as with twelve on a aide he scored
52 runs, not out, against the beat bowling in
America, and won the silver cup for the
highest aggregate score of the weak, in ad-
dition to winning two prize bats for
individual innings of over he* runs. In
1880, while on sick leave in England
he was asked to assist a Canadian team,
which had then been playing for three
weeks is that home of the game. Although
not well enough to participate in all of the
remaining games of the trip, he greatly
distinguished himself on several occasions,
his beat performance being the compiling
of half a century against the Surrey Club
at the Oval, In 1881 he took up his resi-
dence in Chicago, Ill„ where he has since
remained, playing with the Chicago Club,
the Garfield, now Albion, which he organ-
ized ; the St. George Club and the Wan-
derers. He was a member of the committee
which formed the Chicago Cricket Associa-
tion. At the beginning of last season he
was made an honorary member of the
Chicago Cricket and Athletic Club in
recognition of his long and successful career.
His scores Buri• -g the peat fifty years have
been too numerous to mention, the highest
being 92,not out,againsta county eighteen ;
91, not out, and 82, not out, against an
eighteen. Last season he rounded off his
half century of cricket by creditably com-
piled contributions of 51 and 56, the former
score being obtained without any practice,
after being out only a tew day's after pass-
ing through an illness of nine weeks' dura-
tion. His score of 56 was made for the
Chicago Wanderers against Hamiiton,when
he helped Cummings to put on 127 for the
second wicket. Ile was also at one time a
very effective round arm bowler, his slow
delivery proving fatal on many occasions,
including, as the most noteworthy feat,the
capture of all ten wickets of the London
(Ont.) team id an inning at the cost of only
five rune.
Small Things.
I shaped a marble statue the image of a
th ottght—
A thought so pure and perfeet,it thrilled me as
wrought;
And when I saw ray task complete, and joyed
it was so fair,
Alas! alas! when next I looked an ugly rent
was there.
In strains of music, then, I told of sweetest
and love;
And, out and in, the harmony in rich, soft
chords I wove:
When, to ! a mild, weird discord that would
not die away:
T11 hear It evermore, through life, unto my
dying day.
A weary, of my failures, I sought the haunts o
song,
Essayed to cull sweet flowers wherewith to
charm bile listening throng,
Anon a warning voice I heard that stayed my
eager hands:
"No soul but one by sorrow tried may join
the minstrel band."
I found a weary traveller, at noontide, by tho
way;
His brow was deeply furrowed, bin locks were
thin andgray.
" Can 1 do aught for you ?" I asked, " I am
athirst ," he said'
I gape a cup of water; he drank and raised his
head. -
A strange and wonderoits change I saw, trans
figured was his face,
His term wag full of majesty, his eyes of love
and grace.
" Well have ye done; wall have yo spent that
gift of charity,
Albeit ye know it not," he said, " ye did it
unto Met
Great works aro forgroat souls; high thoughts
for those whose minds can soar;
Sweet music for the ears that catch the note
from Ileaven's bright shore.
Strong words that move the multitude ate not,
my child for thee;
Thine are tho hidden ways of love and quiet
charity.
Chiidren Cry for Pitcher/0 Caged*
AGRICULTURAL,
A Log Feed Rack;
This home tirade feed rack eau be eon•
trusted any desired length. `,Che iowe
portion is about seven 'feet wide. The
dQ n o '
height depends a aniinals'uoing i 't . The
must reach the bottom easily. The upper
part is of euffioient width to allow ample
room between the top log c the first part
and the lower log of the aeoond part for
stook to reach down and get the feed.
LOG FEED ?ACI{.
This method is much more desirable than
throwing hay end other roughness upon
the ground. Nothing is wasted by being
pulled out and trampled under foot. Fut
a large load of hay into this rack. The
stock eat it from the bottom al needed and
the upper portion settles down as the feed
is taken from beneath.
Forage Crops for Dairy Cows.
Grass—green, succulent grass—including
clover, is the most perfect forage for cows,
writes a correspondent. Good pasture
grass makes a ration balanced just right for
a milk.produoing food, It is also palatable
and easily digested --qualities that are in-
dispensable. But we have geed pasture
only a small part of the year. Grass grows
well in May and June, then conies the heat
and draught of midsummer, with its short
mixture ; or, if the number of stock is small
in proportion to the size of the paature,
with, at best, its tough and dried up grata.
In the latter part of summer or in the fall,
we may have another spoil of good pasture
if we are fortunate enough to have plenty
of rain,
It is certain, if we expect to get the beet
results and most profit out of the dairy busi-
nese, the pasture must be supplemented for
at least part of the summer with other food.
I have come to relying less and less on
pasture as the years go by and land game
more valuable, In fact, I doubt it being
good policy to pasture any 1 the whole.
farm is good, tillable land, worth from fifty
to one hundred dollars an aore. If one has
rough land or low land that is not well
adapted to cultivation, of course we can
have it in permanent pasture, but we can
not expect it to carry cows all through the
summer without help.
On my own farm I have a permanent
pasture on land rather rough for convenient
cultivation, which contains about half as
many acres as 1 have. head of stock, Be-
fore the cows are turned on, the grass is
allowed to get up so as to afford a good
bite. It affords nearly enough food for
them while the grass is growing the most
rapidly. But they are fed all summer other
forage in the stable night and morning ;
also a small grain ration, which I am sure
pays. The supplementary feeds are green
rye, clover, green oats, sometimes millet,
second crop of clover, green fodder corn,
beginning with some early variety and end-
ing with some late variety. These feeds
come along in the order I have named. 1f
there is more of each kind than is needed
to feed at the time, we cure it for winter
food.Peas and oats make an excellent forage
in places where peas do well, but they do
not seem to flourish on the farm,
For winter forage 1 rely mainly on
clover hay and the corn crop. Clover makes
the best hay for dairy cows if, out at the
right time, that is, when in full bloom and
cured in the right manner. Millet makes
very good hay if cut early enough—just
after it is fairly headed out. Timothy is
poorer hay than either of the nth• rs for
cows.
The corn crop will provide more cow food
per acre than auything else. The silo is
the place to put it. Good corn ensilage
and clover hay, a little dry corn fodder, a
very little straw, and about ten pounds a
day of wheat bran and gluten meal is what
my cows are having this winter, and they
are doing nicely,
1 have never practised putting up corn
ensilage fol summer food, but I know of
some that do with excellent results. The
cows will leave the best of pasture and eat
ensliage greedily and produce duce
the alar e
amount of milk. I believe that more profit
can be made dairying without pasturing at
all, if the farm is all good tillable land, byy,.
putting in nearly all the farm to corn and
clover and feeding ensilage every day iu the
year. Asensilagedoes not make a perfectly-
balaneed ration for milk production, clover
should always be fed with it. The cows
shouldalso have other protein foods, such
as wheat bran, oil meal,or cottonseed meal,
I ani certain that in this way there would
be no trouble in keeping one cow to
each acre of good land, or in producing
300 pounds of butter per acre, and have
the farm growing richer instead of poorer.
'should expect, of course, that all the
products of the farm should be fed to the
cows and none sold off in the shape of
gritin. But I should also expect that the
hogs and calves fed on the skins milk
wonld bring enough to buy the foods
necessary to feed that were not grown on
the farm.
Feeding Corn Meal.
While it may be admitted that corn is a
staple food, and corn meal the cheapest and
moat convenient material in general use on
most farms, yet it is not the best food for
chicks, nor is corn the best for fowls, In
the winter, en the weather is old and
the birds should iia kept warm, then corn
is the material for that purpoae,as it is rich
in carbon and oreates warmth, but for
growing chicks it is insufficient. It must
be considered that unless the growing chick
is supplied with all the element& necessary
for waisting in the formation of bone and
muscle it will gradually droop and die
without apparent cause,in the game manner
that a plant withers when not provided
with ter! ilizcrs,tbougbsometimes the olfioks
will appear bealthy,but do not grow', Very
young ohloke when fed on corn ureal are
often attaoked with bowel diseases, The
aafost plan to adopt for ore le to binned.
lately ohmage the fend to an entirely
different kind. Some may claim that they
have raised ehiolra on corn :meal, which is
true,but onlwhen the o iek
haye
an
opprtunity to forage and scours
Meseta
and wernis, Exclusive cornmeal is only a
partial and incomplete food.
A STREET RUNAWAY
The Alnwst Fatal Ending of an Accident
And to mangy amnion,
The newspapers ref' red to it under the
caption, ",B Street Runaway." The
phyaioian said it would be fatal. The
victim dictated a dispatoh t
Jean; I am dying. Will you forgive,
and come?
DAVID.
The lightning express swung on at its
fifty miles an hour. The cars'rattled and
rocked. The landscape flew by like the
pictures of a dream. Bat the motion was
as the pane of a snail beside the eager
beating of her heart, " Forgive 1 Forgive 1
and come 1" was the only voice she heard
in the roar, and daah, and confusion all
about her.
He touched earth once more in the end-
less flight of delirium, and felt a hand on
his forehead. He seemed standing with
her again under she apple trees by the
Maumee,
" David I am here." The white apple
blossoms vanished, and the white ceiling
of the hospital was again above him. She
saw the recognition in his eyes, and, with
an arm gently held about his neck, she
laid her face against hie haggard cheek
and whispered : "Not a word, David, my
bay -my poor, poor boy. I was yours, and
always yours. I only learned the full
lesson when you were gone. Oh ! if God
were good, he would let roe go into the
grave with you !"
And'he could only whisper, r' I knew it
would come I No anger and no trouble
can keep asunder the hearts that God hath
touched as one. I shall die, now, in the
sacredness of that belief."
She gathered all her soul into one plea,
and poured it forth ; " Come back to me,
David 1 Coma back 1"
He wan sinking into the deep, deep
shadows. But the desolation of her cry
thrust itself into every fibre of his being,
and he took a supreme hold on life, and
death was baffled and beaten back from his
prey.
The apple blossoms were indeed above
them this time, and the broad Maumee
rolled at their feet. She was in white, and
orange -blossoms circled her hair. There was
a crutch beside him that would be his com-
panion to the grave, but there was no
bitterness in his heart toward it. He
simply laid his hand upon it and said : "It
was fate that gave me this. Because I
lean upon it, I have gained you also to
lean upon in our walk through time, and as
we go together up the long avenues of eter•
nal life•"
She answered " Your cry, forgive and
come 1'pierced like a spear -thrust through
my pride and stirbborness. It saved me
from a sacrifice and a sacrilege—from a
loveless marriage of pride and wealth
together. It showed me the path back to
love and happiness and you—and God has
been very good 1"
Then the bells chimed in the tower of
the church, the children sang, and sweet
showers of white sprinkled down from the
apple trees.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Doee a
Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
andyon will receive by poste pretty pictures
free from advertising, and well worth fram-
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market
and it will only cost lc. postage to send in
the wrappers, if yon leave the ends open,
Write your address carefully.
Mr. Henry Asquith, the Imperial Home
Secretary, is suffering from influenza.
Tom—"If you had the privelege of kiss-
ing a pretty girl oa the right or Ieft cheek
which would you do ?" Dick—" Is would
be hard to make a choice, but between the
two I should probably find away out of
the dilemma."
019.
When Baby atassick, we ease her Castartte.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When she heel Cbildrea, shegavetltem Castoria
Mrs. Newrich—" 1 want a pair of the
dearest gloves you've got." Clerk—" How
long do you want them, madam ?" Met.
Newrioh--"I want to buy them, young
man ; you don't think I wanted to rent
them, do you?"
THE
MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY
FOR MAN OR BEAST.
Certain in itse ffects bdlnnear blisters.
9
V
EoxQA
LL S S A W CURE,
Box tit, Carraan 73endorsottt7a..l11„l'ob,di,'01.
Dr. n. J. ii%NnALT, bo.
Dear Sira-Please send mo one of your florae
Seeks and oblige. I hem used a great derd of your
iCondall's Spavra Cure with good autos • it is a
wonderful medlcine. tonne had a mare that had
an (Moult Stavin and nye bottles cured, her. I
keep a bottle au hand all tho time,
Yount -2111y, Cads. POwavn.
KENDALL'S SPAV1N CURE.
0.15508, Moe Apr, g, '02.
Dr. B. 3.1Cixsoitt Co.
Dear Sura -I have %sod soveral'bnt,Ilea of your
"7Cond Il'sSpavin Caro" With nine h Surcess. I
think is the best Lintinent I over used. Have it.
mouse/ono Culla Bite load Stavin and killed
too hallo O Wlna, ave r000minended it to
several of my Wands w Biter
are much pleased with
and keep it. aospeetlullr,
S•!t RtZ, P. 0. Bolen,
For stile by all Oruggiste. or address
t. 11... 0..17N2)4XL CO IfP.A.11'Y't
NOSSIUactt Fatr.S,:vt
stteee
isn'tinit
.
If is just be
cause "fere is
rto lard;n, it -that
T T0LE$E
new shorten n
is so wortderf1-1201).*
Li
I r writk hosxsekeepgrs.
OTTQi.EtNE is Psi
Jf IACATE, H H-
6.4.154115iHCr- nano
of Me un lea * nr odor
plecess~ rf)y connected
with lard
Sold iu 8 and 5 pound pails by all grocers.
Made only by
The N. K. Fafrbank
Company,
Wellington and Ann $lair
MONTREAL.
'W'OOD'S 3.' OSP]IiODjNE;
The Great English Remedy.
Six Packages Guaranteed to
promptly, and permanently
enre all forms of Nervous
Weakness, Enafssfons,Sperm,
atorrhea, Impotency and alt
erects of Abuse or Excesses,
Mental Worry, excessive use
fte�. of Tobacco, OpiuntorStaintc.
Wore and�4
ktnfs, which. soon read to In
firma?", Insanity, Consumption and an early grave,
Bas been prescribed over 85 years in thousands of
cases; is the cute Reliable and Eonest Medicine
known. Ask druggistfor Wood's Phosphodine; It
he offers some worthless medicine in place of this,
inclose price in letter, and we will send by return
mall Price, one package, Ili six, $5. One win
please, six mild cure Pamphlets free to anyaddress,
The Wood Company,
Windsor, Ont., Canada.
For Sale in Exeter by.) W Browning, ..z
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
THE
OWEN
ELECTRIC
BELT.
Trade Mark) DF. A. OWEN,
The only Scientific and Practical Electric
4elt made for general use, producing aGenuine
.'urrent of -Electricity for the cure of Disease,
„fiat can be readily felt and regulated both in
rnant'sty and power, and applied to any part of
'tie body. It can be worn at any time during
e-orking hours or sleep, and will positively cure
k;.Feiatien,heunsatisrn,
General Debility
Lumbago,
lvervons Diseases
▪ DVnysxipepscoeeia,le,
Sexual Weakness
Irnpoteyne, ,•,,
I:ldneDiseases,
• Lanie Bacyk, -
/i+r Urinary Diseases
Electricity properly applied is fast taldngg the
place of drugs for all Nervous, Rheumatic.IKid
nay andUrinal Troubles, and will effect cures
in seemingly hopeless eases where every other
known means has failed.
Any sluggish, weal: or diseased organ may
try this means be roused to healthy activrt+
Wore it is too lata.
Leading medical .men use and recommeni
the Owen Bolt in their practice.
OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE
Contains fullest information regarding the curd
of actite, chronic and nervous diseases, prices,
how to order, etc., mailed (scaled) FR EE to
any address.
The Owen Electric Belt & Appliance Co.
49 KING Sr. W., TORONTO, ONT.
201 to 211 State St., Chicago, Ill
MENTION THIS PAPER
CARTER'S
iTTLE
IVER
PILLS.
R
Sick
Headache and rel eve at the troubles incl•
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after
eating Pain in the Side, &c. While their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
8 I
Headache, pet Ceays&'s.Lirri.z Liven Pints
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 oniy,cured
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing complaints
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them wilt find'
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without there.
But atter all sick bead
E
Is tbebane of so many lives that here is Where
WO make our great boast. Our pine cure it
while others do not.
CART9tt's T rrrf n LrvEa Picas are ve y email
and very easy to take. One or two piihis make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their.entle,i'T
lilease all who use them. In vials r'
vefor'SI. Sold everywhere. t% aCli.
OA1liCla0 1.111A1010 rawest -r '
mill rill l -'S•
.}anadlan C
' 13.o a galls