Exeter Times, 1898-11-10, Page 3LECattle
DICKSON Se CARLIN%
arrigers, $olieltore. Notarial, Conveyancers,
Oonunivtions r • EGo
,Xoney to Loan at 1$ per conk and 5 per oent,
OrP/010 ;—IPANSON'S BLOCK, 10(10TER.
L fl,CA LIMNS. U. A. Im l. OWKSQN.
_ member of ;be firm: will be at Roman on
Thursday of each wet*.
00111.AINS,
Barrister , Solicitor, gOilliayancer, Bto„
- ONT.
OFFICE :* Over O'Neil e Bank.
LLIOT & GLA)DMAY
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pablio,
Couveyancers Sc,
rse-moley to Loan.
OFFICE, - MAIN - STREET, EXETER.
L V. IDT4a0T. F. W. GLADMAI,C
amse
V --
1$4,1g DItiAL
----- — , .
_DR, J. 11. RIVERS, M, B. TORONTO UNI
, VERSITY, M D. 0. M.' !vanity Univer
City. ( ifice—OrediMn, Ont.. '
,
. 1 V I.1tOLLINS it AMOS.
.,
„
operate Onion. Residence sable as comet -
I , Andrew st. Offices: Spaelcinan'a building.
ale st; 1)r Rollins' same as formerly, ninth
tor; Dr. Attloa" sante building, south door,
LA. ROLLINS, M. 0,.., T. A. AMOS, M. D
' Exeter, Onb
W. RHO W N IN G M. D, M.O.,.
P• 13, 0 naduate ViIoriL Univt rsity
office awl residence: Dominion Labora-
tory, Exeter. s,
T)R. riYNDMAN, coroner far the
Oounty of Heron. Otilee, opposite
Veiling Dyes. store,Exoter.
A U CT IONE ERS.
T.11 BOSSENBERRY, General Li -
.1124 . /mused Anotioneer Sales coutluoted
in aliparts. Satiefactiongnarauteed. Charges
moderate, Bensall P0, Out;
EKRY EILBER Licensed Atm.
tioneer for the Countiee of Mums
end Middlesex; Beilee OEonduot0 jtod.
orate rates. °Mae; at Post-Milee Geed -
toe Out.
alms
VETERINARY.
Tennent & Tennent
Inemereat. ONT.
Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary Col-
- -'1,11reen—bne door south of"Tovvn Hall."
MEE WATERLOO MUTUSLI
Ltrua, INS1111ANG E CIO .
EhibU$JiedLit 1803.
, WEA D OFFICE WATERLOO, ONT
This Company hos been over 'evrenty-ei
years in successful over Ilion in Western
On tario, and con thin es to insureiteninst LOSS OC
il.tuncgo by Fire, ]tui Ittings„1 erehandise
Isimissimitories and all other descrietioos of
;,„-ar...e petty, In ten ding insu rem have
the.option ot Insaringen the Premium Note or,
CashSystem. •
During the rase ten years trite company has
issued 57,0a Policies, covering property to the
ann nut ol$40,872,038; and paid 111 losses alone
r7fiti,752.01). -
Abseils, $176,100.00, consisting of Cash
in liank Governumut Depositaud the [masses
-
sed Premium Notes on hand and 10 ierce.
j;ss ,IV Aimee. President ; 0 M. TA rhea
.. secretary ; J. B. Il ;Aims, inspector . GRAS.
BELr, Agent for Exeter and vicinity.
Old
People's
Troubles
....
Hard for the
old folks to move
about—constant
backaches to
bother them in ,
t h e daytime --
urinary weekness to disturb their
Atst at night.
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
Strengthen the Kidneys and
help to make the declining
years comfortable.
Mr. W. G. Mugford, Chestnut
i1 have been greatly benefited by Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I.,
writes:
0 For the past two years I have
' bad much trouble with disease of
the kidneys and non -retention of
ethic, was dropsical and suffered a
great deal with pain in my back.
tthe use of Doan's Kidney Pills."
9401aiNitalayalalldil/feMeefelte
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NERvE IsPANs .
covery that eiWe tho wurtt pf
Narvells iNaltity Lost Veer end
,
B t A est ea weakedtil basly'er initufehnsed
likT•• Fading Illenhout restores tho
by ,ever -work, er the °trolls or eV
erases of youl. Thia Remedy Mr-
sointely creaar.the imest °waste ewe weon at nistee
ettesemtees have f 1 ilad oval t.o rdivo UldIct thl*,
gtata at.$1'por 'l 1)1 CiC Jen, rr 1mm sr
•0,,,,,04,f, Of 1111,1'1, '• '0; • s,,1 su",:v•s-r
a old 11 Browniee'e iartig otore 11X6 tee,
twwwkNA1,-.
# On the Farm.
CLOVER ON NEW ,L AND
-Under old systems of clearing land
when the country* was new, thane waa
great temptation to keep as 'natal of
it cropped as possible, eeoauee Quire
tvae then very little land besides that
could be oultivated. Now, when on a
large fann apiece on woodland is eleax-;
ed, the farmer wants to have it se*
ed -with grass as quickly as possible,
so that it can be pastured. But the
gales *it'd keeps air from , the atump
roots and thus keeps them from rot-
ting quickly, so theta it takes a good .
many years before the stumps are
ready for removal, Besides, whero,. the
field is plowed every two or three years
each time the land is plovvod *erne part
of the roots will be loosened. or broke
en off, and the renivoal of these leaves
a vacant place in the soil, evhich, of
CORI'S/a is filled with air, which hastens
Lbs decay of what parts of the root and
stump are left. Besidee this, a grass
sod pastured down keep e the soil heavy
when it should be light, and as this les
Sons the crop that may be expected
from the land, it is a deoided encone-
agement to plowing it. Just hare is
where the adventage of seeding with
clever comes in. It- would be better
if new land were seeded only with clot'-:
er, This keeps the soil Porous down
to the depth of the clover roots, and as
they are all the time giving off car-
bonic acid gas, it rnakea stump roots ,
rot more gaickly when in contact with
clover roots than when the surface on-,
ly is covered with grass rootsand taere
are none in contact with parts of the
decaying stump. Besides,if theclover ,
is sown wills land plaster, it will hold
all through the sumuner a great auen
omit of dew, and this will also help
keep the stumps moist. We well re-
member once when a newly cleared.
stump lot was seeded with clover see-
ing many stumps that were partly' de-
cayed on the outside, and strong clover
plants growing up against them and
extending their roots among the de-
caying wood. Sometimen one or more
clover seeds will fall into the hollow
stupms and take root in the sediment
that is always found at their bottom.
In such cases we always noticed that
the stump decayed very quidely. If we
wanted to rot a sound stump as soon
as possible, we should do it by putting
oil of vitrol on its top until it had
eaten out a hollow, and then fill this
with rich soil and put one or more clov-
er seeds in it to grow. If we had depth
enough of soil to hold the rninfall,
we have no doubt that these clover
plants would soon begin to at into
the stump and hasten its decomposi-
tion. After two or three crops of clov-
er have been grown, most of the stumps
of beech, maple and the softer woods
will be rotted enough so that they can
be profitably lifted out by machinery
made for thie purpose. It is because
we believe in clearing away the stumps
early, while the soil is full of vege-
table matter, that we recommend fre-
quent seeding wilh clover rather than
with grass. It is an important mat-
ter to have new land freed from its
stumps while it is capable of grbw-
ing large crops, instead of leaving the
stumps to slowly rot out, and the soil
In the meantime becoming partly ex-
heusted, so that almost from the first,
measures heve to be used. Possibly our
cleared lands are less rich than they
used to be because, under present con-
ditions, all parts of the trees find some
use,,and none of them have to he burn -
on the land as refuse. But if the
newly. (nen red land is kept seeded wit h
clover, it will probably be as rich by
the time the stumps are off as it used
to be under the old system, when it
had, at the first, an excess of potash.
That probably hastened the. decomposi-
tion of the vegetable matter in the
soil, without at all hastening, but rath-
er retarding, the rotting of stumps and
their roots,
HEAVES AND INDIGESTION.
There is no radical cure for the heaves
which is really broken wind from struc-
tural changes in the air cells nif the
hinge, but indigestion is often combin-
ed with heaves. Every disease has a be-
ginning, so when a horse is getting
" heavey " he becomes much more so
when hitched up directly after break-
fast on a full stomach. When this is
repeated day after day, indigestion de-
velops, and especially so when the food
is coarse as well as unsuitable. Horses
affected should be fed sparingly on
the best kind of food—Le, sound, cle,en
oats, good, coarse, whole wheat bran
and fine upland meadow hay chaff,
which should be free from dust, damp-
ened and sprinkled over With table salt.
Once or twice a week a inaah should be
made of the feed. and a pint of flax-
seed meal added to it. This will soft-,
en the contents of the bowels and tend
to prevent indigestion before it be-
comes .ehronie as well as the heaves.
Watering 18 another itera to be ate
Lencled to in these troubles. Water
should be given, half an limit before
feeding, never on top breakfast, dinner
or supper. When you do this you wash
the food out of the stomach before the
gastrie juices have prepared it for the
first process of digoetion. This pro-
dttces indigestien, Affeeted horses
should not be alloeved loose hay only
hay chaff of fiee quality mixed with
bran anti oats andgiVen dampened.
This diet will lessen the heaves in vol-
ume and the horse will go gently along
without greet distress. By proper
care in feeding and watering, horses
have so far improved that people have
deserted that they were cured of the
bertvea, and When A sharp dootor hag
given Setae cure-all posvdere it has been
theogilt that theme powders had effect-
ed the etym. Any farther, however, can
think it out, foe himself, and see thitt
there ie 00 place for powders o' mo-
theine to get in And do good in Sueh
strectuee I 'Changes. It should be not-
ed that iteeves IS the setettel of a bad
(e)1d ; therefore, when young hereee ere
elek they should littae the best attalis
TIE1 EXETEIR TIMES
tion, so en to prevent the developMent
of this trouble,
tWA,TERING TREE'S AT 'rRA.NSe
V CI ANTING.
A eorrestiondesit says :—" I have
planted, perhans, 4 Million of trees in
nan ltfetinte. met with but few fail-
ures, and oanriot remember, baying -wa-
tered any of tbese trees. If the 'soil
is made thoroughly flue before plant-
ing ; if the soil about the roots is press-
ed in very firm, as firm es a fence
post, if the soil is left loose on the
top, and kept continually loose by cul-
tivation, the trees .will live even
though the season may be dry," In
connection with this paragraph, it may
be noted that, on one occo.aion within
tbe experience of the writer, a large
number of trees that nad been planted
in tile spring, and had grown tolerab-
ly n,e11, showed signs during the fol-
losving very dry summer of wilting
their leaves for want of watee An ex-
a/nineteen seemed to show amt al-
though the tree a hod been well plant-
ed in the coramon acceptation of the
terns, yet the earth in many cases was
not paeleed closely around the roots,
It was not convenient to water there..
The owner was recommended to pound
the earth around the Tapes with a
heavy paving ramneer. This was done.
It, is almost impossible to convey an
idea of the force used on this occasion.
A force was exerted fully equal to that
employed by the regular rat:mars in
Paving the streets. The earth being
very dry Was reduced to fine powder
by this process, and moisture was
drawn upward by capillary attraction.
In a , couple of days afterward, there
was not the slightest sign of wilting,
although no water had been applied,
and they continued to grow without,
any evidence of suffering for want of
water until the next rain came. Had
the -eil not been heavily beaten in this
n
so-aytetihyeeeirrtin
deaf 13 would have been ab-
tu
-GIVE COWS GOOD STABLES.
A cow, like a human being, suffers
from bad environment. Stables must
be dry, clean, well lighted, ventilated
and comfortable, else the animals con-
fined in them will suffer in health.
Kest of the bovine tuberculosis is made
possible through the dirty, unventil-
ated stables, and it spreads rapidly
through betds when' onee introduced
because of bad physical canal:10es.
A damp wet stable muses rhonna-
tista 10 MA'S. Lack of ventilation and
sunlight lowers their vitality, end
makes them resemble children who are
never allowed to breathe the pure air
et to play in the sunlight. When to filth
and clampuens, to darkness and foul
air is added the torture of the immova
able stenchion, we may truly say the
patient animals aae confiraed in cow
Penitentiaries, end the conditions are
such that to produce wholesome milk
is an impossibility.
For Infants and Children.
The fae-
sigaature
of
HONEST RATS.
—„--
is ea
evea,
sweeties.
Itueer Little Fellows Who waif Trade But
Not Steal.
Of all curious animals which man has
come across and studied, probably none
can compare with a kind of rat found
in the Rocky Mountains. Though for
a long time well known to trappers
and lumbermen, it is only lately that
any naturalist has studied these ?lost
peculiar little beasts.
Although called a rat, this animal
is 'eager than an ordinary rat, with
a body eight incites long. It is a very
pretty creature, witb soft gray fur a.ncl
a squirrel-like tail, easily tamed and
a delightful pet. The trappers long
ago gave it the name of the "trading
rat," from its curious habit of never
stealing anything without putting
something in its place.
Two young men camping in the high-
lands of Wyoming left the lid of their
cracker box off one night. In the
morning all the biscuits were gone,
and the box filled with an indescribable
mixture of chips, scraps, of leather,
sticks, bones, dried beans, in fact ev-
erything movable near at hand.
The trading rat builds a very beau -
Mut' nest, sonietimes two feet in hetet( ,
and is very clever at storing food. It
has a violent fancy for anything of a
bright red hue.
ZE
TT
ALT RH EU
RELIEVED IN FDAY
SKIN 01811A8111 ititallintia uv OMB AP.
PLicatiON or
OR. AGNEW'S OINTMENT
.85 OIENTS,
It ts a marvellous am.* for all silaietliin
goeting and Mitigating dlatimptes SS tar
kernel,salt HiliontS,' Tatter, Barbsroa Itela
Scald Need. Intern Illottifies. It course sill
eruptions of the akin and make' it Mitt
rand evlatteaa27.
Sold by (1, Luta,. Exeter.
I V.]
Like biliousness, dyspepsia, beadacbe, coast!,
Ipstion, four stemma), inalgestion are prOnlidlY
Citron by good's Fills. 'ft:0y do their worn
'easily and theroughlY-
Best after dinner pills.
26 cents. All druggists.
Prepared by 0, L Rood Co, Lowell Mass
trbe onlv rill to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
f LIZ
liADE HIMSELF A MACHINE
INTERESTING- SKETCH OF LORD
KITCHENER OF KHARTOUM
A, Pen Picture of the Her° lior the Soudise
Pourtimylug Ms Character —lids Life,
Ws 'Methods, Iiiit Ambition.
In the London Daily 1VIail Mr. G. W,
Stevens thus desorilses the Sirdar:—
anajor-Gerteral Sir Horatio Herbert
Kitchener, is 48 years old, by the book.
He stands several inches oyer six feet,
straight as a lance, and looks out im-
periously above most men's heads; his
motions are deliberate and strong; slen-
der, but firraly knit, be seems built
for tireless, steel -wire endurance,
rather than for power or agility; that
also is irrelevant.
Steady, passionless eyes, shaded by
deoisive brows, brick -red, rather full
cheeks, a long moustache, beneath
which you divine. an immovable mouth;
his face is harsh, and neither appeals
for affection nor stirs dislike..
He has no •age but the prime of life,
no body hut one to carry his mind, no
face but one to keep his brain behind,
The brain and the will are the essence
of the whole maa—o brain perfect and
a will so perfect in their workings
that, in the face of extremest difficulty,
they never seem to know what strug-
gle is. You, cannot imagine the Sirdar
otherwise than as seeing the right
thing to do and, doing it. His preci-
sion is so inhumanly unerring, he is
more like a machine than anaan.
n/ASTER OF THE ART.
He has turned himself to the man-
agement of -war in the Soudan, and he
is the complete and the only master
of that art. Beginning life in the
Roaal Engineers—a soil reputed more
favourable to machinery than to
human nature—he early turned to the
study of the Levant. He was one of
Beaconsfield's military vice-consuls in
Asia Minor; he was subsequently direc-
tor of the Paleetine Exploration, Fund.
After that he surveyed Oypetta, whence
he escaped—some whisper, without
leave—to see the bombardment of Alex-
andria.
At. the beginning of the Soudan trou-
bles he appeazed. He was one of, the
original twenty-five officers who set to
ift.
work on new Egyptian army. And
in Egypt nd the Soudan he has been
ever since—on I he staff generally fight-
ing often, living with natives some-
times, mastering the problem of the
Soudan always. The ripe harvest of
fifteen, years is that he knows every-
thing that is to he learned of his sub-
ject. He has seen and profited by the
errors of others as by their successes.
He has inherited the wisdom and the
achievements of his pred.ecessors. He
came at the right hour, and he was the
right man. During the summer of 188'7
be was at Korosko, negotiating with
the Abadeli sheikhs in view of an ad-
vance across the desert to Abu. Hamed,
and note .how characteristically he has
now himself bettered the then aban-
doned project by going that way to
Berber and Khartoum himself—
ONLYWITH A RAILWAY I
The idea of the advance neross the
desert he took over from Lord Wolse-
ley, and indeed from the immemorial
Arabs; and then from his own stroke
of insight and resointion, amounting
to genius, he'turned a raid into an ir-
resieLibie certain conquest by super-
seding camels with the railway. Calera
had thought of the desert route; the
Sirdar, connecting Korosko to Haifa,
used it. Others had projected desert
railways s the Sirdar made one. That,
summarized in one instance, is the
*working of the Soudan machine.
In 1887 and 1888 he commanded Sua-
kin, and it is remarkable that his
most important enterprise was half a
tenure. He attaeked Osman Digna at
Hindub, when most of the Emir's men
were away raiding;, and although he
succeeded in releasing a number of
cap! ives, he thought it well to retire
himself wounded in the face by a bul-
let, without any clecisive suoce.ss.
The withdrawal was in no way dis-
creditable, for his force was a jumble
of irregulars and levies without disci-
pline.'"But it is not perhaps laneiful
to believe that tha Shaba, who has
hover given battle without making cer-
tain of an Annihilating victera, has
not forgottee his experience of hap-
hazard Bashi-Bazeuking at Handuh.
MEANT' TO 33E SIRDAH.
• He had his revenge before the end of
1888, 'elate he led a brigade of Soudan
ese over Osman's treacles'at Gemai-
zeh. In 1890 he succeeded. Sir Francis
Grenfell as Siedar, That he meant to
be Sirdar in faCt :la well as name he
showed iinmediately. The young Khe-
dive travelled siouth to the frontier,
and to& the occasion te iheult every
British officer he tame aeross. Kit-
chener promptly gave battle; he re-
signed, a. °rigs eaMe, and the Khedive
Was Obliged to do public ,.penance, by
isettinie a general order m praise of
the discipline Of tne army and of its
811.1'wtisoh t:freflair'sr70.A'; he began the re-
conquest of ,the Soudan. Withoet a
single throw -back the work has gone
forward sine—but not without inter-
vals. The Sirder is aever io a hurry.
With immovable self-control he bolds
back from each step until the ground
is consolidated under the ta3t,
The real fighting power of the Sou-
dall lies in the country itsslf,--in US'
barrenness, which refuses food, and ite
vastaess, Wniele paralyzes' transport.
The Soudan machitje. obviates barren-
ness and vastneSs; the bayonet. Elation
has piled the bank with supplies, or
the eteamer actiou can, run with a full
Nile. Fighting men may elude and go
clown with typhoid and cholera; they
are in the Um grip of the entlehiner
and they newt welt the turn of its
wheele. Dervishes wait and wooer,
passing from apprehension to seetanny,
Then suddenly at daybreak one mern-
ing they eee the Birder advancing' -up-
on them from all sides together, and
by noon they are nearly all dead. Po -
tient and swift, certain and relentless.
the Soudan machine, rolls conastering
southward
STRICT BUT YET POPULa.R.
In the meantime, during all tne years
of preparation and achieve/neat, the
man has disappeared. The men, Harbert
Kitchener, owned the affection of Isaf-
vate friends in England end Of old
comrades of fifteen years standing;
1
Lor the rest of the world, there is lo
man Herbert Kitchetter, but only the
Sirdar, neither asking affection nor
giving it. L
Hie officers and naen are wheelin
the Machine; he feeds them enough to
make them efficient, and works them
" tiareilesslY as he works himself. He
will have no married officers in his
army; marriage interferes with work,
Any officer who breaks down with the
climate goes on sick leave once; next
time he goes and the Egyptian army
bears him ou its strength no more.
And if you euppose, therefore, that
the Sirdar is unpopular, he is not. No
general is unpopular who always beats
the enemy. When the columns move
out of clamp in the evening lo march
all night through the dark, they know
not whither, and figbt at dawn with
an enemy they hove never seen, every
man goes forth with a tranquil. mind.
He may personally come back and he
may not; but about, the general result
there is net a doubt.. You bet your
boots the Sirdar knows, he wouldialt
fight if he weren't going to win.
Other generals have been loved; none
was ever better trusted.
For of this one human weakness the
Sirdar is believed not to have purged
himself—ambition. He is on his pro-
motion, a man who cannot afford to
make a mistake, Homilies against
ambition may be left to those who
have failed in their own; the Sirdar's,
if apparently purely personal, is legi-
timate and even lofty. He has attained
eminent distinction at an exceptionally
early age; he has commanded vietorious,
armtes at an early age when most men
are hoping to commend regiinents.
Even now junior Major-General, he
has been entrusted with an army of
six brigades, a command such as few
of his seniors have ever led in the field.
HE WILL NOT FALL.
Finally, he has been entrusted with
a mission such as almost eyerT ene, 02
them would have greedily iscapteti:"-
the crowning triumph of half a gener-
ation at war. Naturally, he has awak-
ened jealousies, and he has bought per-
mission to take each step on the way
only by brilliant success in the last,
If in ibis case he be not so stiffly un-
bending to the high, as he is to the
lo -w, who shall blame him? Be has
climbed too high not to take every
precautionKagninst a fall.
But he will not fall—just yet, at any
rate. SO fat as Egypt; is concerned,
he is the man of destiny—the man who
has been preparing himself sixteen
years for one great purpose, For Anglo -
Egypt he is the Mahdi, the expected,
the man who has sifted experience and
corrected error; who has worked at
small things and waited for great, mar-
•ile to sit still and fire to smite; stead-
fast, cold, and inflexible; the man who
has cut out his human heart. and made
himself a machine to re -take Khar-
toum.
Children Cry for
CAST MA
GOOD ADVICE.
Life is too short and full of care and
sorrows. for oue to he the cause of
adding one feather's weight of trou-
iie another's load. Will Carleton,
the poet, in the " First Settler's Story,"
we believe it was, makes the old man
say, in speaking of his wife, that she
used to stand around and boss the job,
end by her kind words lifted whole
;ons. Kind words have the same ef-
fect the world over. Tiley lift e fel-
low out of the slough of despond; they
break the stiffened, set featurea of the
worried into a pleasant, hopeful smile.
And how much better it is to cultivate
the habit of treating everyone as
hough a lime would come when we
should lay down the mortal form; and
that; to leave behind. a character end
reputation of fairness, truth, end hon-
or, is the most enduring of riches.
NEW ZEALAND'S RABBIT EXPORT.
The exportation of rabbits from. New
Zealand has assumed such dimensions
that it hes (mite got beyond the exper-
imental stage, and has now become an
important industry. One exporter is at
the present time in receipt of between
15,000 and. 20,000 rabbits per day, and
is paying to trappers in wages between
$4,000 toad $5,t00. per week. He haat
24,000 traps out, giving employment to
about five hurtdred trappers, Last year
his export 4 rabbits was about 700,-
000 while be anticipates sending away
about one million and a half this sea-
SOn. By this exporter alone boat
eight: trucks of timber are used per
week to make the boxes in which tbe
rabbits are frozen and exported, while
in cartiage be pays over $500 a week,
W.AlrintVut...*eiroirin*Ildsa‘iciawarallrnisikalCAilifino
Peibao, API% 'Wood.'s Phosio'hodits,
The Great English. ReRtctigi.
Sold and recommended by all
druggists in pomade. Only reit.
Igo medicine diseoVered.
crekeass guaranteed to cure all
forms Of Seta Wealcheat, all etteets of abtste
or excese, Mei 1. Worry, BECOSIRVe use of 110'
133000, Opts= Stimulants, Mailed on reeelpt
of Price, one knee 411,, six, $5. Oge plead,
tuitt amphlete free to any addtess.
e 'Wood Cestatasny, Windsor, Ont.
Wood's I?laosphodine is sold in Exeter
by it, W. Browning, dritggist,
salnifitaInaelete
inetiestentaia 11
ve_raLirnaromrarrwormwrs-awmusarraiirirramear
01 Mill 111,.(1111101411111i1.1 .1,11011ii1,1110,111thalltigaii
AVegetablePreOarationforM-
slinilating theroodanciRewa-
tvig ttleStomsriasandl3owels af
,1E
Promotes Dige$tion,Cheerrul-
MSS anciRest,Contains neither
nitei,Morphine nor Mineral.
,
OT NATIO OTIC.
„Maw a ZKVillinffirdiEll
Benp.kin Segi-
,41zSernais
Baia, $etts*
affix Sad •
.ggewear.fft:raff& •
rftrnxis
Aperfect Remedy for Cons tipa.
don, Sour Stornach,Diarrhooa,
Worms ,Couvulsions,Feverish-
nese and LosS OP SLE1EP.
Tac Simile Signature of
arreests-
larEW
lean. m
nee,
are
ENADT ICOPYOT WRAPPER.
HAT 11-1
FAQ -SIMILE
SIGNATURE
OF
IS ON THE
WRAPPER,
OF ENTRY
BOTTLE OP
STO
Paste& is put up in one -size bottles only. rt
Is not eold in balk. Dona allow anyone to sell
you anything else on theplea, or promise that it
Is "just as good's and "will answer every pur-
posan. Aaa See that yen get 0 -A -8 -T -O -R -LA.
'he
ft -
of
oa
4444" "621
emelt.
eat: etn
n2naa
naNnanateennteee,
tananalanti Stan
settalseass-
eady=to-Wear
Rigby Waterproofed
Freize Ulsters
Made from pure wool, 32 oz. to the yard
Frieze. Five pockets.— Deep flaps.—SIX
inch collar, with throat tab.—Double stich-
ed edges—Raised seams. Length 54 inches.
Nine colors. Black, Blue, Mid Bro
Drab, .Claret, Heather, Oxford, Blue mix-
ture and Olive mixture.
Waterproof, Windproof,
Frostproof, Comfortable.
Sold by all reputable dealers from
Nova Scotia to British Columbia fee
6.75
Shorey's Guarantee Card in the pocket,
of course. Insist on seeing it, it is a good
square guarantee.
10
.2.1.0.1.1.011111g...4.1.03.1BassnAnsta.12.
ICARTER'S
TT
VER
PILLS.
6
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles Ina,
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, .Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side, hIce, While their most
remarkable success has been slaownin curing
Headache, yet CArtran'a LITTLE LitrEit Pittaare equally valeable In Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the stomach,
Mtmulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
Ache they would he almost priceless to ttose
who stiffer from this distressing complaint;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them will find
these little pills valualsie in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do Without therm
But after all sick head
itease bane of so many. lives that here is where
an make our great boast. Our pills euro li
-elan others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PIMA are very small
and very easy to take. one or two pins make
O dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all 15130 1103 themin vials at 25 cents;
live for $1. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail.
OARTER 11E1IOINII 00„ Now nat.
ai1 11 m11.S4a1.1..:Noot
TIME SPOON,
Something valuable has appeared in
the way of a new tittle spoon. There
is convenience attached to it. On its
handle is 'a cual about the size ot
quarter of a dollar, tmon which Are
engraved nuenbers, after the feehiou
of a clook face. There is tt. little
indi-
e'itoi in the center, which may ba
turned at will, to show when the next
food or mettinine is to be administered
Ohildren Ory Tor
AST� RAI
Our respeet for old age depenfla
great deal on 'Whether it be Applied
to Men atiti wolnert or boarding hoots"
poultry.
STRENGTH CAME BACK.
The /brill oneo snore rings with the
strokes of his heroines..
Mr. Thos. Porteous, the well lmown
blacksmith of Goclerich, Ont , tells hove
tacitness and weakness gave way to hettitn
exia strength. For the past four years/34
nerves leave been very weak,nay sleep fitful
and disturbed by dreams, consequently I
arose in the morning unrested. I was
frequently very dizzy and was much
• troubled with a mist that came before rav
eyes, my memory was often defeetive
; had fluttering of the heart, together vs'
sharp pain through it at times. In
condition I was easily worried and
enervated and exhausted. Two months ago
I began taking Milburree Heart and Nerve
Pills, since that time I have been gaining in
health and strength daily. They have
restored my nerves to a heathy conclitiora
removed all dizziness and heart trouble, Ina
now 1 :sleep well sad derive comfort Etna
rest from it. That Milburn'a Heart and
Nene) Pills are a, gond remedy for Nervous.
non, Weakness, Heart Trouble and Manilas
complaints goes wit -haat searing." Price
SO els. a box at all druggiste ab T, Milburn
rfe Oe., TorOlato, Ona
..,axnAlver Pills cure Dyspeolit.
14111101,
DaL
PLAST1R
We guarantee that these.
Plasters will sr elle
pain quicker than any
other, Put up only in
25c, tire boxes and
yard rolls, The latter
elloWS yeti to cut tile
Plaster any silte,
Elvery fitmily
tluoud have 0110
ready kir zen011tt0f.,
& LaWllainIE
iliONTAPAL
e are of imitations