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The Exeter Times, 1895-8-1, Page 2st,4 THE FARM. For Feeding Calves. A trough feetened into le pen it; not da. eirable for feeding celvea ite it cannot be OA thoroughly soalded out as it shonld be. Moreover, pouring milk into any receptaole in a pen in whiob there is e calf is hazardous ew. re front. Almost a Ho...ristosoromemaradonmamomoo 1122912.ase. A. Terrible Cough. No Rest Night nor Day. elven up by Doctors. A LIFE SAVED' BY TARING AYEITSRTiRRAI 'Several, years ago I caught a severe cold, attended with a terrible cough that allowed me no rest, either day or night. The doc- tors, teeter working over me to the best of their ability, pronounced ray ease hopeless, and said they couI4 alo. no more in ine. A friend, learning o my trouble, sent me a bottle oil Ayer% Cherry Pectoral, 'which began to take, and very soon I was greatly relieved. By the timeIbad used the whole bottle, 1 was completely cure& have never had much of a cough since that time, and I tinily believe that Ayer's Cherry Pectoral saved ray life."—W. H. WARD, 8 Quimby Ave., Lowell, Mass, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral 4HIGHEST AWARDS AT WORLD'S FAIR. Ayer's Inns the Beet Xantily Physic. R4* C 0 N PATI 0 N, LI 0 N ESS, tc1/4 DYgpeps tz SICK EADACI-fa REG U LATE,THE LIVEIt ON eTtil=kEg S.ATI N 0 INSURES QCODDIGESTION,. PRI OE 25 CTS..ViE p ()DO! ToPligotift THEEXETER TIMES. IspubilsnedirveryThupony mpenug, at TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Iltagl::ttetegtY.J;c7.11;34,11°,34Z 1:519,g RITES OF dzvEnTismet fir BS ns ertiou , p er I ins. ..... ...... 10 cents la eh subsequeo tinsertion ,per line......3 cents. To ipsure insertion, advertisements should gt sent in no tl ater than Wednesday morning OurSOB PRINTING DEP ARTAIS NT is eftbe largest and bes te quipped in the 0 ounty oilauron,all work entrusted to us tvillreastg.t nor promptattentiom Deesions Regarding News- papers. niAypersonwho takes a paperregularlyfro.n thepost-office, whether directed in his name or another's, or whether hc has eiatQcrib3d or nos isresponsible for payment 2 If a pereon orders his paper discontinued hemust pay all arrears or the publisher may entinue to send it until the payment is made, lid then collect the whole /mount whether e paper is taken from the office or not. B In suits Or subscriptions, the suit may be nstituted in the place where the paper is pub ished, although the subscriber fnay reside hundreds of miles away. I The courts have doeided that refusing to aknewspapers orperiodicels from tne post - fie. or removing ancl taxying the ri 1150 XI.131. teprima facto evldenes of 1010011303d fraud (Pdt hie: .14 -0 li 4 6 I• '6'' ! witnb „. s but don't try to patch up & lingering eough or cold by trying expenmental remedies. Take PYNY - PECTORAL and relief is certain to follow. Cures tho most obstinate coughs, colds, sore throats, in fact every form of throat, lung or bronchial inflammation in. duced by cold. Large Dottie, 25 Cents. sTopti,04:4ARitiv TRUS5 By a new device recently patented in U, S. and Canada by CHAS.. 0 LL111-111E 41212=arzi RUPTURE GAN etECURED WITH NO INCONVENIENCE WI I IIUU II" I flUdid CHEAP' SY MAIL Ircu"aleItsr Card 01t1 GLUTHE 44.ksso St WEST TOROUto ... CANADA 5151001.14.0140500"0""OVNONO~VVVI, business, the operation usually resulting in spilled milk, An arrange:neat with a feed nag pail is shown in the illustration. The back board ie hinged to the front of the pen on the side marked a. The pail can thus be set into the holder on the outside of the pen and the holder ewung a quarter of the way round and hooked, thue bringing the pail inside the pen. When removed, a button keeps the calf from getting his head out through the °porcine. Suoh a contri- vance can easily be made by anyone handy with toole, and will be found a considerable saving of time as well as eeed, wagon will do more dernage than et dOZen With. Wide tree if the MOO are et all NOM No one diaputea be philosophy of wide ' tires, and no one >News to 11S,Ve 4137 go94 retUi0X1 tO offer why they should nob be "bead. Our farmers euriply follow precede Mali and ge on ueitag narrow tires beoaese their fethers did before them. Lutnber men and freighters nee wide tires almost ueivereelly awl save money by doing so, bt.it it BOOMS that farmers do not care to eoonomize la this direotion, The oendition of our roads costa us more than any other single item of waste in this country, e.nd the °annum) nee of wide tires would reduce this waste of energy to a large extent. Roots For Winter Food. The dairymen who wants good butter next winter should not miss to grow a bountiful orop of carrots and parsnips. The excellence of the Jersey cows is unquestion- ably due to the parsnips which are fed to them, and for which the soil and climate of the Channel island are so well adapted. These roots are wholly free from any objec- tionable quality, and confer a sweetness and aromatic flavor on the butter which are gained by no other food. It is as reasonable to believe that the food is the source of the flavor of the butter as it is of the fie.vor of the flesh of an animal. And this notwithstanding the avowed be. lief of a number of scientific persous—or persons who claim to be scientific—to the contrary, It is alleged by these persons that it is the individuality of the cow that gives the flavor to the butter. Common people know better, and no amount of scientific allegation will make them believe that when a cow eats garlic in the pasture or cabbage or turnips in the stable, it is the individuality of the animal and not the strongly flavored food that contributes the special taste and odor to the milk and but- ter. And so it is the food to which the Jersey cow has been used for hundrede of years, and by which the milk and butter have been gradually increased until the large product of the food and the ability to consume a large quantity of the richest food have been fixed on the race, and have be - cense an essential characteristic of it. It is true that the Jersey cow possesses an indi- viduality of her own, but this is a come- quence and not an intrinsic natural ability ; it is not an active, but a passive character- istic,aud. nothing more or has than a result of long training and eclueation, fixed by breeding. Any other cow has the same poseibility if the same means are taken to form it and perpetuate the distinct °Immo- ter. And every dairyman should so manage his herd as to develop and fix this improved condition. The farmer who has ea yet neglected to test a eilo for winter feeding should not put off any later the planting of two or three acres of some early kind of corn, and should get the materials ready for making the silo to hold it. The two acres will yield thirty to forty tons of the most valu- able fodder,which will be sufficient to keep five cows in the best condition during the whole winter. There is no other way in which a cow can be fed so easily and °heap- ly or so well. The early Canada corn will ripen its grain if planted by the 1st of July while the evergreen sweet corn will mature sufficiently for this use. The silo should be a round one. It is made exactly as a einem may be, of staves, and hooped with iron bands. It may be put up in the corner of a barn, in a con- venient place for the use of the fodder. The economy of it is in strict line with the present advanced condition of things, and no one can afford to be behind the times if there are only as few as four or five cows to feed. 11 10 yet time to sow white turnips in the corn at the last cultivation or to grow a crop of rutabagas for winter feeding for sheep. This root is the best of all the turnips, al- though the yellow Aberdeen is not to be despised. Both these varieties have been improved of late years and made far more productive than they used to be by the larger size to which the roots 'grow. The Aberdeen is a good table turnip while the rutabaga, or the awede turnip,is too etrong for dornestio use. It will be well worth while to give the turnips at least 150 pounds of superphos- phate of lime per acre, phosphoric acid be- ing a dominant element in the ash of these roots. The turnip contains more. than 19 per cent. of it, and the rutabagas 17 per cent. in the ash. The other large element of the ash is potash, of which both of theft have at least 50 per cent. in the ash. So that a liberal application of unleached wood ashes, with the phosphate mentioned, will be moat desirable. About Broad Tires. While the subject of good'roads is bob:1g agitated in every part of the country those most interested in the subject are doing their best to make bad roads still worse by tieing narrow tires on their wagons. Heavy loads are drawn over our mud roads on these narrow,tired wagons and deep ruts cut into them, that in wet weather Melee them almost, and sometimes, entirely impassable, We have a tort of pity for a man who urges hie team along a muddy road all the time grumbling about the hadnese of it, When he might reduce the labor of his team fleet emeothird to one- half by using wide tires at a very little additional Melt to himself and to the gteat saving of team and temper. It is to he hoped that the firee lagiolation looking to the improvement of the roads of the country will be in the yeast of encouraging the nee of wide tires, for one bereave tired, A THRILLING' RESCUE. Lit EXettilIg Scene Witnessed While Crosit- ing the Atlantic. Much imperilling of life is demanded in the mid-ociean reaoue of a drowning man, and suoh an incident always furnishes ntense dramatic interest for a spectator, The Baron de Malortie, in a recent inter- esting work, recalls an exating scene he witnessed years ago, while orossing the Atlantic. The ship was several days out when, one afternoon, he was idly lounging about on the upper deck. Suddenly, he says, I saw a man approach the bulwark, He threw overboard some objects—we learned afterward that they were his Bible and a rosary—and followed them with a header into the foaming sea, "Man overboard PI cried, but the storm covered my voice, and I rushed up the bridge to oall the attention of the officer on duty to the accident. Stop 1 half -speed astern, and orders for the lowering of the boat were the affairs of a minute or two. "Volunteers to man the boat 1" shouted a young midshipman, cutting a life -boat from the davits - Ten men oame forward for every one wanted and selecting four of the most powerful tars, the middy was lowering -the boat when a young doctor, quickly pocket- ing a flask of brandy for a restorative, let himself down one of the ropes, and reached the boat as a monumental, wave was dashing over it. The men pulled with a will, and the eallent little nutshell fought bravely up and down the mountaius of angry waters. As to the suioide, he was far astern, and only from time to time could we see something like a human form emerge on the top of a white-orested wave. Oh, the anxiety with which we watched both the boat and its goal 1 Dieappearmg altogether the moments, when we feared we had peen the last of the noble fellows, another gigantic wave would toss themeep again like a cork. It was exciting in the extreme. But the boat was gaining ; nearer and nearer it mime, whilst we were slowly following in its wake. There 1 the doctor throws a life -belt. They are only some yards offnow. But no, a cruel wave has tossed them past the object of their tremendous efforts, There they are throwing round her nose : they are tacking ; the middy has passed the rudder to an old quartermaster, and arm- ed with boat -hooks, he and the doctor stand ready for action. Another second and the life -belt is hook- ed ; the man is grasping it desperately, but he has no strength )eft; there he slips—all is lost, just at the critical mo- ment. But who is that jumping overboard? Three cheers for the brave man --it's the doctor 1 But he, too, disappears. Are there to be two victims instead ot one ? No, no 1 And there—hurrah l—thete is the doctor, his precious burden before him. The men pull like mad to reach the two ere they sink again. The gallant young middy Is watching for the right moment. More life -belts are thrown. They help the doctor to keep above water ; another pul and the boat -hook has done its duty, and whilst two of the men stick to the oars, the others are busy dragging reacuer and rescued on board. The long, cold bath, the fright and the proximity of death had wonderfully sobered tee would be suicide, whom remorse for a drunken spree had driven to this mad freak. It did not require many restoratives to'bring him to, and two hours later he had an opportunity of recapitulating hie adventure in dire solitude, having been condemned to be kept in irons for the reet of the voyage, a well-deserved punishment for exposing six valuable lives, the lives of six heroes, indeed, in this perilous venture. Church Membership in the States. The religious census of the United States, now published in book form, shows that the American churches have a total membership of 20,612,806. There are 165,177 organizations, either general or congrega- tional. The congregations own 142,521 church edifices, with a seating capacity for 43,564,863 persons that is to say for all the enrolled members and 22,952,057 vis- itors. The value of church property is nearly $700,000,000, and there are 111,030 ministers regularly engaged. The most numerous denomine-tiohs are:—Catholics, 6,250,000; Methodists, 4,000,000; Baptists, 3,725000 ; Pres by terians, 1 ,180, 382 ; Luth- erans, 1,230,000; Protestant Episcopal, 540,000. Row to get a. "Sunlight" Picture. Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper, (wrapper bearing tho words "Why Does a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to Lover Bros., Ltd., 43 Soott St., Toronto, andyou will receive by poita pretty picture, fres from advertising, and well worth fram. Ing. This is an easy way to deoorate your home. The soap is the best in the market, and it will only cost 10. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully. IChildren Cry for Pitcher's CastorTa A CATALOGUE OF CRIMES. SOME GREAT CRIMINAL TRIALS OF THE PAST FEW MONTHS. Crime That Has Hardly Ain+ Parallel ilk the Recorde or Ottenees MleinSt UU" Malt Ure—The Triai orate. noraey at Braintrord—The Murder otrJess le Keith by the Trani)) Vhaitelle—assossination or Frank Westwood — Wats' invItlr te:iociatese.ltenik — The Ilendershott atu Throughout) the lengbh and breadth of the oountry little else has been talked of but the extraordinary disclosures which twee been published in the daily papers concerning the orimeS of the Mien Holmes, and the finding of the bodies of his two young victime in the cellar of 16 St. Vin- cent street, Toronto. It is doubtful if ever the country has been so stirred by a murderous deed. Toronto has of late had surfet of crimes ; a plethora or criminal prosecutions ; the people have come to look upon murder, manslaughter, and incendiarism as almost being items of daily news, so plentiful have they become. Events which two years ago would have aroused the widest interest have become ma nothing, in the face ot the remarkable and even astounding series of develop- ments which have, during the last twelve months, been brought to their notioe. This province has been during that time the scene of a chain of occurrences which is almost unrivalled in the criminal annals of any country ; and the eingule.r feature characterizing most of them is that they hinge, in one way or another, upon the question of life Insura,nce. It is on account of this that Toronto has lately gained a notoriety as tlse scene of remarkable orimes whioh, though far from enviable, is never- theless unique. In-oonnection with the case whioh is now so completely absorbing the public mind, it la worth while recalling briefly the few great criminal trials of the past months, Some of these are as yet subjudice, but the facts as ao far known may be briefly touched upon, and the present position of the cases defined. There have been also others of lesser importance, but theee tew to be mentioned stand out amid the rays- tereas or crimes of this country with a pro- minence which almost defies comparison. It ie not proposed here to deal with ancient history, but merely to straw the reader's mind to the previous oases, in order that he may compare them with the terrible and almost incomprehensible butchery by which the community is now confronted. ft may, however, be stated that these crimes have not, as a rule, been the deeds of Canadian citizens, and that the present outrage was concocted, and its execution commenced, in a foreign country, and that Toronto Was made the unfortunate scene of a double murder which has hardly any parallel in the records of offences against human life. ' RECENT GREAT TRIALS. Of these great trials tfie first was that of Mrs. Hartley, for the alleged noisoning of her husband, which trial took place at Brantford Iast fall. This prosecution ex- cited wide controversy and attention, both on account of the feat that the accused was a woman whose life was at stake, and that the chief witness against her was a man whose evidence impressed the public with such contempt as could hardly have been surpassed had he confessed to the crime which was before the jury. In this case the woman was discharged, the evidence not being such e.S to show that the death of her husband had been caused by the poison which she was supposed to have administered to him. Almost on tbe same day as the Hartley trial commenced the MIIRDER OP JESSIE KEITH lily the tramp Chattelle took place near Listowel, and aroused an abhorrence and agitation which spread from end to end of the province. For a few days the country was kept in suspense, es the exciting news of the search for the miscreant ceme over the wires, and wben at length it was known that he had been apprehended and had confessed people breathed more freely, in the knowledge that Camedianjuetice would he executed to its utmost limit and the scoundrelbrought to the gallows. And they were nut disappointed, for Chattelle was banged with commendable promptitude. Frank B. Westwood, the young son of Mr. Benjamin Westwood, of Jameson ave- nue, Toronto, WOO shot at his father's door by an unknown person, and died within a few days. To this day the caie is wrapped in myetery. A woman named Clara Ford was arrested on suspicion of having com- mitted the deed, dressed in male attire. Investigation produced a singular sequence of circumstantial details pointing to her guilt, and the met) was published tar and wide. Her trial lasted several days, during which time feeling ran very high on both sides. At the end she was acquitted, and no other clue has since been obtained by the authorities. So far as is known there W&5 no motive for the murder,young West- wood having no enemy in the world, and being an honest -minded, straightforward boy, of whom there was nobody to say an ill word. Of all the aeries of recent trials, how- ever,there has been none to equal in inten- sity of interest and romance of detail that of THE HYAMS TWINS, for the alleged murder of Willie Wells, in January of last year. This trial commenced in the begiening of May, 1805, and lasted fourteen days, each of which was replete in sensational developments and incidents. Eminent couzisel were engaged on both sides, and a battle of legal giants took place, while the two young men looked 'on it all from the dock, witn drawn and furrowed faces and anxious eyes. The termination of the case witnessed a scene never, perhaps, paralleled in Toronto. During the hours while the jury was out the crowd in front of the court -house increased, until the street was blocked by an agitated mob, eager to know the result. The jury diaagreeci after many hours of deliberation, and the two prisoners are now in gaol, awaiting a rtntrial at the Fall A seizes. Last spring the Henderehott murder case developed near St. Thomas. The particulars of this orime ere as yet froth in the publi,c mind. H&c the qvidence oollected ; how the boas were drawn round the two doomed inen- 11E1;1=8110TM AND W8,,INE11. ; how tb.e deed which they had thought so ()irefully hidden from the eye of tht laW Wee grocluokily and reinorouleesly exposed by the cleteetiVeS ; how the lightest word (wonted for volumes, end bile Impulse of a Moment forged the link that bound the chain, of death ; how the young girl plead- ed for the reprieve of her father and her lover, in vain ; and how, at the last, every recourse being exhausted, every AV011110 of esoape being blocked, forced to meet the punishment which had been meted out to them by outraged juetioe, and given over to ehe death which they ao riohly merited, the two murderers met their disgraoeful doom upon the scaffold. All these events are well known, and blie shadow of their passing has hardly yet faded away. It) hardly seemed then that oruelty could reach a higher pitch or utter heartlessness be more plainly show. In addition to these few there have been many others. TiaE LICKS OASE, in whioh the moused is charged with hay- ing murdered hie wife and burnt hie house, has been postponed to the Fall Assizes, and the Scollie case ab Peterborough is now under way. These are, as already stated, the chief criminal events of the past year, and they form a series which, for intrioaey of detail, strangeness of motive, and varlet) of circumetanoes can hardly be equalled in recent history, It will be noticed that of therm oases, some of which have as has been said, proved to be un- founded, the motives alleged is ineurance money. The Hartley cue involved insure mice ; the Hymns case was based upon a motive of alleged insurance ; the Header- shott murder was shown to be the outcome of an insurance policy; the same principle is also alleged to be involved in the Dick's trial ; and the charge in the Soollie case is founded upon an allegation which, while not directly involving an insurance polioy, is muoh upon the same lines. ,xete OREATAST OP ALL. Before the Pitezel merder,all these great cases fade into insignificance. In those which have been proved the plot of the crime has been comparatively eimple, though the details have in some instances been hard to trace to a conolusion. But in this instance there is discovered a eters, of such iufamy, such gross heartlessness, combined with an acuteness of intellect and a cold-blooded indifference to the commonest feelings of humanity, as has perhaps NEVER BEEN EQUALLED. The career of the prisoner is one to which history affords no parallel. His repeated aveindlings might be understood. Such offenoes have been frequently known, and frequently punished. Swindling, both of insurance companies end in every other guise, is infinite 10 113 variety and unending in its schemes, and a new method of ac- quiring one's neighbor's goods attracts hardly a passing comment. But when to such a career ie attached A HISTORY OP MURDER, running from chapter to chapter; when a man with a university education, yenned in manner and clear from other vice, hav- ing no motive such as ordinarily precedes the execution of a murder, because a man of his intelligence could have found other means of escape from the position in which he found himself; when such a man brings all his intelligence to bear in order to commit a rnurder in stab a manner ae to evade its consequences and baffle the pur- suit of the law, he weaves such a network of infamy is eau only be unrevelled by the most elaborate research. Of this nature is the case now before the public. Its history reads like the wildest dream of the roma- ncer, and its sequel promisee to be equally dramatic. Its chief aator -has shown a character such haa been rarely met with, and he has gone through a career such as could hardly be described. What further will -be drawn to light concerning him time alone can tell. Toronto may yet play a larger part in the terrible drama, and it is possible that a few more of the threade surrounding the mysteries connected with the case may yet be untangled. THE HUMANE YANKEES. TWO Women and Six Children Arrested For Flaying No Money by the Niagara Falls, N. Y. Authorities. A despatch from Niagara Falls, Ont., says :—Mrs. Sheehan and Mrs, O'Connor, mother and daughter, with six ohildren, natives of Tralee, Ireland, who have been rodents of Toronto, arrived from Toronto, on the Ilth inst., and took up their abode at Nfitgara Falls, N. Y. They were as- companied by their husbands, who were in search of work. The latter found employ- ment on the new electric railway on the American aide. Wedneade.y while their husbandwere absent, about three p.m., both women and children were taken into custody , and locked up for upwards of two hours, after which both they and their effects were carted out and dumped on the middle , of the upper Suspension bridge by the lacal au thorities of Niagara Falls, N. Y., and were told that being people without viaible means of support they had to leave the country (of the brave and the free) ; that they had n use for such people. The ages of the children ranged from 12 days to 10 years. It was a pitiful sight to see so young a babe in the arms of its mother, who, it can be readily understool,is still in too delicate condition to receive such treatment from a supposed civilized country. Mayor Ronan, hearing of the oircumstances, took the party in charge, and ie caring for them in a humane manner until something can be done for them, Egypt's Longest Railroad. The longeSt Egyptian railroad now ex- tends to Girgeh, 326 miles from Cario. is soon to be extended to the firsb-cataract, 710 mileir from the coast. This means, of course, an ultimate railroad connection with the British poseessione in South Africa. HUMANITY NOT ALL DEA,D. Roston surgeon et celebrity Exeutp111100 This Statement's Troth, The beet things that luau can do feeble kind have no fixed money vales, It is refreshing to note this 10 511 epooh in which the in:ramble for the almighty dollar is be. ooming more intenee with every pe,seing hour, The case in point is that of a world -famed Beaton surgeon, whose office, in the heart of the fashionable Matte®, is the haven of the halt and the maimed. Stiff prices he has for the pets of fortune, but pennies are as dollen when the sufferer is a soldier in the ranks of poverty. The doctor likes his comfort, hie luxuries as well as auother, but he taxes the rich for them and gives tha poor the benefit. Not long ago a man, a quiet New Hamp- shire village man, to whom a dollar is as big as a grindstone, found himself seriously ill with an unknown disorder. He had heard of the famoua Boeton dootor, and, with all his savings, betook himself to Beaten and the wise one. "Appendioitis ; serious (attire," was the diagnosis. "How muoh money have you got ?" the doctor asked. "Seventy-one dollars ; its in my pooleet" "All right. That will about pay your board at a hospital. Needn't bother about me." The operation, en unusually complioated one, was performed, the villager remained four weeks at the hospital, where he had the Sarno attention from the great surgeon as his moneyed fellow patients. And the doctor would thank you not to mention the matter to him or anybody else. His skill is his own and he will do with it as he chooses, His fes for an operation recently performed WaS 85,000. Sharp Answer. Upon Fenelon telling Richelieu nut he had seen the portrait of His Eminence at the palace, the Caruinal sneeringly asked : Did you ask it for a subscription for some poor friend of yours? No; the pi oture Was too much like you. When Baby was sick, we gave her Caste?. When she was a Child, she crit d for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castor's. When sba4i1dren,8he�V5bbemCa0r, Indignant. A little girl we know does not understeied encores, and so found fault with the au- dience at a recent children's concert, in which she helped to sing a chorus. I know we didn't make one mistake, she exclaimed on her way home, and yet they made no come out and sing it all over again. cotfs iliaanneemmer A CUTE Inflammatory Rheumatism is pre. duced by an excess of uric acid in the ' blood.. Paralysis is nearly a dead circula- • tion produced by impure and impover- /shed blood. So-called neuralgia of the thigh is sciatic rheumatism; sorofulitics rheumatism is hereditary; syphilitic results from syphilis; gout is caused by high living; sluggish circulation affoots the heart. "THE KIND THAT CURES" Thus the whole line of rheumatic diseases owe their being to an affected circulation of impure blood. No person can suffer a rheumatic pain that has a free and equal ROR circulation of pure blood, and this ac- ••• counts for Scott's Sarsaparilla, curing the supposed incurable cases. It eradicates all rheumatic poisons and acids from the blood and equalizes the circulation. • If you must draw the line at and have, like thousands of other people, to avoid all food prepared with it, tlais is to remind you that there is, a clean, delicate and healthful vegetable short. ening, which can be used in its place. If you will USE COTTOLENE instead of lard, you. earLeat pie, pastry and the, one! " good things" which other folks enjoy, without fear of dyspeptic consequences. De- liverance from lard has come. Buy a pail, try it in youi own kitchen, and be con- vinced. Cottolene is sold in 3 and 5 poundpails, by all grocers. made only by The N. K. Fairbank Company, Wellington and Annaba. ilionmazAL, CURBS DYSPEPSIA, BAD BLOOD, CONSTIPATION, KIDNEY TROUBLES, DEADACHEp BILIOUSNESS. B.B.B. unlocks all the secretions and removes all impurities from the system from a common pimple to the worst scrofulous sore. BURDOCK PILLS; aeir gently yet thoroughly on the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. HEAD -MAKER'S InEILLIST HIVE? No TO OW SATISFACTION !FOB tiladev' nu ALL riFereeReltee *\. 1 4 4. ' RHEUMATISM AND GOUT SCOTT'S SKIN saae PRZVENTS GREASY 00/.1PL.T.ICI5tt Sold by C. LUTZ, Exeter, Ont. zmz Tows , Sarsaparilla Cures Rheumatism, Gout, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Scrofula, Sores, and all Eruptions. BRISTOVS Sarsaparilla Cures Liver, Stomach and Kidney Troubles, and Cleanses the Blood of all Impurities. BRISTOL'S Sarsaparilla Cures Old Chronic Cases where all other remedies fail. Be sure and ask your Druggist for BRISTOLIPS Sarsaparilla MEN AND WPME THE OWEN ELECTRIC BELT. :Trade Markl DR. A. OWEN, The only Scientific and Practical Electric Belt made for general use, producing a Genuine Current of Electricity for tbo cure of Disease, that eau be readily felt and regulated both in quantity and power, and applied to any part of the body. 11 can be worn at any time during working hours or sleep, and will positively cure Rheumatism, Sciatica, General Debility Lumbago, Nervous Diseases. Dyspepsia, Vari co eel e, Sexual Weakness. impoterleV. Kidney Diseases, Lame Beet, Urinary Diseases Electricity properly applied is fast taking the place of drugs for ell Nervous, Rheumatic, Kid- ney and Urinal Troubles, and will effect cures In seemingly hopeless cases where every other known means has failed. Any sluggish, weak or diseased organ may by this means be roused to healthy activity before it is too lato. Leading medical men use and recommend. the Owen Belt in their practice. OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOG...DIE . . Contains fullest information regarding the cure of acute, chronic a,ncl nervous diseases, prices, how to order, etc., mailed (sealed) FR EE to any address. The Owen Electric Belt & Appliance Co, 49,KI NG Sr. W., TOFIONTO, 01474 201 to 211 State St., Chicago, Ill MENTION TR'S PAPER. If we did not take great pains, and were not at great expense to corrupt our naturea our nature would never corrupt us. —Clar- endon. tn, • , easee e &ea- eeee -es eve' eeleele,