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Exeter Times, 1896-3-12, Page 6, Arts. tray Joh s ate. Pi Ayr's Fria "I would like to add my testimony to that of others who have used Ayers ?ills, and to say that 1 have taken them for many teai's,and always derived the best results from their use. For Stomach c and for cure and liter troubles, the c tr of headache caused by these deran enietus. Ayer`a lilts cannot be equaled lthen my friends ask me wbat is the hest remedy for disorders of the stonmele Liver, or Bowels, itis lurarfttble aiiswcr is, Ay5er'a Pins. Teten m Beason they will break up a co't,ii ct, tlagrinuo,ell'ekfevtr,ate reestate to tie (Westfve organs. They are t..:ey to tale, and Are the best all-round fainil Tee/Heine Have ever known."--Mr:,s; x ,l=:x..seN, cos hider Ave., New `leak cite. .Y � iLL Ent Aretst ;' s at Aha i 's Fait'. A leas Seers:aiicerilicts or tits Weed". T1113 FARM. ERRORS IN TUE DAIRY. TEE. EXETER TIMES 1 amount of corn. They should have made a. gain of nearly fifty pounds per head to have repaid me for the corn that was fed them. As a general rule I believe in selling all kinds of stock when they are in the best. condition More errors occur in the management , to earamand the highest current mar - of the cream and butter in the average kiet deice, unless on iiit pecan, but u thein be private dairy, as a rule, than in the i ries, in a prize article published in the Irish Farming World—no doubt, be- cause creameries aro generally worked on more-scientifie lines. To begin.with,. bow many dairies are really kept as they should be, for the storing of milk; have many an acre. cream and butter only? Many dairies It makes a farmer have a wry face (by courtesy) are nothing less than general store rooms, in which every- ; thing, from red herrings to paraffin, is indiscriminately kept, quite regard- less, or perhaps in ignorance, of the fact that milk and cream are most sen- sitive to smells and taints of all kinds, and that the odors and flavors absorb - sureactsto sell just as soon as the market xe- creamery, writes Miss. E. A. Humph-. . FARMERS' PUN. The good farmer sees many a har- rowing sight_. A farmer may be toothless and yet iTtiMtrennitInIrtrrninrirtriMI There is no mystery about it is amply a seenr, pure, honest soap for i av ti anti household •a • seu u e 1 y L',v most approved proceseete a;i 1 l c:gig the best, it has the largest sale in the world. It is trade in a tv;ia bar for con- �J v enit ice sake. This shows T:n_, e 'Tan Bar h; e '.:;1.T - 1 For every 12 Wrappers sent es se'SOI' to LEVER Enos., Ltd., 23 gibi:: :�.�1's it Seca St„ Toronto, a use- '':1 se- .t raper -bound hook will C. � i,a Use will rev cal The Twirl Ecneeits Less Labor. Greater Comfort. 10' t4 to see his grain crop short. A farmer's face may be smooth, al- though his fields are furrowed. To a farmer corn in the field is worth much more than corn on the toe. The farmer's crop differs from a chickens and is generally more, valu- able. Many a farmer is small potatoes Min- ed in the milk will certainly reappear f if ,salt ough he raises very large ones VirOViliesittlinnrreiranl rket. in the butter. Where a room cannot Sometimes a farmer looks as seedy as be reserved exclusively as a dairy, his farm in the spring. greater care is necessary to obtain good A good farmer likes to turnip the butter, but in no case should anything strongly smelling or decaying be al- lowed to remain where milk is kept. Many mistakes in dairy work mean money out of pocket, and butter making isnot at present profitable enough to allow for this. One very general cus- tom is to sklin just before churning any cream sufficiently up and to mix it to that ready to churn. Thi,is causes a decided loss of butter fat. ; sweet cream takes longer to churn than ripened, consequently when the ripe cream conies Off" T H E J EN ET ER ""' TI elES FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS. THEcO ICSBESTFRIEND LARGEST r.:i'w1.E IN CANADA. ESD -MAKER' - iitNs FAILS i5 are.8Ci!1SFAST! h E' � FM; 1.fit.tc "q,* 9L. ') •':t3fit ARK OF REFUGE FROM RIE i .tiTl isNI. DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF KOOTENAY— ff Its application toa wide range of that many good farmers evils not agree diseases. with inc on these points, but if they We could probably have had chest - will take the pains to test it they will nuts without worms if anybody had 800 cured in 6 months in two cities, find that•I' am correct. All farm pro- thought to mention it in time, but as The potency of the new ingredient ducts which contain a large per cent. we were all busy askin' after 'caters in combination curing Hemorrhage of water will shrink in bulk and weight. without any pits in 'em the chestnuts of the Kidneys. soil, even if he gets beet in doing so. The farther should always sleep m a bed, but never in a, celery bed. Some farmers are very slow, although they may have any quantity of bops: \\'hen heifer a farmer starts to rais- ing stock be shouldn't let anything cow Rina in an attempt to bull the market. A WONDERFUL GARDEN THIS. At least the Story about it is 'Wonderful Enough. Most people have heard of the bang- ing gardens of Babylon, the modern roof to butter the cream last added i5 un- gardens and the gardens or floating churned and passes away with the but- islands in which vegetables used to be termitl . In one dairy I know of, tbe grown for the citizens of ancient Mex- return of butter weekly has almost ico, but probably few have heard of a doubled since the practice was stopped.' garden on board a ship, with farmyard Cream should be well nnised and stirred attachment. The splendid. ship Mow- at least twelve hours before churning ban, now in port at Portland, Ore.,had to secure equal ripening, Another mise such an arrangement on board during take is made when cream is allowed her trip to Qregon. On leaving Bel- fast for Portland she took on board as ballast 2,000 tons of Irish soil, which, when leveled off, made quite a stretch Of ground, and, as the soil of Ireland is proverbially fertile, the ship's com- pany proceeded to put it to good use by planting a stock of garden truck in it—cabbage, leeks, turnips, radishes,let- tuce, peas, .beans. etc. The seeds came up all right and the plants flourished finely, and when the ship was in the tropics, grew with great rapidity. As they progressed toward the Horn and to stand on the milk until sour, the idea is that snore cream is obtained the long- er it stands. As a, matter of fact once the milk thickens no more cream can come to the surface, and instead of gaining in quantity the cream is losing n qualiay, and will give inferior but- ter. Again, in small dairies, in order o make. a "good churning," the Bream is often eolleete.d far too long; if peo- ple could he persuaded to try it they would final tint by churning oftener i heir 'goad t•hurn tuns ' would be made bitter. hairs in utter are very ills - ;tasting, ;lad ordinary care will keep• the weather "rely colder, things came zilun Bows sof tt,ntt iNce n e into ilie tl fry eaerfship's apprentices rapidly.etiou t ces� andhe crew amsedthemselve pby nth he has t It int ,nei his clothes, or, weeding and cultivating the plants,and i Dtsu etheay y iiginrorsThen, all crftmhl d the captain and officers took regular i s ./min:'.i into the churn; it Hairs walks in the garden deity,. and all had ere in it they isi11 remain Rebind in the green vegetables to their hearts con- strainer, and straining will break up tent, lumps of dried cream. also curd if there As tbey came around the Horn the is any. There sitould he no curd ingarden was replanted, and by the time the ' cream, and if it has been stirred they reached the equator everything was abloom, and all hands feasted on often, and not allowed to become too fresh vegetables daily. The only •diaw- 4oCh there will bt+erne. backs to the garden were the weeds, Churning the butter into a lump in skis buttermilk is a grave mistake. which grew so rapidly that they could Shiny people imagine that by doing so hardly be kept down and the droves of they obtain more butter, while in truth pigs that were kept in the farmyard the extra, weight is made up of curd and attachment, and which, on several 00 - : tut tcimilk, which, besides spoiling the. canons, when the ship was bucking in - 'solar. will very soon impart a rank and to a nor'easter and rolling heavily,broke comet was in the west oe Timour'v do- innocent villagers as anything remark- , 'lieesv taste to the butter. The en- out of the bounds and made serious in- minions and in the sign of Aries. Tina able. They only thought it was 'un-` ,Mosel; buttermilk makes that butter roads on the garden. It is a serious our, prepared for war, entered tbe ene- coinmonkind' of Mrs.'Trevenaand hoped ' ..ale, and eurd appears in tiny white matter to call all hands on board ship, mies' territory and utterly overthrew - she would be rewarded for her 'charity.' ; i.aks, v. hieh no amount of washing and is only done in emergencies, but them. In the reign of Selim II. (1572) Charity 1 Sho laughed at the word. :will remove. If the butter is :washed when the pigs got into the garden there there appeared a comet, which had the Charity had nothing to do with it. A while still in the grain the buttermilk was more pounding on forecastle scut- brightness and magnitude of Venus. child m the house—it was a joy in - can eaeily he removed, and if there is ties and handspikes and blowing of This excited the monarch's apprehen- carnate—a blessing unspeakable—a con- t curd most of it: can be got rid of by boatswain's whistles than if the ship sions, which were augmented by the solation without end. She did her w shine; in brine and then liftingthe had been laid aback by typhoon or all predictions of his astrologers, who fore- duties, neither light nor few, but grains carefully out of the brine, aken the masts had been carried away, and told that this phenomenon announced through them all she hugged herself in the eel/.i will be found at the bottom every, sleeper was aroused to help gat the calamities which excessive rain her secret bliss. Sho used to think of ' fl'et u on the em ue "forty • it as she walked, as she chatted to her WHAT DOES IT FORETELL ? WILL PERRINE'S COMETBRING GOOD UR EVIL P It is Due to Strike this Sphere on March 15 -Wars, Violent Storms and Ilui'iieftiies Seem to Follow the Appearance of a. Comet—Many Historical Instances. The approach of Perrine's comet, which is speeding toward the earth, at the rate of 1,600,000 miles a: day, and Which is due to strike this sphere on March 15, naturally raises the question to what extent, if any, this earth of ours is influenced by these strange denizens of heaven. That they have some in- fluence has been stoutly maintained by astrologers of all ages, Albumazar tells us that comets, be - becoming first visible in Aries, signify evil to the countries ruled by that sign. and that drought twill be especially pre- valent. Now, the comet of 1870 ap- peared in Aries, the sigu of Germany, and in that year the Franco-German war was begun and several districts in Europe suffered severely from drought. Donati.'s comet `appeared in 1858, and was followed by the Italian war of 1859, The appearance of the great comet ot 1861 coincided with a most destruotive conflagration in Lon- don, and was immediately followed by the outbreak of the civil war in the United States. The assassination of This Lincoln belongs to the same epoch. T g comet appeared in Gemini, the sign of the United States and London. The no work in which the reward of the groat comet (comet B) was first seen Great Friend of children will more sure- ly follow --and it is one in which even the humblest way have a share, A woman china to the Shelter one day in search of a child whom she could other public disasters." The learned Grotius observes that "Comets and fiery swords and such like signs are wont to be forerunners of great changes in the world," Raphael tells us that "The great comet in 1680, followed by a less- er in 1682, was evidently the forerunner of all those remarkable and disastrous events that ended in the revolution of 1688. • A comet appeared just at the time our unfortunate Charles of England was defeated by Cromwell, and in 1819 a comet appeared m the summer previ- ous to the death of the excellent Duke of Kent and of His Majesty, George ILL" Many other examples could be given of the popular belief that comets are harbingers of tremendous changes in mundane affairs, This belief is doubt- less not as widespread as it was a cen- tury ago, but there are still some who cling` to the old so-called superstitions, and even the most skeptical must ad- mit that very notable things have hap- pened on earth while comets were blazing in the heavens. HOMES FOR CHILDREN. It's Good Work That ifay be Done to Car- ing for a Homeless Jloy or Gal. In making a special. appeal to Chris- tian people on behalf of homeless chil- dren, Mr, 3. J. Kelso the Prov -inial Superintendent of Child Saving work says:— In these days of liberal charity there is the danger of providing for home- less children eapenaive institutions, instead of what they need most —a share in some good woman's love, and a. place in her home There is no grander work than this possible -- in Gemini on May 22, 1881, and on July 2 of the same year President Garfield was shot. The same period was noted for its violent storms and hurricanes, 1 Now, the ancient astrologers taught ave. Several bright, healthy ail - that the appearance of a comet in Gem- dren were shown her, but she passed iii always signifies severe tempests and them over until she earth to a delicate little one of whom the doctors spoke the death of some illustrious man, doubtfully. "That is the child 1 NAPOLEON'S COMET. want," she said, "that 1 may nurse it Evidences of a. like nature abound in back to health," And she did her part history. A comet, tenanted the lieav- faitbfuliy,, so that the child is now no ens for several months before the birth antlgzateul�for the lovet is so freely strong mad i of the great Napoleon and another one stowed upon it. Thero are many such of vast splendor became visible at the children who might be nursed back beginning of September, 1811, when lie icnal, Lad) thoirlthheaxts pinerallor lov©hy lit was at the height of his glory. More w•hlcn they are ser unjustly deprived. curious still, it attained its greatest . Let those whom God has blessed think lustre in the latitude of Paris, and it o£ Ibis, for the Master in the form of a vanished over this latitude of Corsica, little child is knocking at their door. I£ only the homes of rho people wore li'iien Napoleon was dying a comet. ap- ' more freely ,opened to the ery of the peared again—Cur the third time in his children, this blessed work of cbild- t saving would work a revolution in our notable life. t social life, and the raproaeh of crowded In 1606 a comet appeared in England institutions and lovoless lives would be in the watery sign Scorpio, and soon : removed. Nor would all the advent- tion there was a terrible rounder- ' ae*rod decd is a ever ofdone e ainii sineeri y tion in Bristol, Somersetshire, Norfolk without. a blessings resting upon the and the eastern counties. Nest rad •ntee, doer. Hoene life would surely ria made by the way, predicted this flood izi 'i, more cheerful, and lonely hearts made fifty years before it took lace. glad by the loving presence of young P life. Toil•sweetoned, anxious cares and Oriental potentates have for ecntur- gloomy forebodings banished, and then ies been swayed greatly by comets. Tini- the possibility that a soul snatched from our, when one appeared, consulted Ab- I dishonor may be made beautiful for a life of service to Humanity. dullah Liesan, a famous astrologer, and in the story of "King Artbur," by , was informed that it presaged the ut-t Miss hlulock, the pleasure that comes most disasters to. his enemies and es- j from receiving, and caring for a foster ; ecially to the Ottoman Empire. Ab-' child is beautifullyTportrayed. Note Pthe fallotcing �assa,,es e 1 he flat of dullah predicted this seeing that. t.he' an. adopted child did not strike these for77,7 !infants and Children. 1'Castoriaissoweiltdaptodto childrenthat I recommend iters superior to anyprescription known tome." R. A. Anonym, tai. D., 11180. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. "The use of 'Castoria' is so universal and Its merits so well known that it sectio a work of supererogationto endorse it. Few are the 'utelligent families who do not keep Castoria within easy reach." CART os Maternr, D, D.. New York City. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, /Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di. gesz.ion 'Without injurious reedicattoas " For several ,eats I have recommended your' Castoria,,' and shall always cpatinuo td do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results." EDWIN F. PARDEE, M. D., "The Winthrop," 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City i'.ts CENTAUR COMPANY, T7 MURRAY STREET, NEW Yona. TENYFARS TLED vi •> v 11 mayl e 'ni:'d cream the urn. "i t. t u. h improved by pit l ling, i. e., mixing salt with it, anti taints from smoke, or tur- nips eaai be partly removed by dissolv- ing saltpetre in the washing water, or by mixing in a little saltpetre when Irish soil was discharged on the elevat- salting. Two colors in butter (streaky or company's dock and piled up neat- ' butter) is n had fault, and shows un- ly, so that any exiled patriot who de- '• even selling; it gt-neralls occurs when sires a bit of the "ould sod" can be ac- tin• lecher is allowed to harden. before coinmodated. The pile will doubtless be , adding the salt ; in dry salting a good covered with shamrocks in the spring wary is to work the butter twice, only and will furnish boutonniers for awhole j partly cork it at first, then lay it aside St. Patrick's Day procession. Doubt - for three or four hours to allow the less many a sack of it will be carried salt to dissolve,. then finish; by -this off to fill flower pots, ete. Although Method mush less working, is needed. it comes from the 'black north" it is Over -salting is a decided mistake, and still the real "ould sod." is no;. a:•nsidered adulteration, which indeed it often is, as I have known of eases where it was added to make'up the weight. The same remarks apply to a large percentage of water in but- ter. I do not believe that honestly, pro- per made butter will hold more than 17 percent. or 18 per cent. of water, but can be, and sometimes is, put into it. --- the pigs out of the garden, would in i P The last, pig was killed and served days afterward." says the Historian, • neighbors and often as she sat in church.; , little Ran That , —m l tis 'Myrill feet little up with green vegetables just 1>eforei.He they imagined themselves threatened Y • Mowhan entered. the Columbia. On the with a universal deluge ; incessant rains morbid self -contemplation, if not actual arrival of the Mowhan at Portland, the overflowed the monarch's dominions in selfishness, which is apt to grow upon Europe and Asia, laid waste three of spinsters and childless wives—upon al- I his chief cities, swept away men, cat- most all ;;omen who have arrived at tle and houses, and rendered the bridges middle age without knowing the 'baby - and public roads impassable for sever- fingers' waxen touches' which prees all al weeks." Whiston has conjectured bitterness out of the mother's breast— that the deluge mentioned in the Bible vanished into thin air. It could not was produced by the near approach of exist amidst the wholesome practice - a comet to the earth, and he further bility of nursery life.' Later on, when surmises that the end of the world may the child had been with her some years, be produced by the approach of a comet the verdict was, 'she knew herself to prodigiously heated in its perihelion. It be a better woman, and certainly her is interesting, to compare his views on husband was no worse man, nor a less the subject wall those expressed by M. happy man, for having that bit of con- Flammarion, its his book entitled 'La tinual sunshine—a child in the house.' Fin du Monde" Every reader can help this movement VIEWS OF THE ANCIENTS. . in some way, and by each one advocat- ing in their own sphere the claims of the homeless child, doors and heartswill be opened and agreat work made pos- sible. _------ Ur Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia—Suffered With Greatly and Found No Relief in the Scores of Medicines Prescribed. WHEN TO SELL FARM PRODUCTS. "'When is the best time to sell farm products to realize the greatest pro- fit ?" ro- fit?" is a question often discussed, says Joseph Allen. There are many thingss to take into consideration, such as shrinkage, wastage and the probable range of prices. For several years I have been making experiments to as- certain whether there seas any great shrinkage in stored grain, when it was WHAT UNCLE WILLIAM SAYS. Even the great Charlemagne regard - I have known a few men to pay out- ed comets as portents. Seeing one ap- law ed debts for conscience's sake, but pear a few weeks before his death, he consulted his astronomers, and i every time I have traded horses with n reply one of them he took all manner of pains to His secretary, Eginhard, who urged to hide the ringbones and spavins and Him not to grown uneasy, he said he git the big end of the deal. was not dismayed at such signs, but When 1 hear of a man beingfeared the divine framer of them, who, friend being incensed with anger against a Iess I do not put it down to any short- people or a prince, is wont in this way -comings of his. On the contrary, 1 to admonish them of his wrath and to know that he lent the first fifty 0 to call them to repentance. Other fa - S10 apiece and so estranged them, and mous men held similar opinions. Cicero the last fifty were refused and thus writes that "In the civil war between driven to talk against him. The world's Octavins Augustustette and Mark Antony friendship is more to be dreaded than the world's enmity. There's heaps o' men who'll cheerful- ly spend tts'o hours any day teachin' a dog to jump over a stick, but if their grown-up habet they never worry over he fact. it was observed that comets were the harbingers of the miseries that then be- fell them," and expresses the opinion that "such appearances foretell great events." Pliny writes: "A fearful star, this comet is, and not easily expiated, as it appeared by the late civil troubles threshed in good condition. I have It took the old man Parker ten years when Octavius was consulas also a learned by these experiments that all to make up, his Hund that it only rain- second time by the intestine war of rains, such as wheat, barley,rye, oats, ed thirty-nine days and nights instead Pompey and Caesar, and . in our days g of forty, and Asset as he had it all set- about , the time that Claudius Caesar clover seed and flax seed, when stored tied they carried the whole family off was poisoned and left the Empire to to the poor house as paupers. Domitius Nero, in the time of whose reign and government there was a blazing comet continually seen." Sen- eca exclaims: "Some comets are very. cruel and threaten us with the worst of mischiefs; they bring with them and leave behind them the seeds of blood and slaughter," Socrates, writing of the siege of Constantinople, says: So great was the danger that bung over the city that it was foretold by a huge blaz- ing comet,: that reached from heaven to earth, the like of which no man ever saw before."' Anna Comnena, the daughter of . the Emperor Alexius,. speaking of a comet that appeared be- fore the invasion of the Gauls, says: "This happened by the usual adminis- tration of providence h1 such cases, for it is not fit that so great and strange an alteration of things as was brought to pass by that coming of theirs should be without some previous denunciation andadmonishment from heaven." ' i FEARED IN ALL AGES. Machiavelli, writing .an the same sub- ject, says: Experience shows that some great commotions are the conse- quence of such signs as these," Mili- chius, a noted mathematician, says: "Much experience and ' observation shows that comets announce great slaughter to the world, such as sacking of cities, subversion of kingdoms and. in good condition, do net lose a single pound in weight by shrinkage, and the only loss is in wastage. It is a well- known fact that clover seed, threshed in good condition and weighed when threshed and then again reweighed in twelve months, gains 1 per cent. in weight. Oats in the , same length of time will gain from 1 to 81-2 per cent. Wheat, rye, barley and flaxseed will. gain from I to 2 per cent. I am aware A man makes a fool of himself about once a month clurin' his natural life,and yet because his horse balks once a year he jumps on his hat and wants to shoot somebody or somethine right off quick. I may be mistaken about it, but it has always seemed to me that the prin- cipal object in makin' campaign speeches was to give a few hundred men oppor- tunity to lie about those who couldn't agree with 'em on matters in general. Corn shrinks from 6 to 10 per cent., de - Its startling cures of Locomatoi pendingmuch, on .the cribbed. Last fa11 was the wiser way is to take what comes e corn when it is z e or turn to peanuts The restoration of sight and hearing, shrink much than an it would m a -wet things of life which hurt a man the were overlooked. This bein' the case, Ataxia and Blood Diseases. a very dry one, consequently corn would It isn't bein' disappointed- in the big lost th rot h the deans is of paralysis.] season. The removal of all t of nercuriial! The best time to sell cattle, hogs and sheep to realize the greatest profit, is poisoning from the system. Its cures of Chronic Rheumatism. when they are fully matured can ready for market;. There is seldom any Pro- fit in feeding hogs more than ninety days as they are now sold. T once fed about forty head nearly six mouths,. weighing them every month, ` and I found that the Iasi month they were fed they made a gain of only ten pounds per head and ate almost the same WRITE FOR PAMPHLET OF STARTLING CURES S. 2. Fiefeetheate MEDICINE CO, elIil°ili.TO0t, OlaT.. its worst. The defeated candidate g ov- er it after a few days, but the man who is kicked while applyin' mutton -taller to the sore heel of a mule can't feel right towards the world under twelve months. `leacher—Have you learned the Gold- en rule, Tommy/ Tommy—Yes'm. It is to do to other people like they would do to you. , hildren Cry for Pitcher' Cat torial THE TOE POST. The toe post is a very ingenious de- vice for correcting the lamentable dis- tortions so common in the feet of both men an dwomen. It is a thin, verti- cal steel plate, covered with leather, which rises from the inside of the sole he great toe from the t and, separates :irates p toe iiext to it, thus correcting the ten- dency of the great toe to become twist- ed around. Of course, "digitiated" hos- iery having a separate apartment for the great toe, is also necessary. . Mr. Holden claims that the toe post is par- ticularly, useful for every form of am- usement or business in which much time is spent in the open air. South American Nervine Was Recommended, and Befc+rel Half a Bottle Was Taken Relief Came. Hage Since Improved Rapidly, and AmNory Complete Cured— So gays hir. David Reid, of Chesloy, Ont. STRANGE CHARITY. A gentleman who recently visited England, tells about a queer charity he noticed there: In the little village • of Broughton -in -Furness is a small baker's shoji, over the door of which is the fol- lowing inscription: "One piece of bread, to be eaten on the premises, given to any one passing through Broughton direct until 10 p.m." This extraor- dinary. signboard was affixed on the shop eight years ago by a neighbor, who recoups the baker for the bread which he disposes of in this singular way. +Wien Baby Was dek, we Rave her Castorht. When she wiae a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to-Castoria, When she ktadataildran,shegave them Castoria eiteheeet a a easesee Dal: am too much misplaced energy in dis shere wori, said Uncle Eben. Dab. am too many young men dat insists in cultivatin'. dab minds when dey or- ter tobe eultivatin' a 'tater patch. What iILs come to humanity from a disordered liver: Tlenry Ward Beecher ha$ said that it was impossible for a man to hold correct spiritual views if his liver was out of order. The liver is so important a part of the mechan- ism of man that when it ceases to work with ease the whole man is unable to do his work aright. Can we not appeal to thousands, nay, tens of thousands, for a verification of this fact? Cer- tainly It is, that Mr. David Reid, of ,Chesley, Ont, felt that the enjoyment ;of life had been taken from him, through the unhealthy condition of his 'liver. For ten years he says he was 'troubled with liver complaint and dys- pepsia. Employing his own. language "At times my liver was so tender I could not bear it pressed or touched from the outside. Had tried a great many remedies without any benefit. Was compelled to drop my work, and decided as being worsethan usual,T deo a sinal .resort to try South American Nervine, which had been recommended to me by friends who had been cured by it. I got a bottle from A. S. dood- eve, looal druggist, and commenced taking according to directions. Before I had taken half a bottle I was able to go to work again, and I have ii}i- troved steadily since. I can coneoieti- tlously recommend South American Nervine to any suffering from dyspep- sia or liver complaint." This is Mr. Reid's story as he tells it in his own words. Were it thought necessary it could be corroborated lay is host of wit- nesses. Mr. Reid has lived a long time+ in Chesley, and his cas! was known to be a very bad one. But that makes no difference to Nervine. This • great dis- covery rises equal to the most trying, occasions. Let it be indigestion, the most chronic Iiver trouble, as with Mr. Reid, nervous prostration, that makes life miserable with so many, sick headaches, that sap all the effort out of man or woman, Nervine measures to the necessities of the case. It is a great medicine and thousands to -day in Canada are happier ane, 1i althier men and women, because of Its discovery. There is no great secret about it, and yet there is an -Important secret. Int operates on the nerve centers of the system from which ernanstte'.all life and he alt !iiite ss or !f@1 s orzi r d rbcitnes ei even /detail. Nervine stri;os lroriitiy at the nerve centers, hence, as wieteel4r. ,.•1 Reid, where ten years` use of other me- dicines had done no geed, less than a bottle of •Nervine brought about else couraging rtsulta, elea 1 a few f eta les . cured. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. Tiros. WICIii;'r'T, Crediton Drug Store, Agent. Wood's �]oer9pl10dii��1,—The Great Eitglash Remedy. Is the result ot over 85 years treating thousands of cases with all known drugs, until ab last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—a oombination that will effect a promptand permanent cure in all stages of Sexual Debility, Abase or .Excesses, Nervone Weakness, Emissions, Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood's. Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi- cians -cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity -cases that were tottering over the grave -but with the continued andpersevering use of Wood's PhosP hodine these cases that had been given up to dig, were restored to manly vigor and health -Reader you need not despair—no inat- ter who has given you up as incurable --the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Price, one. package, Sit six packages, $5; by mail free of postage. One willidlease, six guaranteed to cure. Pamphlet free to any address. The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont-, Canada. After ;7atca� ng. Y Wood's PhosP P hotline is sold b responsible wholesale and attain druggists in the Dominion.