HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1897-11-18, Page 6tr
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1 VI.DIORSON, Burl:der, Soli-
olini in:route tioart, Notere
Peelle, aoiveeseeses Oeueniestener, ko
Menne to Lanne
. Wenn n ensonantoolt, neater,
L ca1,A1N.8,
Banister, Sqlicitor, Convoy itlIOOL Ett:
ZeerrE
OFFICE ; Over O'Neil's Bank.
1...i1XeLIOT et. ItlieLiOT,
arristors, Solicitors, Nota,rios PabIii
Convoyazieers (Fze, &E.
-s-Money to Loau Loweet Rates of
'merest.
- MAIN - STREET. EXF,T11111.
Hereon every Thureilay.
V. si.1,DYC., FREDERICK mantra
•-xf.mn.4m444!4m4r4.4e.morkeens..,.M.44.4.4.4=Me
31EDICAL
. ...„ _ ... . ea.
SIR. J. IL RI V Rine. M. B. TORONTO L'NI
Ertelre MP._ .c M.To: n ts Liver
Offiee-(rediton, Ont..
ROI.I.lienes Aeinn,
separate taanes. It eine q:one a4 former.
.1„
Anew r. t)nivea: Apa.,icaiares
'Shansi; lie 'Winn,' Name as formerly, norm
ecor: Dr. Amos'• bitil'Ungt, Ktait•h doer,
eni Rotel:CS. M. De T.&. . MOS. ti. D
Exeter. Onti
w BROWNING M. D„ 0
P1/ • P. s, teradaate ettetorte univen ty
ein a residence, I)Orn men riehe a
teableszeter.
• --- see
LB. HAND -MAN, coroner for 4 le
. Comity of finrOn. Otnes. OiP 4544
t arlins Brim. StAnn,Exetar,
AUCTIONS ERi.
1.4-1 SFNJ3EliflV, (ieneral
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in anus., la. iittptIa,,a go.tt...taIO0 1. tliaa:',„.ort
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11 itr Kit:DER Licata tied Niec-
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nete retes. °nee, at Poste...el:no nand.
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VE1UNR.
Tennent & Tennen
1.:X1 1111 et, ONT.
ta4tnit.s. ettatt thltat.
S p.
E• ene ovrtrYtt
Scomieclo.4.4.=.440m14.4 4.gr;.,1".
'THE W.annlinA.,()(J .11UTUAre
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8 11 1, E;:z t for Exeter aliaviwity
NEM/
BEANS
THE FARM.
CHANGING FROM SUMMER TO
wINTE43. FEEDING;
Oii the majority ot farms there are
1 two, marked changes iet the manage. -
went and feeding of the farmers' close.
Df 'stock. These ehanges •ocoor in the
t fall and spring ot the year, and are
I1 mush more marked at the.se seasons
e thaa at any other time during the
year. For many classes of live stook
• the approach a whiten means an en-
tire change in the system of feeding,
not only in the food given. but also a
complete change iu surroundings end
manner of 'feeding.; hence it requiree
not a • little skill( on the part of the
feeder that these repict changes from
succulent to dry food he made with
as little disturbanee to the animals:es
Passible. Fattening, cattle. espeeially,
should be watehed carefully. for three
or our 'Weeks when titey are taken
from pastures and placed in feed lots
upon dry food, as they are especially
lialtle to gaffer if the eltange is not
judieiouslr made; entl. ofttimes it is
found diffieult to get a bunch of cat.
tie from Lite easturee into the feed-
ing yards without naany of them los-
ing a el -eek or tate We hay.e found
tat alive:ever a steer has received
a set -Lott due to carelessness in the
ehange of feedizig methods that he
rarely recuy ere daring the entire feed-
ing period whieh follows. Nlatty good
feeders follow the Oractiee of eemtuenc-
in; to feed tle.ie steers while .411 on
piteture. hauling out the corn. steeks
. and all, and seattering it_ onthe
grounii. (if ciitirse only a limited
amount of this is elven at first, but
it is or:Au:lay inereaeed until the
i cat t it- Itre In lion eertuanentiy front the
pastures and placed in the feed lot.
, Winter proteetion for stoek is also a
imeetien of t. it el imeortance In farmers
ene Centers in the Western siate:s. anti
OSTP-i.a0Y ill tenee seetitale where the
thorinfiitivt i.01* loiters aleent zero a pa)04
•,Jirtion of tee Vitae. We have seen as
• tine a tot of nettle as were ever titer-
', en out of fetie eits fed in open vard.s
i asteceit :tny shei•ter whatever, ext.ept-
1' ire: a ait. istre•eit from the north. or
1 r" TAN' Peng ricks of stra'a loteitee 111
•', no-ere:le parts .t.i' tee fee-al:az lot ;
i : in u- :ire not. preperel to envie:ate
1 is ee-:fel11 of feeaing in eny ;net of
tee weetern stat ee We lennee neat.
, a eitin,proof shed will T•ii profile tile i11
eseery ippganes for tee seeiter of fat-
: telling ant lie ene, in eour ee eews and
: elseds r•a-l14' ,,l;001411.1 Ufa '4e 1,•1. 4-41t tlUr"
• /14:: inviement rr. Caters. par-
i tiettlerly, s' !MIA ; e hent,eti early at
• tt Ina net turreet out 5tt eirly in
• Ine morninn :04 t 1;e cieter etietk Itairy
eteers need e ti rt het la r at, eit i llin: eAeb
etes. skean' :lave a "41in.41.r:It. (gunnies.-
!- et ion. and W,, 1,Plii'Ve iitaf the eeetber
ilanSf iv eXt'ela iNflaily faVOrahle toe er-
• rant t he terrines .sue of t his class of
steek The annless houeing of sheep,
and the tee/wee, trove / aeturee to dry
food ie !Ittenertiel l'.itit a if trilw eer-
ie:nate:: ‘..1 ken. than. perletes, aith
'411,Y "I1.,or 'iT44 t+g eto..k.- lc is adds -
to ei teat. a lieera" seeply tte eneen-
• ent. 1 tete ee Ste! io :or liear early e in-
ter seeeper: re eiti to .1 rel eat :1
, neap a very isont reed. and in
. need nierly elate:en. el:euel 1 4! Olt l4‘4441
ftbr tee ttD1 ire. rittriot of airier
ing'- IL:ren neat, Irirtle• alai* care. ''. tvi
we do yee emesider it .* oeiel 11.ine i o
alP,s-v i0../gi toren et enti ii: tee iaale
fielde
or eaetiire fienle nuring the se-
vere weateer of winter Mn e farm-
ers ro in., t 'Le 1,1*1--li--i. of 1 inutile teeir
e erre. horeee out lett) tee fields to
"view!! it" US tl,r-•y! e44il it, after the
le i- --r. te"I•ile the horeee
v a!! 'illo Ft*T2H1/1.ti" 11 'Corti ill'''Y ,'er-
1 I in; y rolai,, wti ,11-‘0,17:t very trench
ok ,...f..7ttr I }tit; ie a fittt.0 premise to
§',.! rov: The !Aline volts should he
,t -heel eerefitily in ine /twit OF of
eee, tateeiei Le ..t %Wee early
fir,••• !44t,, en•I only e:teleittee tio ran
• teo enirlies the nenile ef VCA, clay.
• --e• • .• e teett if farmer.: reel et eek
. re1,---1.- ''-. eetI4 et,,ereke a little More
tie> wieter nrineeement in
: fn ir in :: sneek it WYCald reaiserve I'D R
. 7.'. ri,'7,!. .-lo...trttt• tee ar...,...nt oe freal that
. ie eeivelv reeitirea a- -ix er;v them over
. tee e i.„. i *non ee. en:. eeidee, he
sleek weale etalnt eat in the springin
' a one+ thriftior eondition,
L. ,1; sno
1,4,31:7,441,3 ° 1:,11:d seen
y 044r.si, thc. ornes Feat
iett ,i a a.. res, Res ey
solen . enein: .tinzt,; ea -1 nhen no other
sans . t te frit,
? es ? r F.71! ra
1.
1 rp1411V1341::':* I2j,1 Store Ex o 'e
D3 WOODS
Renenn
Inneteen*
Czneneen!`":eneen'
hnnel"n. 'nn47n,
CURES
00 OHS, COLDS,
NOARS2z:t :Ess, ASTHMA,
BRONCHITIS, AND ALL
DISEASES OF THE
THROAT AND LIMOS.
PRICE 25c. on 3 FOR S1.00
FOR SALE E.If ALL DRUCOISTS
FADFAKEfl 0
Temel...0,-0
tieee l'efeeWii ftetarenett Tna*
4A.47 el
rrHE EXT1T1A TIMES
Is eabliehed every Thursday morning at
Times Steam Printing House
Nia•th street. w nrly opposite Fitton's jewelFy
store, Exeter, Ont.. by
• .TOPIN WHITE & eONS, Proprietors.
,BATES OF ADVERTISING:
/11,4 inseition, per line 10 cents,
Each subseqiient insertion, per line3 cents.
To insure, irth`ertion, adyertisethents should
eent in not later Than We dneedin morning.
Or JOB PRt NT ING DEPARTMENT is one
et tbe largest and. be equipped in the CountY
of Huron. ..e.11 work- encrusted to us will re
ceive our prompt attention.
Deesieione Itegarding Newspapers.
--Any pereon who151888151888 a paver regularly
trout the post office.;- whether directed in his
elime or anotesens, or nbetheit be has sub
sceibed or not, is responsible totnanneent.
2 -If epereon orders his Parermu4,neeoetinued
sepay en arrow's or the enesainer May
continue tend it until the Pennant earned°,
and then eoneetthe whole amount', einether
the paper is nik.on from the °face at not.
3 -In suits for stibeieriptioes, tLe auit moy be
Instituted to the place e her the paper M pub
lIshed, eltheneth the subscriber may reside
irendredie of mile: awns*.
4 -The r.ourts have decided that refusing to
take neweeapers or periodical* from the pea
offices or removing and leaving them uncalled
tor, in prime facie eviennee of intentional
n,
• CLAY L.eND DFRING MOUTHY
• SEASONS'.
These fanner:: whn broke no the nat-
ural' sea on :day lands seeured two or
ttree good crops: then they learned
that the fertility ha,' been so inter -
(nixed with the under clay soil that
it is only daring the most favorahle
• seesons with extraordinary care, that.
a fair erop of grain is secured,. says
'iter. In other seasons, failure oc-
curs. Diteli deeply these clay soils and
lay tile drains. The ditches should be
IDA more than thirty feet apart, the
tile used not less than four inches in
diameter, running into mains not
lees than six inebes in diameter, anti
the drains not less than thirty in.
deep.
A very good way to cheapen tile
drainage is to plow the field into
lands just the -width, between the
drains, or thirty feet, making the wa-
ter furrow come where the ditches are
to be cut. Plow. in this manner for
three successive times, first for a
corn crop, then for an oat crop, then
for a wheat crop, ridging the lands
and deepening the water furrows. It
will be found that better props have
been raised than when the ground was
plowed and left level. The water fur-
rows have drained the water from ad-
joining lands during winter and
spring raonths a,nct the soil is more
the
1 hen there is only eight to
twelve inches of dirt to spade in or-
der to get the tile laid the proper
depth. The ground is then plowed
. baok• into the furrow e over the tiles.
Strawy manure or corn -stalks. from
the stable yard, light brush, old rot-
ted wood and rubbish plowed under
keeps the soil. from packing. The tiles
then ,carry eff the surface 'water muesh
more quickly than when the drains
are put through the hard clay, thirty
or thirty-six inches in. depth. The soil
should be deepened an inch at each
t plowing -until a furrow ten inchesdeep
has been seouxed.
At each plowing turn under as much
THE EXETER TIMES
coarse fertilizer as can be seenred at
reasonable rates. This, incorporated
with the clay soil, to a depth, •of ten
inches, takes up moisture and holds it
for the benefit of the roots Of plants
in droathy seasons, and steady growth
is maintained.
After the •soil has been plowed in
sPring, there should be thorough oulti-
vation before planting. Then with due
diligence in tilling afterwards good
paying crops will result: even during
droutby seasons. The men who say
that they are not able to tile drain
their lands, can surely thoroughly
drain one acne, and that area properly
fertilized and tilled will produce: good
crons and means with which to tile
dram other acres. Several years ago
I drained two acres of stiff clay lands
with hardpan clay subsoil which bad
failed to produce paying crops, at an
expense of forty-five dollags. It was
plowed and drilled to wheat, no crop
amounted to fifty-six bushels and sold
for S48.16, or $3.10 imore than the drain-
ing east. Ten loads of stable manure
were applied to the wheat during the
winter. The tile draining causes the
soil to be more porous, and enables
the rains to carry the surface fertility
deep into the soil.
^
CARE OF BROODER CHICKS.
1. The down of "just hatched" chieles
is nu protection from cold, and in win-•
te:ehikt
great ehued.
care that
n
11 Like full-grown poultry, Wicks
need exercise. Keep them •busily
sere}euirdise.
n)ogin light litter furnished for
tb
$. Keep currents of air from paeeing
over the chicks When in the Inesoiers.
If bowel dieease appears it is usually
due to colds induced principally from
lack of warmth at night.
4. When ehieks droop and appear
hsletzsy,zn
i‘onIetef:s1.: targe gray lice on the
o
5. Dry feed is best for ehicks. feed
three times a day, but scatter millet
or other small grain in the litter to in-
duce them 10 seratoh. guod author-
ity on trouler-raised ebieks aye they
should have "rolledn dry oats for their
first fooil sea tteren where they can Pk
• ifrt getfoadul.
The sku1d
Pin -ed in little troughs. After the
fourth day give the, bread and milk
for the morning meal, tolled oats at•
noon, and eraelted wheat and era:eked
coru at night, with occasionally a lite
tie eiasppen eons or. meat After they
an; ten days tild feed nem anything
t
sthem to
O. Supply enter in stain a way that
• the cheers eaunot get themselves wet.
Furnish grit is t1e. shape of coarse
sand, pound-( shells, or etime hard
ma terial.
7. The main requirement for sue-
eeesnai raising of thrifty nrooder chicks
is warmth. If the elneks erowd to-
gether at Ulnae, you may he sure there
is lack of merlin -1e If they separate
under the tie:oder they are comfort-
able. In whiter. the temperature of
tin brooder sLoind be not less than
• ninety degrees and not more titan a,
hundred degrees, Examine the heat-
ing apparel use at; ASCII at' the position
et bedtime, also early in.
til( I1.rning.
S. Kee,: tee brooder elean.
9. Feed a eerie ty food, but let-
craeked wheat and eraekee corn he a ,
part of the ration after the alleles are '
old enough to eat them. Give cut clo-
ver hay for green food. Fresh milk
may be gieen, but not sour.
TO SALT 13E1ele AND DRIED BEEF.
We have just been, salting eorn beef
bY a retire a friend gave me last
year, anel as the meat kept the best
and was the eineet ee ever had, will
sent it for other, to try, writes Aunt
nr. Cut in the meat as soon as eold
and put it in a roll piece where it
will not freeze, to rieen for four to
eht days. 0.,^.1•OrdirIP: I:0 age of creature
iie days is limn enough for a two-
year-old. Then take an iron I oiler two -
Write full of Soiling water, be sure
it lolls. an4 pet in as many pieees
of meat as it will hold, put on, the
rover and let it boil ateno ten min-
utes, then taee out and put in some
more for the same length of time, he-
ing eare there in a good fire and the
water is boiling hot- every time. This
HN! THIES UNDER FMB.
THE CORIANDER -IN -CHIEF HAS HAD
A CHARMED LIFE.
9.40.1
Lord Wolsoley's Maus' Escapes from Death
in Action Told by a CerresIlendout -
White Ile Das Sone Through.
A correspondent to the North Brit-
ish. Daily 1/1Si1 sent in the following
interesting letter concerning Lord
Wolseley's wonderful escapes
No living soldier, so far as I know,
has experienced more remarkable es-
capes from death than Field. Marshal
Viscount Wolseley. Campaign after
campaign he has seemed to bear a
charmed life. His first escape occur-
red in the Burmese war, when an en-
sign in the Eightieth Regiment. Along
with another officer who was killed, be
was leading a storming party against
the fortified positien of Myattoon,
when struck by an iron jingal ball on
the left thigh ; the artery was laid bare
bug not cut; otherwise he would. have
bled to death in a few minutes. His
condition, however, was ixiOst, critical,
and required the constant attendanee
of a soldier for six months. Several
narrow escapes took place during the
Crimean war. One in the trenches be-
fore Sebastopol in February, 1855, when
his coat was pierced by a bullet; an-
other, two months afterward, when
he was slightly wounded by the debris
seattered by a round shot; and
another, when, with Captain Peel, R.
N., be dashed into a powder magazine,
the entrance of which had been set on
fire by a shell, and managed to ex-
tinguish the flames. At the taking of
the Quarries a ball passed through his
cap, knocking it from his head, and
shortly afterwards lie was wounded be
the thigh by canister shot, and lost a
considerable quantity of blood.
On the night of August 30, he was
nearly killed in the trenches. Along
with two sappers, he was engaged tri
refilling some gabions with stone,
when a round shot elm& the gabions
and scattered their contents with ter-
rific force. Tbe two sappers were kill-
ed, and Wolseley was hurled to the
all over.
,wRitbe ase
l f ut:elorsetlyvilovloeunrkeeq.e. iiios
face and body were cut and battered
the leg. Both eyes were closed; _and
the sight of One totally lost. Many
thought that he would never reeover,
but he did, after spending a numher
dofarevkneeeles.
ssshut up in a cave in complete
in the Indian Mutiny he frequently
passed through a "kerfeet shower of
S,s1a.00rtsds,ap,Thdiiullets." no employ his own
A
bullets hopped off the, tires
of the guns like ents off o. drum."
When storming the Moine Mahul at.
Lucknow a soldier. who hail been his
servant, in tbe Crimea, was shot, and
fell on the st reet. NVolseley sprang
out to carry biro under shelter, when
a mutineer at a distance of five or
six yards took deliberate aim at Min
and fireel; but the bullet, instead of
striking biro, ineee.:d through the body
of the soldier. In the Rea River ex-
pedition in 1870, during a severe storm,
of thunder and rain at night, u tree
was thrown down. ant in felling erush-
ed a boat elose to the spot where W 01-
seley was sleeping. In the Ashantee
campaign. during the attack on the
village of Ordashu, Wolseley, a'hile
SITrING ON SMALL STOOL.
was strurk on the helmet. by a slug
shot and knoeked to the ground. If
the slug had not been arrested by the
pugleree folds, the career of the tom-
raander-in-chief, would have been end-
ed. After the night march before the
battle of Tel-Keler, N% hen. the troops
had halted, Lord. :Wolseley pro eiecied
in advance of his staff to reconnoiter
the position cfr the enemy. He dis-
mounted, and was gazing with Ins glass
through the darkness, when sudden-
ly a shell, fired, it is supposed, at ran-
dom, fell between him and his horse.
It buried itself in the sand, and did
not. explode. If it had, in all likeli-
hood Wolseley would have been blown
to pieces. Not a few envy the numer-
ous honours and high position Lord
Wolseley has attained, but how many
would undergo the same hardships,
dangers and wounds to seeure them?
Fens aniat pisces sed non vull tangere
plantas.
proeess closes the pores of the. meat
on the outside and keeps the jun ee
from going into the? brine. When the
meat that is to be salted. has all been
eooked a few minutes, pack in the
meat barrel, put on a weight and add
the following brine, boiling hot: TWO
ounces saltpeter, tveo Pounds brown
sugar, six pounds coarse salt, to four
gallons of water.
l'o salt driod beef -To every thirty
panties of meat take one quart of fine
salt. one tablespoonful fine saltpeter,
and the Lest West India molasses,
enough to color the mixture a light
brown. Mix anti rub over each piece
of meat and pack, in a large jar as
closely as poseinle, and put on
weight. In forty-eight hours turn
over the top pieces. and if it is packed
close enough, there will be brine
enough to cover. In four to six weeks
it will be ready to dry.
HER PRAYER ANSWERED.
Years ago I heard this story. Its
lesson remains by me and will as long
as I live.
A poor old woman. being entirely
alone in a miserable shanty, had noth-
ing to eat, and, she knelt down an.d
prayed fervently that God would sup-
ply her necessities. Some boys hap-
penecl to hear the fervent supplization
and in the spirit: of mischief procured
a loaf or bread and threw it in at the
open door. The pious old lady picked
up the bread, and, falling on her
knees, thanked God for answering her.
prayer. Then the boys approached and
the leader said: "Old lady, God did not
send the loaf; we brought it."
"Ah, lads," said the devout soul,
"God, sent it, even if the devil brought
it."
• REMARXABLE CUTLERY.
• The most renaterkable knife in the
world Is that in the curiosity room of
a firm of cutlers in Sheffield. It has
1,800 blades and 10 blades ere added
every 10 years. Another curiosity is
three pairs of SOISSOTS, all of whieh
ea -n be covered with a thimble.
Fifty Years Ago.,
*This is the way it was bound to look
When grandfather had his "picter took:,
Thsse rre're the shadows cast before
The coining of Conjurer Daguerre
And his art; like a girl in a pinafore
Some day to bloom to a goddess fair.
Man certainly were notes black, we knovr
As they pictured them, go years ago.
Ayer's Sarsap: rilla
began to make new men, just
as the new pictures of men
began to be made. Thousands
of people fronted the camera
with skins made clean from
blotch an4 blemish, because
they had purified the blood,
with Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It
is as powerful now as then.
Its record proves it. Others
imitate the remedy; they
can't imitate the reoord;
50 Years of Cores.
111 Tiff SIM 13 RI
ITEMS OF INTEREST ABOUT THE
BUSY YANKEE.
Nelshborty Interest In ME Dolnge-Matters
, Moment and 111rth (lathered from His
Dally Record.
In Mexico City Hop Lee advertises
an American restaurant.
An unusual perquisite of ragploking
fell to the lot of a Louisville woman,
who found a $20 gold piece in the rag
heap of a business house,.
• Sweet almonds and chestnuts have
been raistd with success in parts of Or-
egon, where it had been thought no
palatable nuts -would grow.
There are a dozen doctors and just
the number of lawyers, who, if they
were tailors, would make one man, to a
population of 1,100 in Bad Axe, Mich.
Five cats were boxed up by the pa-
tient possessor of twenty-three, in Pun-
ta, Gorda, Fla., and expressed to the
Mayor Of Arcadia, and on the third
day after shipment each cat had come
back.
Somebody in Colunabia, Ky., bas sent
out and got printed. in the West a story
that, the Green River at that place has
been so low lately that swine have tak-
en to wallowing in it and catching and
eating fish. '
During a, temperance revival at Ced-
ar Rapids, Is., A young man who was
converted confessed that he was guilty
of a robbery for which another man
has been imprisoned since last fall. He
was arrested.
According to the experience Of a
Topeka clerg.yenan people out there will
pay more to be married tban they will
to hear the Gospel preached. He says
he makes more by perforraing marriage
ceremonies than he does by 'mewling.
There is one Tennesseean, anyway.
who will not practice the habit of hold-
ing a toothpick in his mouth any more.
A sneeze caused, him to swallow one the
other day and he is considerably exer-
cised over it whereabouts and rossible
effects.
It is said in Virginia that the people
of Kansas believe that the Confederate
notes ought still to he good money,
and are willing to make thenm good,
by aecepting them and it is told tbat
at least one Kansan has written the.
Richmond Chief of Polies asking for all
Of them that he ean get.
Gentle shepherds of the olden sort
are not likely to inspire future poets
of Montana. Ai- White Sulphur
Springs a. big ranchnean has been ex-
perimenting with a Itioyele for use in
sheep -herding atoi he pronounees it
such a success that, he, believes the
wheel will soon be in demand for that
kind of work.
On the floor of a private dining ream
in a Minueapolis restaurant a aaiter
found .11_5100 bill ono night. The next:
day the preprietor of the lave was
ealled to the long-ilistanee telephone
and a man tola hint of Laving lost a
$100 bill. The waiter who found the
money identified the man by his voice.
For an hour and a quarter a mine
engineer near I3ourne, Or., was whirl-
ed around witl the fly wheel, into
which be had fallen, but when he re-
covered consciousness after the wheel
was stopped, it. was found that he was
not seriously hurt. The wheel WitS
20 -foot one, and was making 125 re-
volutions a. minute.
An Indiana professor who took out
a $3,500 inSUFlinCe policy in 1850 re-
ceived an offer from the company 2()
years ago, to yeah the joliey for $2,000
or pay him an annuity of $110. He el-
ected to vike the annuity, an;l now,
at the age of 90 years, has drawn from
the vompany more than $8,000.
A rope with a loop in the free end
left dangling over tile street from a
telephone wire in Easton, Md., caught
a button on a carriage which was being
driven up the street and, wrenelting
the top from the vehicle, threw out a
wornan who was riding in IL She was
severely injured and died in the house
to whcch she was taken.
Of an operation commonly looked up-
on with more resignation in this world
of wickedness and. small woes, a Missis-
sippi paper says: "Some fiend incar-
nate, evil le the roaring furnaces of hell
staring him in the face, entered the
residence of John Jones Sunday night
and stole the Presbyterian Sunday
school collection."
E. j. White, of Bemidji, a pioneer
trapper and hunter, of Minnesota,
stakes his reputation on the prediction
of -a cold winter. He says, the wild.
animals, deer particularly, have espe-
cially thick coats this year, and; that
the muskrats are building their houses
high and with thick walls -signs which,
he says, have never failed within his
experience.
Experiments upon a sub -stratum of
swampy soil on the Myrtle Grove Farm
in Queen Anne county, Md.., have de-
veloped. a new fertilizing material and
a new stock for a brown and durable
paint. The mud, when subjected, to an
evaporating process, hardeus into crus-
ty blocks. This substance, when crush-
ed, has been found available for fer-
tilizing or as the body of a paint if
the usual mixing fluids be added.
Basil Hayden, who as a Confederate
soldier, has lived in good health in his
house at Bloomfield, Ky., since 1863,
and not once in all that time has he
set his foot on the ground. The Lord
was not good to him in allowing his
negroes to go feee, he said, and he vow-
ed never to put foot on the Lord's earth
again. Such is the story told. in con-
nection with a report of a mule sale
conducted by Hayden at his home.
A GOOD INDICATION.
When a girl is worried. about the
kind of teckties a young raan wears
she loves him. •
ONE GIRL AND ANOTHER.
Miss Frymrn-That disreputable jack
Bugglay invited me to go to the theater
with him last, night,
Miss Cuttynge-How did you enjoy
Ithe Plan
(1.13tv,' • '• c'e 'pier* .
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7
IIIIPSUIll
aniii nnurniuint' iisto rustimla
iNegetablePreparaticaforAs-
, Similating the -Food andRegula-
Eng the S tomachs andBoweis of
N",fikiiiin,
'14 I -'$..'(
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PrornotesDigestim,Cheerful-
'ftess and nest.Contains neither
ppninT,Morphine tun' Mineral.
NOT INTAltc 05rid.
..7Reris of egellir.P1111772ZIWZIFR
fflasAin Sea -
Atzsgro. *
A401,414-
.1frite Sort *
lArrirrette:forta, •
714-m Seed -
Avi4 i .rugar •
lonewoenco: Fariwi
.
Aperfect Remedy for Constipa-
i. tion, Sour Storae,ch,Diarrhoea,
/ Worms,Convuisions,feverish-
andLoss OF SLEE11
rness
TeeSitnite Signature of
arr-ii#1-77‘44
ITVW YORK.
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k EXACT CoPv OP WRAPPER. .
anus *nest 'inn `neer el„ nalenelannent en .
SEE
THAT THE
FAC -SIMILE
SIGNATURE
-OF,
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EVERY
BOTTLE Or
The.
the g
duty
had a
es Ms
Gramc
with
so sub
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by wl
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get o
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mark
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was
room,
into t
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down
she je
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input
like tc
litt
him."
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used
think
Norl
wit hot
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of her
=lame
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did so
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not m
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broad
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the pt
Mrs.
fright(
than
man a
The
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jaoky
his ar
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choice
'prefer]
ed Jac
childre
proteci
sonang
Now
en e plt
&hoe fel
Wing
marqu
ting a,
and 13i
• chen t
Mrs.
• ellow
'1•••
Oastorla is put Up18 one -she bottles only. It
Is not sold in bulk, Dotet allow anyone to eel'
you anything else on the, plea or promise that it
is "just as good" end "will answer every per -
pose." liar See that you get 0 -.&B -T -O -R -I -A.
Tho 110-
of
is on
egtatiee ..&;e2,,e tem
Team?.
AN EARLY TALKER.
";r4Ove is blind," according to the pro-,
verb, but the proverb ortnnot be true
ofyne:ternal love, for the average
mother easily sees in her baby a world
of things evhich nobody else can dis-
co"Does your baby talk any yeti" one
woman was heard. to ask of another.
"TOW Well, I should say he did
talk," replied the mother, almost in-
dignantly. "Tie says just anything I
His little tongue runs steadily from
morning till night. He oan ask for
anything he wants at the table or any
place else. I never bad a, child that
talked so early or said so many things
at his age.
"My sister-in-law has a little boy
eight months and four days older than
this child, who don't begIn to talk as
roach n.or as well, although, of course,
I. 'wouldn't any so before her. She
thinks the child is a wonder, but he
don't. compare with his little cousin
here. Johanna say bread and butter,
fax the lady.
"Bed an, buttum." said Johnnie,
"There! You SCO how perfectly he
says it; an.il the best me sister-ineliew's
baby EfI.D. do la to say 'bell an' bullawn
and he calla sugar `coogah,' Johnnie,
say sugar and. I'll giv a you a lump
when. we get home'
You see the difference. It's
just so with everything, but I never
brag about it to my sister-in-law, for
sh.eLsatre. tguess
you a' sgeansitive.
nbawl.oladniit,"'t ask if
this child could talk iC you could hear
him once! Of course in a strange
place. now, and. he's quiet, but 1 guess
he can talk; and. T don't see who he
gets it from, either! There are no
great talkers in. ray family nor in his
father's.
HELPFUL HOTEL RULES.
Gentlemen will not occupyseats in
the dining room without their coats.
Women who announce their inten-
tion of going to Klondike on wheels
will please carry out the same 5511 not
linger here.
Gentlemen who wear russet shoes
should not appear in evening dress.
Hatpins will be placed. in the safe
in the office.
A. limited number of queations will
be answered at stated hours.
Funny people will be searched before
entering the dining -room, and their
jokes, if they have any, will be taken
away during the meal hour.
The fee.
(15110
eignature
of
CL01...10MIC:031CLX.L01-.
is on
14717-60,4( ovary
wrapper.
CARTERS
1TTLE
1VER
PILLS.
tee-.
Sick Headache and, relieve all the troublee incl.
dent to a Within state of the system, stioh
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness. Dietress ate
eating, Path in the Side, Sze. While their moo
remarkable success Las been ehowu la ourid
lioadache, yet CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PI22I1
are equally valuable in Constipation, curie
end preventing this annoying complaint, whit
they also correct all diaorders of the stomach,
etimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Ersu if they only cured
Ache they would be altnoab pticeleaa to those
but fortunately their goodnees does not on
who suffer from this distressing complainti
here, and thnse who once try them will fin
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without them.
But after all nick head
!Mebane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
'while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE Layne PILLS are My MERU
and very easy to talce. Ope or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
notgrIpe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vials at 06 centat
five for 31. Hold everywhere, or sent by mail.
0AITE3 248610168 00,, New Tote.
Lail Ell Small Dom kraal Prim.
?vc IN SEALED CADD/zs
). ODER THE SUPERVISION OF
ct•-•
e4 PLN'
"MONSOON" TEA....
Is packed under the supervision of the Tea gioWei
and is advertised and sold by them as a sample 01
the best qualities of Indian and Ceylon Teas. F
that reason they see that none but the very ftesll
..r..8.4-fre..,04,6,,ve-me,yeges.ley.s; leaves go into bloesoon packages.
That is why "Monsoon," the perfect Tea, cab
be sold at the same price as inferior tea. •
It is put up in sealed caddies of % lb., lib. fad
6 lbs., and sold in three flavours at 40c., 50o. and OM
STEEL, HAYTER & CO., Front St., Torontdi
THE DxErrz
6 'DRIVING LAMP,
is about as near perfection as 50 years g
of Lamp -Making can attain to. It
burns kerosene and gives a powerful
clear.white light, and will neither blow
nor jar out. When out driving with
it the darkness easily keeps about two
hundred feet ahead of your smartest
horse.. When you want the very best
Driving Lamp to -be had, ask your
dealer for the '' Dietz,''
We issue a special Catalogue of this
Lamp andif you ever, prowl around
after night -fall, it will interest you,
'Tis mailed free'
; R. n.DIETz Co.,
;60 'Alight S.,‘New York.
• Sp.:total tenne to Canadras customers.
041r.4.11/14904,11411,421.Sref-MS.PIMg..,IMI/
THE GEST SPRING EFIEDICIPIE
. Cures all Bleed Diseases, from a common
Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore,
1.111.111=MIIINMINI.
Aramennotealle
TEMPERANCE IN CANADA.
Recently pdblished statistics in Eng-
land show that the consumption of
liquors in Canada, is, in proportion to
population, the smallest of any nether!
in Christendom. There is not the
slightest doubt 4.1.tat Canada is mak-
ing 'wonderful. progres/f In tenperat
habits,
her: "
Grandi
self tb
610.X7
strang
• turned
burst c
• IVfolloy
the ma
ndb,
"Son
Norry,
▪ n
' with r
"Nor
body,"
emphal
Jacky,'
pionshi
• up the
aunt 111
Luke, ,
bye, 'Ti
Molloy
• marski
'The
under
oho d len
Corsi
lion or
.SIte-bet
the sti
that sh
• slo
find lin
his ban
• le4natc
tumine
Wait fe
ed 00 a
ert Lug
Tile 1
to his o