Exeter Times, 1899-1-26, Page 6L.
4 -The eourts hne dee , 0 a re 118 1114 te
talc° na'at.papers Cr perimifeals frotn• the post
ollice, or renioviiig and leaving them unealieri
for is prima facie evidence of intentional
fraud,
NERv E nitavil IstAlTh e .
1
, 'coven, thot cure the uunt Nut., of
' . Nervous Debility,' Loeb Niger and
BEAS CI ' loaillee'.Ataremoe; . restores. tbs
X.414.--4.4-4 4,11%4 weakliest a body or mina mese
by overevork, er the errors or eka
PtoPPIOPIPpeAraPoPTHEAU COH(1610t 00th. Thi E ROMEO Ob.
Polltedy aritt. Os most riAtitiate rotted *bon ,all other
tritnAttituks latv.Afalled Orate tolleve. l*"..,elti hiding.
gists at $1 per parkopy, or Sit tor .t.',5, or teat by ',nail di
, "oeilst, eq. efieei,encin,n.iier',nril'E , i ,1"11;,,i;',51,,pfe,,11,cy
Sold et Brown bols Drug Store Exeter
X I,
fr —:411 B X T E
TIMES
-46,-6"0
he I-1()me
es410,11rWielbsillkdibe
CLOTHES THAT moN EASILY.
id yoii ever stop to think, when
ing gowns for the wee ones, that
soft dixnities and lawns iron just
ut as easy again as do the heavier
Tales and ginghanas ? says a writer,
13 is something whieh should °male
o the eonsideration of every moth -
of small girls. I ean iron about
O thin muslin gowns to one percale,
really the muslin or thin goods
'ens last about as well as do the
vier otes. The light weight ones
sh much easier, too; so, taking it
into consideration, it is an eecoao-
of time, strength, and probably,
money to put the little ones ,into
pretty light -weight cottons for
mer,
good many advocate not ironing
ertain kind of clothing and house-
ld linen. I have tried both methods,
bing and not ironing, and I have
eluded that ironed clothes keep
an enough longer to -have it pay
iron them. The sheets are generallY
ded from the line, and other things,
, as much as possible; this saves
s of wrinkles that would otherwise
ed pres:sing out, Sometimes the sheets
e not ironed, and sometimes they are,
t pillow slips and towels certain -
are nicer ironed in spite of the
any to the contrary. 1 think, if any
ndid person will try untroned pillow
ps for three days, and then a pair
neatly ironed ones for the same time,
Le will readily eee that there is a dif-
renee about the soiling 'qualities of
ned and u,nironed clothes.
Towels are no exception, and there
e not meny who prefer a rough
ied toweL to one smoothly,- ironed.
am gure, for one, 1 like a towel just
smooth as it can be, and they iron
easily if the irons are hot. I almost
ways get mine ironed while testing
e heated irons. These are frequently
o hot for starched. clothe, where one
nnot just run the iron over as fast
it can be moved, and this may be
ne on a pillow slip or a towel, so
at by the time one or two towels
e ironed the iron is cool enough to
so on the I/lois particular starched
ece. Then, too, when the iron is too
01 for the starched things, it may
used to nub off a couple of towels,
rhaps, and so these will get ironed
•most imperceptibly.
Of course this is rank heresy to one
ho has adopted the non -ironing sys-
na, but I have used both, and if the
e who has the ironing to do is able
do it at all, the commoner clothes
e ironed too. I must confess, how-
er, that I see no advantage in iron -
g knit garments, Turkish bath tow-
well floured before being greased, and
balso in a, very hot oven,
Batter Bread -Dissolve one -hall 1e1-
sPOOSI/U1 Of $040, in One quart of clab-
ber or fresh buttermilk, Stir into
thie four well-beeten eggs, one table-
spoonful of melted butter, WI table-
spoonfra a salt and one and one --
bait pints of white unbolted. corn meal
Pour into a baking !dish and bake
quiekly,
Batter Oakes -Two eggs well beaten
together, three eupfuls of sweet milk
half pints of white. unbolted corn meal.
to make the batter the consisteney of
fresh cream. Have the hoe hot, grease
slightly, drop the batter on the hoe
and let it fry milli brown, then tarn
Serve hot with fresh butter, This
makes a, nits dish for an invalid and
can be prepared in twenty minutes.
isehROSENE AS A BEVERAGE.
News from France of the increasing
popularity of kerosene as a beverage
suggests the possibility of agitating
differences between the Standard Oil
Company and the Woman's Christian
Tertiperance Union. The new habit has
made more progress in Paris than else-
where, and is under observation there
by the guardians of the public health.
The petroliques -seem to begin their
evil courses not because they are out
of humor with alcohol; but becauge ker-
osene is the only stimulant they can
get. It produces an intoxication which,
though a low-spirited affair, has its at-
tractions for the. experimenters, How
unwholesome kerosene is in its effects,
and whether it is worse than alcohol,
has not yet been fully determined.
Meanwhile alcohol is in no present dan-
ger of being crowded out of France,
The number of wine -shops has increas-
ed twenty-five per cent. in twenty-
four years, and in the larger cities
the consumption of wine varies from
forty to sixty gallons a head, ,besides
more or less spirits and beer. Thirst
like that must either be restrained or
rated by home products. There is no
prospect that any zonsiderable part of
it will ever be allayed by kerosene.
Children Cry for
ASTOR IA.
JOURNALISM IN AUSTRIA.
Ludicrous Bevel...trams Gran imitor Broughe
to Trial for Libel.
Some curious facts have been
brought to light in the course of an
action for libel brought against the
editor of the Neunkirchener Zeitung, a
provincial weekly paper with a large
circoletion in Neunkirchen and dis-
trict. Neunkirchen is a flour-
ishing town alatiut sixty miles from
Vienne..
s, and wash cloths, flour sack dish
wels ole., seem just as evelj, evisaees>" 'lee editor, Carl Kull, urged. in ex-
, ./
oning as with.
•dent to reiterate
ain aboietsrteIm • -
esd -e,ng light-weiht mates-
's...tee-eel
.se children's cotton gosyns, and
✓ our own white aprons, because
hey do iron so much easier, and really
ok quite as well, if not better.
PLANTS IN WINTER.
The ordinary furnace heated house
a bad place'in which to grow plants.
he air seems to have all the dampness
emoved and that moist condition so
onclueive to a good growth in plants
not found. This may in a measues
e overcome by means of evaporation,
hieh, while not supplying a great
mount of moisture. should do some-
hing towards relieving the bad con-
ition of the atraosphere. Place jars
✓ pans of water in, around or about
he furnace, hang buckets of water
own inside the furnace pipes below
he registers, or place them anywhere
hat rapid evaporation may be induc-
d. Keep all the plants in light, airy
°cations, but away from draughts.
ever consign a well gtown specimen
alm to a corner of the room, though
t may look better there, Its beauthiul
ppearance will last a Short time only
n the dark, close place. It may seem
trange, to some, but the very best
lace in the house, if the temperature
an there be maintained at an even
obef, is the kitchen, becau.se of .the
°natant evaporation of water as it
uffs forth from the spout of the tea
ettle.
KITCHEN APRONS.
In buying ginghame for kitchen
a.prons, avoid the browns, as the wear -
ng qu,ality of brown will be found
far below that of other colors, owing
robably, to some rotting element in
the dye. Blue stands first in durabil-
ity,. and perhaps will wash better than
any other color, but it is better to
select those shades that border on the
indigo, rather than the greenish blues,
which do not always keep their coins
when washed.
SALTED PEANUTS.
Salted peanuts are a good substitute
for salted almonds. Remove the shells
and pour boiling water over the nuts
until the red covering leaves them;
spread on a flat tin, pour sonie salad
oil over thin, and place in a slow oven
for about half an hour; then sprinkle
with very fine salt, shake thoroughly
and set aside to cool,
tenuation of his misdemeanour, • that
he was so occupied w:th, his duties as
a ehoemaker, that he had no time to
properly discharge his editorial work,
which he only undertook as a supple-
.
m.entary occupation. Ws salary as
editor was £5 per annum.
Judge -You do not seem to possess
the training and education necessary
to an editor.
Herr Kull -That is not necessary at
all. •
SOIV1E VIRGINIA 13IIEADS.
Beaten Biscatte-Orte quart flour,
one half teaCupful of butter, tme-halt
tea,enpful bt lard, one teaspoonful. of
salt, Mix with sveeet milk into! a stiff
d.ough; bea,t-with a heavy weight/ until
the dotte;h blieters thoroughtY. • It
usually takes half at hoar. Olt, with
O biscuit cutter, stick •eaeh •bleeuit
seeerel thriessieWith a fork, and bake in
a hot oven. until they are a soft, deep
brown.
• Laplaxids-llerit separattlY one. dozen
m
eggs, rainto the yolteg one. gnarl; el
flour, • one, quart of ereani, one tea-
spoonful of salt, the white; beaten to
a, stiff froth, rut bele' teOnldS,
Much in Little
Is especially true of Hood's Pals, for no medt
Otte ever contained so great curative power 111
so small space. They are a whole medicine
Shied always ready, al-
ways efficient, always,
lsfaetory; prevent a cold
eat -
or fever cure ell liver 1118,sick headache, Jaundice, constipation, eto. Silo
The only rturte take with II ood's Sarsaparillo.
A 11•111111111.100Ola ONIIIMPIIIMIMIN NOM COP
THE RETIRED BURGLAR,
4:11avolas DIsappointinent Supplants A
Calterillg PrOSpeet of Wealth.
I found myself one, night," said the
retired burglar, " in the dining room
of a house where they had a safe to
put things in; It was a kind of an
old-fashioned house, and this safe,
which was painted in imitation of the
wood, eves built into a big, old-style
sideboard, a fine, solid, substantial
piece of furniture..i spread a burial),
bag out on the dining room table and
then turned my lanag on the sideboard
and Safe again, just to take another
look at it, slick and solid and shipshape
as it was, and then I got ready to go
at the lock. But before beginning on
it, more as a matter of detail, than
Judge -But an editor must at least
be able to write an article.
Herr E.ulf-Oh, no. I cut all my
articles out of other papers.
Judge -Who acted as editor in your
absence?
Herr Kulf-.A. hatter lived next door
to the office, and. he used. to receive
the correspondence and. hand it over
to the printers. Th1; printers publish-
ed what interested them.
judge --These are extraordinary con-
ditions for a town so near the capi-
tal' of Austria.
Herr Kulf-It is not only in Vienna
that proper ideals of the mission of the
press are in vogue. I always praise
the townspeople who .cleal with ate and
pay their bills regularly, and "pitch
into" those who buy tlaeir shoes else, -
where and do not settle their debts.
The Neunkirchener Zeitung is a pa-
per with principles. It receives a
alarm you ever heard. I sienna, e
subvention from the local authorities.
Judge -How do you obtain the sub- door shut again, hoping that that would
vention ? •• cut off the connection arid stop the
Herr Kulf-I undertook to fully re- • bell ringing. But iL only seemed to
port ell the naayor's speeches, chronicle start it up loudier'n it was at first.
his small doings and shower praise on And then Is turned nay back on the
his administration. diaMonds. I was going to let them go
Herr KILII: was finally sentenced. to a and have the rest if I could; and I
fine for not exercising supervision over picked up my lamp and the burlap bag
his paper which an editor is in Austria and started for the door. I hadn't ta,k-
legally compelled to do.
# On tile Farm,
SHEEP PROSPECTS BRIGHT.
1 see no maul why there is not a
good prospect before the sheep raiser,
I believe that business ehould be en-
couraged and. extended, by those far -
mere who will take bold of it and
alheeraenwillb14:iont"psa'y alinaylib-heet4terrteathawnoli'llk
any other business. I would not ad-
Ythiseeirfairaremres to juptuct athliethperroedsuoeutrieoens ooff
sheep. I should very much doubt
ks teoeopki endg wholly
lthe tehr etye p of a yosu aa r. mijs.
Grover. The grain fed our stOck adds
much to the value of the dressing, and
sheep will not pear as heavy rations of
that the year around as cow& 1 have
had no experience with; pure breeds.
My flocks are all grades, but I doubt
if I ehould have done any bitter with
pure breeds. If' I lived, near a good
mutton market 1 wolald try for the
mutton, for we are. pretty sure of a
good crop on good mutton sheep.
As to the prospect of success in rais-
ing hothouse lambs, therd are a great
many things to consider in answering
that question properly. You. cannot
raise hothonse lambs in a cold storage
barn, n.either from scrub sheep, and
cI
anything else, because while folks do nnigemilhdwseld,kbeit wtihileingneetePount idneseil°fljna:
sometimes forget to lock their safes it. judging from my own experience
they don't forget 'eta one time in a in the last few years, 1 think it the
if this safe, big safe as it was, thaf"best paying business I can do. I have
sold twins in market that have netted
million, I tried. the knob, and I'm blest
me over §21) per pair. I shear my
I'd expected a lot of work over, was sheep from the middle to the last of
locked at all! I just turned the knob
and swung the door wide open.
"Well, now, you ought to seen the
inside of that safe, lined with purple
velvet and just filled with silver stuff,
The stuff kind o' old-fashioned, as you
wae lined with was very fine and rich, my lambs all they can eat, keeping at
before them day and night. I have
tklieuwds line
might have expected, but beautiful and lainndseceoarnmmeaelallanandix, tahfteerabaovleit
just a -glistening, when .1 turned the equal proportions by weight, and fee.d
bullseye on it. The velvet that the safe
too, and the bright silver and the pur- silage. Clover and some mixed hay
had no experience with roots or en-
too,
velvet, looked so PootY together should be fed for a change after. lamb -
but business is business and 1 put my allege tar. NN'iltte tia hey
but
that it seemed a pity to break `era up; janng4
glivfe"tdli :lily
lamp down and began transferring the
will drink morning and night.
stuff from the safe to my bag on the ----e--
table.
April. 'Fat sheep are never rauch
troubled with tieks. I never had any
Scab and but very little sickness in My
flocks I feed my sheep good quality of
hay (clover if possible)l up to lambing,
then grain them, giving small ra-
tions of shorts and corn meal, or oats
WHAT TO FEED CHICKENS.
and tubby -holes of the silver, and a elements to make strong hens, vigor-
-Fresh Green Cut Bone contains the
" I cleaned. out all the pigeon holes
in with the lamp, and Legal:, on the ' a cheap feed and cut up fine and run
ous chicks and lots of eggs, Bones are
Se.autiful lot it was, and then I looked
wdraesevaerve,arbiiegtyatodf little, and here there through any clean and well oiled hone
_ ,- S.:11t.ictsT,--tia-Gri•tddii-a-S•tOirpting ration
VV,E,S A7i5 FORKS, which is rellehed by all fowls. Fine
and before I knew it I'd run up against cut bone resembles hash meat in fine -
It just beat everything; you ever seed,, nese, is thoroughly digestible and will
Line -
some gold napkin rings and gold spoons.
and the next drawer I opened had jew- make more, eggs inS winter and spring
eiry in it --watches and that sort of then anything on the market. Bones
• h h• te are strongly nitrogenous, so build up
hat is
N
WA.
.\%
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants
and. Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a, harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups and. Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and.
allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour
Curd, cures Diarrhiea and. Wind Colic. .Castoria relieves
Teetlihkg troubles, cures Constipation. and Flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach
and Bowels, giving 'healthy and natural sleep. Castoria
is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend,
Castoria.
"Castoria is an excellent medicine for
children. Mothers have repeatedly told me
of its good effect upon their children."
• Da. G. C. OSGOOD, Lowell, Man.
Castoria,.
"Castoria is so well adapted to children.
that I recommend it as superior to any pre-
scription known to me."
H. A. ARCHER, M.D. Brookl_vs„
THE FAC SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER.
THE CENTAuP COMPANY, 77 MIRKY STREET% NCWYOFIK CITY.
- •
Xre
41110•101Mill11001:1195111r
..amonasmonsunAAPHugocaa.T
THE NEW WOMAN.
:to
Whatever Added itigikts She May Claim She
• Stliis Holds Past to Per Privileges.
"Here is something that I would like
to approach very gently," said Mr.
Stoggleback, "so as not to give any
offence.
' "The new evoraan wants her rights
and. her privileges;too ; and as a mat-
ter of fact, I ara very, giadeshe does
cli '1 0 het privileges,
and. I hope she -
CARTEKS
RIME
IVER
PILLS.
•
always will; which means that I hope
she'll stava woman. I3ut the way in
which she mixes her rights and privi-
leges up is sonaetimes a little conf us-
ing. For instance;
"When walking along the sidewalk
woman holds her course and lets the
tiling. man turn out' and. she does this just
must have been intended and used not the frame, strengthen the bones, de- the same in the busiest streets, as she
only for the silver, but. as a sort of 1 the muscles and the ilrue they would in a calm and quiet residence
contain makes a sti ong shell. 13one street. You might think that a busi-
family strong box to keep valuables
cutters may be obtained in any sizes nese woman working among -business
in.
Well, you know, I almost wonder- and el yles and if kept in clean, condi-
ed if I'd ever dote anything to entitle tion, 'the bones can be cut easily by a
me to all this, because here was a sinall child. Among the cheapest in first
fortune made in a single night; but cost a.nd in repair is IVIann's bone (Int -
1 kept on putting the stuff in the .bag I ter. Those who are not experienced
all the same, and pretty soon had in the feeding oil bone, or who do not
everything cleaned out except one lite appreciate, what a profitable use is
tle sort of a small inside safe that I thus made of green bone, should send
was leaving till, the last, and that 1 /or Mann's circulars, which are free to
shouldn't have been surprised, judg- all. •
ing from the rest of the safe, to find I
fined with diamonds, in bracelets, and l
taint glaatnsdorbtuotfteithiiinieds. ainIdvasstagrosi,n goingto
FERTILIZER FOR GRAPES
put that stuff in my pockets; so I tied Perhaps • grape vines are the only
do not: need stable man -
up the bag, and got that down off intents which
the table, all ready to carry off, end 1 ure, owing to the fact that manure
then I turned to open the little safe, contains alburninoids in excess, which
and I pulled that door open with one makes grapes rot and vines decay. A
hand, holding the light with the
with 'em, just a glittering there, en- than a rich one. Therefore vineyards
ough to take your breath away, and a are planted on the hill sides. More
moment later something happened that than nitrogen and aCide phosphate
pooty near took ray breath away for . . . . .
open a little veiclee to get • at the per cent a potash. Often 'we hear far -
other, to leek in. And it was filled Poor, gravelly eon suits vines better
vines need a fertilizer containing 15
a second or two. As I swung the door
stuff easier I heard a click,. and then mers boastbag of having put tons of
the loudest and. wranglingest, and jang- commerSial fertilizer in the soil of
'ingest and slambarigingest burglar their farms, which may be very good,
but we never hear any boast about a
well-preserved stable manure, which in
this Sandy soil particularly is an ine-
pellant necessity, for it furnishes vege-
table matter (humus). of which the soil
is deficient, improving its condition
so as to enable it to hold its humidity,
and that addition of, commercial ferti-
lizers if the soil is too loose -es is
the casewith ours -makes it compact,
en two steps when the burglar alarm and if 11 18. still it loosens, it. It is a
seems to break out loudern ever, and fact that the effeets, of stable manure
it seemed now td be right .in the room in the soil have been traced twenty
where I was; before that it had seem- years after. ,
ed to be somewhere else in the house,
but now it seemed to be right there
in the room, and itt orte particular spot.
and :C couldn't help turning' toward it
t and s e what
sort of thing it was, and I realized
that it was my oivn alarm clock bang-
ing away to wake me 'up and let ..-me
know that it was time to get out and
get to work.
"And it might interest you to know
that all I did get that night, as a
matter of fact, was four napkin rings,
all very thin and light, and a ham.'
A COAL PRICE PROPHET.
Bilkins--I'm going to lay in my stock
of winter coal right off before it goes
Mrs. B-Wbat will put the price up
this weather?
The big strike of
Is there going to
Certainly.
Hoow do you kno
Because there isn't
course.
be a strike?
w?
any going on now.
ceeetisis ovocanotautzeoseue"
- Heart Spasms
DR. AONEW'S'. CORE FOR THE HEART
A WONDERFUL. LIFE-SAVER.
NO organ in the human anatomy to -day
a
whose diseasecan be ;more readily de-
'tected then those of the heart -sand
niellicel, discovery has ' made them
amenable to,proper treatment., If you
have. palpitation. or fluttering, short,.
seas of breath, weak or irregular pulse,
s,„welling of 'feet or ankliA, 'pairs bi.the
• ieft side, feinting spells, dropsical ten.
dency, 'an y theite Odleate :heart xlis-
Cato. No matter of how long Standing
gii
Dr. Aew'e Coro for the Ileart wUL
ente--it's beartspecillo-eacte quiokly
eaectei surelys-aots safely.
"1 rcyn,agrVen tip 10 did phydlelatis .
and friends, Onedose o Agriedvas
Caro tor the Heart gave me ease, and,
die betties aired my 00)50 of fifteen
,_ev oat's; standin 11115 1,L. lintaing•,
whitewood, yur.T, go'
narantees ,13 *ta1fltitesp 4
Sol y. C, Lu• mrttt,. glaitaro
•
to look at it for a u e e
DIAMOND SAW.
The diamond saw Which is being used
tit the hard Stone for the Paris Ex-
position buildings was designed by a
French engineerlt is a steel, disc
like that of the ordinary circular saw",
but the teeth are formed of diamond-
diatleter of this saw is six feet,
and the cutting edge has MO diamonds
in it, tEhe latter are ordinary elle-,
tala worth abont 10 shillings a carat,
The spewd of the saw is 3S0 revolttions
a minute,•
COMPOSTING FORSMALL
The farmer who is so fortunate 08 to
have many acres and much live stock
I and is not in debt may safely regard
the compost method of Making ferti-
lizers with comparative indifference.
His stock greencrops and commercial
manure make tlies problem: "How sus-
tain and increase fertility," an easy
one. But the small 'farmer -small in
acres, in stook and in floating capital,
or possibly in debt, must view the
ma,tier with more coneeth. To him
composting is the only fee sible • solu-
• tion 'Having made the best possible
use ot his little home supply hi must
strike out for raw materials from oth-
er sources --beg them if he can, bay
them if he must,
•13ig gante .rs said t� te eztraordinar-
ilY Plentiful in the region of Fashocia,
The rivet swarms with or000diles and
luppopotatoi, while great herds of ante.
florpecteilo:nftivarimicruost kwinktths, and giraites are
men in a business part of the town,
would adopt business methods in every-
thing, and that when you met her in
the street she would turn to the right
as you do and as all men do, but she
doesn't. She holds her course, ;which
is very likely to be along the inner
side of the walk, and expects you to
turn out for her, even if it carries you
to the left instead of to the night; she
doesn't dere about that.
"No matter who she may be, or
where you meet her, woman eXpects
naan to turn out for her; and I hope
she. always will.
lIfter• '13110aphiaitte,
arest Ettiid1s RenzeaV,
Sold and reecoximended by ell
druggists it Canada.. Only tell.
able medielnedideovered.
Pohltarles 'grizsranteed to cum all
forros of Sexual SVcriltneasl,- all effects of abuse
Or exeesS, Mental Worry, Excessive use Of To -
taco°, Opium or 8tifnulante. Mallecten reeelpt
of odee. Otte paelcage $i, sit, $5. (Int wittadase
flszSlU ettOe. Pamphlets free to neve eddies&
"the'Wood. Cionimetty Windsor, Ont.
Wood's Phosphodine 14 sold it Ill:war
by I. W. Orownint,
THE CORNFED PHILOSOPHER,
Many a young man tells a young wo-
man he loves her better than his life,
said the Cornted Philosopher, but re-
fuses to change the life lee is leading.
CST
For Infants and. Children.
The fat-
qignsture
1111111
10570ori
41.2:4'961 g IneIP16
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles inci-
dent to a bilious state of the system, -such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after
eating Pain in the Side, .fcc. While. their most
remarirable success has been shown. la curing
Headache, yet Cesarnst's Iarriat Lrrnst Pitts
are equally valuable In Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the Stomach,
V.vimeVirty
chetheolilvyuecrarnea regulate the bowels.
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing complaint;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, suad these who once try them will rind
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will net be willing to do without them.
But atter all sick head
I is the bane of so many lives that hereis where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
Ia dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
_not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
I please all who use them. In vial's at 25 cents;
I Lye for $1. ,Sold everywhere, or sent by maiL '
I 0A1lS1311 MEINOlita" 00., New York.
hat fill, Small DORN 110,11
BOILING CRIIVANALS TO DEATH.
--The last instance of boiling to death
took place in Persia in 1830. The offen-
der, who Via13. gliiitY of stealing State
revenues, wars put in a large cauldron
of cold water, which was slowly. heated
to the boiling point. His bones were'
distributed as . a weristng among the
provincial collectors.
Children Cry for
C STOR
NOT TO BE TOO WELL DONE.
There is a happy mean in everything.
It is seid that a shrewd old lady heard
het married daughter say
If roy husband doesn't do sada and
suc,h a thing, he'll find hinaself itt hot
Water.
My child, said the old lady, 'a maxi
is like an egg. Kept inwater little
while he may boil soft; hill keeled bine
there long, and he hardens I•
DIREDIRININGNIIDANIDARRINN9IDNPREat --"'''
OUR( ALL Iffnut PAINS wi,li
Pain-Kslier.
A flIodiolne Chest In Itself. ,..
SImple,,,Safo and Oink Miro for
CRANIPS, DIARRHOEA, COUGHS,
•-• COLDS, RHEUIVIATISIV,:
•
. ' NEURALGIA.
GO and SO tient Dicitti00.
BEWARE 60 tiiiITATIONe.
' Boy tiNty THE optlillIN E.
r PERRY DAVW
Ii116111611111filMiigglailtailinallE
STRENGTH CAME BACK.
The Anvironee more rings with tit*
strokes of his hammer.
Mr. Them, Porteous, the well knowEl
blacksmith of Goderich, Ont., tells how
sickness and weakness gave way to heattt
aadstrength. "For the past four years raj
"Ak
nervehave been very weak, ray sleep fitful
and disturbed by dreams, d'onsegtiOutli 1
arose' dia the morning unreeted. I web!
frequently very dizzy and Wad Much
trolibled with a mist that came before nil'
• eyoS, my memory Was often defective a,
had fluttering of the bea,rt, together ve
sharp, pain through it ab time& In
condition I was easily worried and
enervated and exhausted. • Two niotithd ago
began taking Milburn's Heart and Nerve
Pills, since that time I have been gaining in
health and strength deily, They bays
restored my nerves to a healthy condition,
removed all dizziness mad heart tron131e, and
now I sleep well and derive eorafort and
test frora it. That Milburn's Ileart and
Nerve Pilla are a good remedy for Nervous.
neat, Weaknetes, Heart Pro -able and altullor
complaints goee without saying." Pr„iili40
50 etsa hot at all druggists or T, Milburri
19e Co, Toronto, Ont.
taxa -Liver Pills cure Dysi3epola.,
Spain lias greatov mixieral resonteeS
than any other countv;y'Itt EilrOPet
eluding iron, copper. Able, slivbr. anti'
OlerlY, quick -silver, lead 4yad gypsum.
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Money
F1.110:01:-F4NSON'S
Thursday
& CARLING,
era, $ouciters. Notaries, Conveyancers,
Qouunissietere rite.
to Loon et SS per seat. ad 5 per cent.
nt.,00K, nxETEIL
.. ,_
1.8. 0.4.1u.ING, It A. Z. H*PtoRsg•
molubor a the area will be at Henson on
ot °wits week.
1-1
-0).
BaRister
OFFICEI
-
1-41
• -
IT. COLLINS.
• I ,, •
, Solicitor Cocveymicer Etc,
i 1
)u.krinmit, - ONT,
f Over (Metre Ba1.11S.
-
-- — -
LLIOT k GLADAIAN
-
4
13,8 , irrktel% Solicito) rq' llotaxics ?WIN
e
Conveyancers (34c7 &C.
W"Moncy to Loan.
OFFIcE. MAIN s STREET, EXETER.
s
33. V. HLraos. F. w. GLanetAN•
soossemmesse..sesessseeesesomssesesses
MEDICAL
----......----
pR. J. R. RIVER% M. B. TORO'N'r0 TINI
VERSITY,•1A D. C. M. Tsinity Ueiver
s ty, Cffice--Croditon, Ont..
Dm. ROLLINS & AIVIOS.
Separate Offices. Residence same as former
ly, Andrew st. Offices: Spacisinan's building.
Nein at; Dr Il.ollins' same as formerly, north
d c or: Dr, „Amos" Hama building, south door,
i...A.. ItOLLINS. M. D.. T. A. AMOS, M. 0
Exeter, On
W.BROVNING If . D., M.. C .,
J e P. Si, Graduate Victoria Urliv:rsity
office aud residence, h o minion Labor a-
tory, Exeter.
R. EiTINDAIAN, coroner for the
A.-- County of Huron, Othee, opposite
Carling Bro e. store , Exeter.
AUCTIONEERS.
e
-1-41:
I
-
Ili
moderate.
a 11
sante
toe
BOSSENBERRY, General Li-
4 e COUSeti Auctioneer Sales ceudacted
obverts. Satisfaction wittranteoti, Cheeps
Ben still P 0, Out:
---- —
HENRY EILBER 1110AD sed Atio.
ti Out er for the Counties or auron
4.1 Mi et illesox ; Sales a:suds-lewd &G. L1104-
rates. Otnee, a t Post-otIlee orea-
Ont.
umporamAso smAmmomomoccomoocol
Tennent
lege.
91.1:1E
A.
HEAD
years
1.11.1nrio
daiunqe'
eisimiliciones
ipsurable
tile
Cni-b,.
tun(
Vith,752.aa.
..Aspott.i,
HI
sed
,L)1,,,,,,‘1,-.:
secretary
13ELL,
71ilTER1NIRY.
-
& ferment
Itlitruilt, ONT.
e
. se
seesessas
Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary Col-
Office—One door south. of Town Hall.
WATERLOO Al U T UAL
FIRM INSTatAN 0 EC 0 . •
, filsta1ilielied In 1.863.
OFFICE • WATERLOO, ONT ,
ll his Company hss been over 'C went v -el rh
in meces.sful . oner tion in Western
and continues to insure:1.gal list loss or
by Fire. liuildinirs, Merchandise
and all other descriptioas of
property. Intending insurers have
option of insuring on the Premium Note a r
..
Burins the past tea years this company lies
ect57,00,i Policies, coverinz property to th...L....Thal
nut of $40,872,038; arid paid in losv,-..,...---..
,,,,?....rr-..ses ....3 elone
$1.76,100_,A.,
i ank 0overmaesp--,-,.'", consisting or. vh
Preiniusar, Y...i. 0 epnsi i u.illi theunasses-
and n force.
--7...:„. Notts on hand i
,-..,...),:HEN,21.1)., l'rtsident; 0 21. TA Y1.0 a
; 3. 1.:. 11 c isu ss, Inspector . CHAS.
Agent for Exeter and vicinity.
•
:Pills
.
•
•
•
•
•
•_
•
...
see
., .
see ves ", 't
,f,
, ,
,..-
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1 -e as e
,b''' .-sie(A,!sd •
Ton need it to bear the daily burdens ef
life. if your baok's weak--Dosn's Kidney
will 'strengthen it. If it pains and
iches-Doan's Kidney Pills will cure it. No
experiment in taking Doan's Kidney Pills.
Tbor cured hundreds- of weak, aching backs
long before other kidney pills were dreamed
a.
Mn. Imo Row, Belleville, Ont., suffered
tor nine years with terrible pain in the
haelx, rheumatic pains, and pains in the
bisclder. He spent 6300 doctoring, btit got
little relief. Doein's Kidney Pills have
completely cured him, banished the back
paine, and all the other pains and aches.
THE EXETER TIME
Ts published every Thursday morning at
Times Steam Printin. w Mouse
...
Iria n street, nearly oeposite Fitton'sjewelry
• store,Exeter, Ott., by
JOHN 'WHITE & SONS, Proprietor&
namies oe ALYVERTISING:
First insertion, per line.... ,, . ,,, ..,.....10 cents
Each subsequent insertion, per line.. 3 cents
To insure insertion, advertisements should
be BMA IR not later than Wednesday morning.
-_-
Our JOH PRINTING DEPARTIVIENT is one
el the largest end best eget ppedin the County
el Huron, All work en rusted to 'ad will re.
Ceive our prompt attentons
Decisions isegareling Newspapets.
1 -Any person who takes a paper 'regularly
from the post ofile& whetheS ("hooted in hie
hated or an otheraeor whethee he has sulaserile
ed or not is respoesible for payment.
•e-u.a. peeson orderei his sniper alseon• tieueci
be sweat pay all arrears Or the publisher may
continue to geed ib until the payteent is made,
knd teen oeileet the vehoY.e aneouet, whether
the peper le taken front the °nicest net.
as -,In stilts for sabeetiptsone, the suit may
metitoted in this plater where the Iliac 111 pub-
lished, although the subscriber noey reside
him i reds of miles ewer. .•
be
4 -The eourts hne dee , 0 a re 118 1114 te
talc° na'at.papers Cr perimifeals frotn• the post
ollice, or renioviiig and leaving them unealieri
for is prima facie evidence of intentional
fraud,
NERv E nitavil IstAlTh e .
1
, 'coven, thot cure the uunt Nut., of
' . Nervous Debility,' Loeb Niger and
BEAS CI ' loaillee'.Ataremoe; . restores. tbs
X.414.--4.4-4 4,11%4 weakliest a body or mina mese
by overevork, er the errors or eka
PtoPPIOPIPpeAraPoPTHEAU COH(1610t 00th. Thi E ROMEO Ob.
Polltedy aritt. Os most riAtitiate rotted *bon ,all other
tritnAttituks latv.Afalled Orate tolleve. l*"..,elti hiding.
gists at $1 per parkopy, or Sit tor .t.',5, or teat by ',nail di
, "oeilst, eq. efieei,encin,n.iier',nril'E , i ,1"11;,,i;',51,,pfe,,11,cy
Sold et Brown bols Drug Store Exeter
X I,
fr —:411 B X T E
TIMES
-46,-6"0
he I-1()me
es410,11rWielbsillkdibe
CLOTHES THAT moN EASILY.
id yoii ever stop to think, when
ing gowns for the wee ones, that
soft dixnities and lawns iron just
ut as easy again as do the heavier
Tales and ginghanas ? says a writer,
13 is something whieh should °male
o the eonsideration of every moth -
of small girls. I ean iron about
O thin muslin gowns to one percale,
really the muslin or thin goods
'ens last about as well as do the
vier otes. The light weight ones
sh much easier, too; so, taking it
into consideration, it is an eecoao-
of time, strength, and probably,
money to put the little ones ,into
pretty light -weight cottons for
mer,
good many advocate not ironing
ertain kind of clothing and house-
ld linen. I have tried both methods,
bing and not ironing, and I have
eluded that ironed clothes keep
an enough longer to -have it pay
iron them. The sheets are generallY
ded from the line, and other things,
, as much as possible; this saves
s of wrinkles that would otherwise
ed pres:sing out, Sometimes the sheets
e not ironed, and sometimes they are,
t pillow slips and towels certain -
are nicer ironed in spite of the
any to the contrary. 1 think, if any
ndid person will try untroned pillow
ps for three days, and then a pair
neatly ironed ones for the same time,
Le will readily eee that there is a dif-
renee about the soiling 'qualities of
ned and u,nironed clothes.
Towels are no exception, and there
e not meny who prefer a rough
ied toweL to one smoothly,- ironed.
am gure, for one, 1 like a towel just
smooth as it can be, and they iron
easily if the irons are hot. I almost
ways get mine ironed while testing
e heated irons. These are frequently
o hot for starched. clothe, where one
nnot just run the iron over as fast
it can be moved, and this may be
ne on a pillow slip or a towel, so
at by the time one or two towels
e ironed the iron is cool enough to
so on the I/lois particular starched
ece. Then, too, when the iron is too
01 for the starched things, it may
used to nub off a couple of towels,
rhaps, and so these will get ironed
•most imperceptibly.
Of course this is rank heresy to one
ho has adopted the non -ironing sys-
na, but I have used both, and if the
e who has the ironing to do is able
do it at all, the commoner clothes
e ironed too. I must confess, how-
er, that I see no advantage in iron -
g knit garments, Turkish bath tow-
well floured before being greased, and
balso in a, very hot oven,
Batter Bread -Dissolve one -hall 1e1-
sPOOSI/U1 Of $040, in One quart of clab-
ber or fresh buttermilk, Stir into
thie four well-beeten eggs, one table-
spoonful of melted butter, WI table-
spoonfra a salt and one and one --
bait pints of white unbolted. corn meal
Pour into a baking !dish and bake
quiekly,
Batter Oakes -Two eggs well beaten
together, three eupfuls of sweet milk
half pints of white. unbolted corn meal.
to make the batter the consisteney of
fresh cream. Have the hoe hot, grease
slightly, drop the batter on the hoe
and let it fry milli brown, then tarn
Serve hot with fresh butter, This
makes a, nits dish for an invalid and
can be prepared in twenty minutes.
isehROSENE AS A BEVERAGE.
News from France of the increasing
popularity of kerosene as a beverage
suggests the possibility of agitating
differences between the Standard Oil
Company and the Woman's Christian
Tertiperance Union. The new habit has
made more progress in Paris than else-
where, and is under observation there
by the guardians of the public health.
The petroliques -seem to begin their
evil courses not because they are out
of humor with alcohol; but becauge ker-
osene is the only stimulant they can
get. It produces an intoxication which,
though a low-spirited affair, has its at-
tractions for the. experimenters, How
unwholesome kerosene is in its effects,
and whether it is worse than alcohol,
has not yet been fully determined.
Meanwhile alcohol is in no present dan-
ger of being crowded out of France,
The number of wine -shops has increas-
ed twenty-five per cent. in twenty-
four years, and in the larger cities
the consumption of wine varies from
forty to sixty gallons a head, ,besides
more or less spirits and beer. Thirst
like that must either be restrained or
rated by home products. There is no
prospect that any zonsiderable part of
it will ever be allayed by kerosene.
Children Cry for
ASTOR IA.
JOURNALISM IN AUSTRIA.
Ludicrous Bevel...trams Gran imitor Broughe
to Trial for Libel.
Some curious facts have been
brought to light in the course of an
action for libel brought against the
editor of the Neunkirchener Zeitung, a
provincial weekly paper with a large
circoletion in Neunkirchen and dis-
trict. Neunkirchen is a flour-
ishing town alatiut sixty miles from
Vienne..
s, and wash cloths, flour sack dish
wels ole., seem just as evelj, evisaees>" 'lee editor, Carl Kull, urged. in ex-
, ./
oning as with.
•dent to reiterate
ain aboietsrteIm • -
esd -e,ng light-weiht mates-
's...tee-eel
.se children's cotton gosyns, and
✓ our own white aprons, because
hey do iron so much easier, and really
ok quite as well, if not better.
PLANTS IN WINTER.
The ordinary furnace heated house
a bad place'in which to grow plants.
he air seems to have all the dampness
emoved and that moist condition so
onclueive to a good growth in plants
not found. This may in a measues
e overcome by means of evaporation,
hieh, while not supplying a great
mount of moisture. should do some-
hing towards relieving the bad con-
ition of the atraosphere. Place jars
✓ pans of water in, around or about
he furnace, hang buckets of water
own inside the furnace pipes below
he registers, or place them anywhere
hat rapid evaporation may be induc-
d. Keep all the plants in light, airy
°cations, but away from draughts.
ever consign a well gtown specimen
alm to a corner of the room, though
t may look better there, Its beauthiul
ppearance will last a Short time only
n the dark, close place. It may seem
trange, to some, but the very best
lace in the house, if the temperature
an there be maintained at an even
obef, is the kitchen, becau.se of .the
°natant evaporation of water as it
uffs forth from the spout of the tea
ettle.
KITCHEN APRONS.
In buying ginghame for kitchen
a.prons, avoid the browns, as the wear -
ng qu,ality of brown will be found
far below that of other colors, owing
robably, to some rotting element in
the dye. Blue stands first in durabil-
ity,. and perhaps will wash better than
any other color, but it is better to
select those shades that border on the
indigo, rather than the greenish blues,
which do not always keep their coins
when washed.
SALTED PEANUTS.
Salted peanuts are a good substitute
for salted almonds. Remove the shells
and pour boiling water over the nuts
until the red covering leaves them;
spread on a flat tin, pour sonie salad
oil over thin, and place in a slow oven
for about half an hour; then sprinkle
with very fine salt, shake thoroughly
and set aside to cool,
tenuation of his misdemeanour, • that
he was so occupied w:th, his duties as
a ehoemaker, that he had no time to
properly discharge his editorial work,
which he only undertook as a supple-
.
m.entary occupation. Ws salary as
editor was £5 per annum.
Judge -You do not seem to possess
the training and education necessary
to an editor.
Herr Kull -That is not necessary at
all. •
SOIV1E VIRGINIA 13IIEADS.
Beaten Biscatte-Orte quart flour,
one half teaCupful of butter, tme-halt
tea,enpful bt lard, one teaspoonful. of
salt, Mix with sveeet milk into! a stiff
d.ough; bea,t-with a heavy weight/ until
the dotte;h blieters thoroughtY. • It
usually takes half at hoar. Olt, with
O biscuit cutter, stick •eaeh •bleeuit
seeerel thriessieWith a fork, and bake in
a hot oven. until they are a soft, deep
brown.
• Laplaxids-llerit separattlY one. dozen
m
eggs, rainto the yolteg one. gnarl; el
flour, • one, quart of ereani, one tea-
spoonful of salt, the white; beaten to
a, stiff froth, rut bele' teOnldS,
Much in Little
Is especially true of Hood's Pals, for no medt
Otte ever contained so great curative power 111
so small space. They are a whole medicine
Shied always ready, al-
ways efficient, always,
lsfaetory; prevent a cold
eat -
or fever cure ell liver 1118,sick headache, Jaundice, constipation, eto. Silo
The only rturte take with II ood's Sarsaparillo.
A 11•111111111.100Ola ONIIIMPIIIMIMIN NOM COP
THE RETIRED BURGLAR,
4:11avolas DIsappointinent Supplants A
Calterillg PrOSpeet of Wealth.
I found myself one, night," said the
retired burglar, " in the dining room
of a house where they had a safe to
put things in; It was a kind of an
old-fashioned house, and this safe,
which was painted in imitation of the
wood, eves built into a big, old-style
sideboard, a fine, solid, substantial
piece of furniture..i spread a burial),
bag out on the dining room table and
then turned my lanag on the sideboard
and Safe again, just to take another
look at it, slick and solid and shipshape
as it was, and then I got ready to go
at the lock. But before beginning on
it, more as a matter of detail, than
Judge -But an editor must at least
be able to write an article.
Herr E.ulf-Oh, no. I cut all my
articles out of other papers.
Judge -Who acted as editor in your
absence?
Herr Kulf-.A. hatter lived next door
to the office, and. he used. to receive
the correspondence and. hand it over
to the printers. Th1; printers publish-
ed what interested them.
judge --These are extraordinary con-
ditions for a town so near the capi-
tal' of Austria.
Herr Kulf-It is not only in Vienna
that proper ideals of the mission of the
press are in vogue. I always praise
the townspeople who .cleal with ate and
pay their bills regularly, and "pitch
into" those who buy tlaeir shoes else, -
where and do not settle their debts.
The Neunkirchener Zeitung is a pa-
per with principles. It receives a
alarm you ever heard. I sienna, e
subvention from the local authorities.
Judge -How do you obtain the sub- door shut again, hoping that that would
vention ? •• cut off the connection arid stop the
Herr Kulf-I undertook to fully re- • bell ringing. But iL only seemed to
port ell the naayor's speeches, chronicle start it up loudier'n it was at first.
his small doings and shower praise on And then Is turned nay back on the
his administration. diaMonds. I was going to let them go
Herr KILII: was finally sentenced. to a and have the rest if I could; and I
fine for not exercising supervision over picked up my lamp and the burlap bag
his paper which an editor is in Austria and started for the door. I hadn't ta,k-
legally compelled to do.
# On tile Farm,
SHEEP PROSPECTS BRIGHT.
1 see no maul why there is not a
good prospect before the sheep raiser,
I believe that business ehould be en-
couraged and. extended, by those far -
mere who will take bold of it and
alheeraenwillb14:iont"psa'y alinaylib-heet4terrteathawnoli'llk
any other business. I would not ad-
Ythiseeirfairaremres to juptuct athliethperroedsuoeutrieoens ooff
sheep. I should very much doubt
ks teoeopki endg wholly
lthe tehr etye p of a yosu aa r. mijs.
Grover. The grain fed our stOck adds
much to the value of the dressing, and
sheep will not pear as heavy rations of
that the year around as cow& 1 have
had no experience with; pure breeds.
My flocks are all grades, but I doubt
if I ehould have done any bitter with
pure breeds. If' I lived, near a good
mutton market 1 wolald try for the
mutton, for we are. pretty sure of a
good crop on good mutton sheep.
As to the prospect of success in rais-
ing hothouse lambs, therd are a great
many things to consider in answering
that question properly. You. cannot
raise hothonse lambs in a cold storage
barn, n.either from scrub sheep, and
cI
anything else, because while folks do nnigemilhdwseld,kbeit wtihileingneetePount idneseil°fljna:
sometimes forget to lock their safes it. judging from my own experience
they don't forget 'eta one time in a in the last few years, 1 think it the
if this safe, big safe as it was, thaf"best paying business I can do. I have
sold twins in market that have netted
million, I tried. the knob, and I'm blest
me over §21) per pair. I shear my
I'd expected a lot of work over, was sheep from the middle to the last of
locked at all! I just turned the knob
and swung the door wide open.
"Well, now, you ought to seen the
inside of that safe, lined with purple
velvet and just filled with silver stuff,
The stuff kind o' old-fashioned, as you
wae lined with was very fine and rich, my lambs all they can eat, keeping at
before them day and night. I have
tklieuwds line
might have expected, but beautiful and lainndseceoarnmmeaelallanandix, tahfteerabaovleit
just a -glistening, when .1 turned the equal proportions by weight, and fee.d
bullseye on it. The velvet that the safe
too, and the bright silver and the pur- silage. Clover and some mixed hay
had no experience with roots or en-
too,
velvet, looked so PootY together should be fed for a change after. lamb -
but business is business and 1 put my allege tar. NN'iltte tia hey
but
that it seemed a pity to break `era up; janng4
glivfe"tdli :lily
lamp down and began transferring the
will drink morning and night.
stuff from the safe to my bag on the ----e--
table.
April. 'Fat sheep are never rauch
troubled with tieks. I never had any
Scab and but very little sickness in My
flocks I feed my sheep good quality of
hay (clover if possible)l up to lambing,
then grain them, giving small ra-
tions of shorts and corn meal, or oats
WHAT TO FEED CHICKENS.
and tubby -holes of the silver, and a elements to make strong hens, vigor-
-Fresh Green Cut Bone contains the
" I cleaned. out all the pigeon holes
in with the lamp, and Legal:, on the ' a cheap feed and cut up fine and run
ous chicks and lots of eggs, Bones are
Se.autiful lot it was, and then I looked
wdraesevaerve,arbiiegtyatodf little, and here there through any clean and well oiled hone
_ ,- S.:11t.ictsT,--tia-Gri•tddii-a-S•tOirpting ration
VV,E,S A7i5 FORKS, which is rellehed by all fowls. Fine
and before I knew it I'd run up against cut bone resembles hash meat in fine -
It just beat everything; you ever seed,, nese, is thoroughly digestible and will
Line -
some gold napkin rings and gold spoons.
and the next drawer I opened had jew- make more, eggs inS winter and spring
eiry in it --watches and that sort of then anything on the market. Bones
• h h• te are strongly nitrogenous, so build up
hat is
N
WA.
.\%
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants
and. Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a, harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups and. Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and.
allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour
Curd, cures Diarrhiea and. Wind Colic. .Castoria relieves
Teetlihkg troubles, cures Constipation. and Flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach
and Bowels, giving 'healthy and natural sleep. Castoria
is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend,
Castoria.
"Castoria is an excellent medicine for
children. Mothers have repeatedly told me
of its good effect upon their children."
• Da. G. C. OSGOOD, Lowell, Man.
Castoria,.
"Castoria is so well adapted to children.
that I recommend it as superior to any pre-
scription known to me."
H. A. ARCHER, M.D. Brookl_vs„
THE FAC SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER.
THE CENTAuP COMPANY, 77 MIRKY STREET% NCWYOFIK CITY.
- •
Xre
41110•101Mill11001:1195111r
..amonasmonsunAAPHugocaa.T
THE NEW WOMAN.
:to
Whatever Added itigikts She May Claim She
• Stliis Holds Past to Per Privileges.
"Here is something that I would like
to approach very gently," said Mr.
Stoggleback, "so as not to give any
offence.
' "The new evoraan wants her rights
and. her privileges;too ; and as a mat-
ter of fact, I ara very, giadeshe does
cli '1 0 het privileges,
and. I hope she -
CARTEKS
RIME
IVER
PILLS.
•
always will; which means that I hope
she'll stava woman. I3ut the way in
which she mixes her rights and privi-
leges up is sonaetimes a little conf us-
ing. For instance;
"When walking along the sidewalk
woman holds her course and lets the
tiling. man turn out' and. she does this just
must have been intended and used not the frame, strengthen the bones, de- the same in the busiest streets, as she
only for the silver, but. as a sort of 1 the muscles and the ilrue they would in a calm and quiet residence
contain makes a sti ong shell. 13one street. You might think that a busi-
family strong box to keep valuables
cutters may be obtained in any sizes nese woman working among -business
in.
Well, you know, I almost wonder- and el yles and if kept in clean, condi-
ed if I'd ever dote anything to entitle tion, 'the bones can be cut easily by a
me to all this, because here was a sinall child. Among the cheapest in first
fortune made in a single night; but cost a.nd in repair is IVIann's bone (Int -
1 kept on putting the stuff in the .bag I ter. Those who are not experienced
all the same, and pretty soon had in the feeding oil bone, or who do not
everything cleaned out except one lite appreciate, what a profitable use is
tle sort of a small inside safe that I thus made of green bone, should send
was leaving till, the last, and that 1 /or Mann's circulars, which are free to
shouldn't have been surprised, judg- all. •
ing from the rest of the safe, to find I
fined with diamonds, in bracelets, and l
taint glaatnsdorbtuotfteithiiinieds. ainIdvasstagrosi,n goingto
FERTILIZER FOR GRAPES
put that stuff in my pockets; so I tied Perhaps • grape vines are the only
do not: need stable man -
up the bag, and got that down off intents which
the table, all ready to carry off, end 1 ure, owing to the fact that manure
then I turned to open the little safe, contains alburninoids in excess, which
and I pulled that door open with one makes grapes rot and vines decay. A
hand, holding the light with the
with 'em, just a glittering there, en- than a rich one. Therefore vineyards
ough to take your breath away, and a are planted on the hill sides. More
moment later something happened that than nitrogen and aCide phosphate
pooty near took ray breath away for . . . . .
open a little veiclee to get • at the per cent a potash. Often 'we hear far -
other, to leek in. And it was filled Poor, gravelly eon suits vines better
vines need a fertilizer containing 15
a second or two. As I swung the door
stuff easier I heard a click,. and then mers boastbag of having put tons of
the loudest and. wranglingest, and jang- commerSial fertilizer in the soil of
'ingest and slambarigingest burglar their farms, which may be very good,
but we never hear any boast about a
well-preserved stable manure, which in
this Sandy soil particularly is an ine-
pellant necessity, for it furnishes vege-
table matter (humus). of which the soil
is deficient, improving its condition
so as to enable it to hold its humidity,
and that addition of, commercial ferti-
lizers if the soil is too loose -es is
the casewith ours -makes it compact,
en two steps when the burglar alarm and if 11 18. still it loosens, it. It is a
seems to break out loudern ever, and fact that the effeets, of stable manure
it seemed now td be right .in the room in the soil have been traced twenty
where I was; before that it had seem- years after. ,
ed to be somewhere else in the house,
but now it seemed to be right there
in the room, and itt orte particular spot.
and :C couldn't help turning' toward it
t and s e what
sort of thing it was, and I realized
that it was my oivn alarm clock bang-
ing away to wake me 'up and let ..-me
know that it was time to get out and
get to work.
"And it might interest you to know
that all I did get that night, as a
matter of fact, was four napkin rings,
all very thin and light, and a ham.'
A COAL PRICE PROPHET.
Bilkins--I'm going to lay in my stock
of winter coal right off before it goes
Mrs. B-Wbat will put the price up
this weather?
The big strike of
Is there going to
Certainly.
Hoow do you kno
Because there isn't
course.
be a strike?
w?
any going on now.
ceeetisis ovocanotautzeoseue"
- Heart Spasms
DR. AONEW'S'. CORE FOR THE HEART
A WONDERFUL. LIFE-SAVER.
NO organ in the human anatomy to -day
a
whose diseasecan be ;more readily de-
'tected then those of the heart -sand
niellicel, discovery has ' made them
amenable to,proper treatment., If you
have. palpitation. or fluttering, short,.
seas of breath, weak or irregular pulse,
s,„welling of 'feet or ankliA, 'pairs bi.the
• ieft side, feinting spells, dropsical ten.
dency, 'an y theite Odleate :heart xlis-
Cato. No matter of how long Standing
gii
Dr. Aew'e Coro for the Ileart wUL
ente--it's beartspecillo-eacte quiokly
eaectei surelys-aots safely.
"1 rcyn,agrVen tip 10 did phydlelatis .
and friends, Onedose o Agriedvas
Caro tor the Heart gave me ease, and,
die betties aired my 00)50 of fifteen
,_ev oat's; standin 11115 1,L. lintaing•,
whitewood, yur.T, go'
narantees ,13 *ta1fltitesp 4
Sol y. C, Lu• mrttt,. glaitaro
•
to look at it for a u e e
DIAMOND SAW.
The diamond saw Which is being used
tit the hard Stone for the Paris Ex-
position buildings was designed by a
French engineerlt is a steel, disc
like that of the ordinary circular saw",
but the teeth are formed of diamond-
diatleter of this saw is six feet,
and the cutting edge has MO diamonds
in it, tEhe latter are ordinary elle-,
tala worth abont 10 shillings a carat,
The spewd of the saw is 3S0 revolttions
a minute,•
COMPOSTING FORSMALL
The farmer who is so fortunate 08 to
have many acres and much live stock
I and is not in debt may safely regard
the compost method of Making ferti-
lizers with comparative indifference.
His stock greencrops and commercial
manure make tlies problem: "How sus-
tain and increase fertility," an easy
one. But the small 'farmer -small in
acres, in stook and in floating capital,
or possibly in debt, must view the
ma,tier with more coneeth. To him
composting is the only fee sible • solu-
• tion 'Having made the best possible
use ot his little home supply hi must
strike out for raw materials from oth-
er sources --beg them if he can, bay
them if he must,
•13ig gante .rs said t� te eztraordinar-
ilY Plentiful in the region of Fashocia,
The rivet swarms with or000diles and
luppopotatoi, while great herds of ante.
florpecteilo:nftivarimicruost kwinktths, and giraites are
men in a business part of the town,
would adopt business methods in every-
thing, and that when you met her in
the street she would turn to the right
as you do and as all men do, but she
doesn't. She holds her course, ;which
is very likely to be along the inner
side of the walk, and expects you to
turn out for her, even if it carries you
to the left instead of to the night; she
doesn't dere about that.
"No matter who she may be, or
where you meet her, woman eXpects
naan to turn out for her; and I hope
she. always will.
lIfter• '13110aphiaitte,
arest Ettiid1s RenzeaV,
Sold and reecoximended by ell
druggists it Canada.. Only tell.
able medielnedideovered.
Pohltarles 'grizsranteed to cum all
forros of Sexual SVcriltneasl,- all effects of abuse
Or exeesS, Mental Worry, Excessive use Of To -
taco°, Opium or 8tifnulante. Mallecten reeelpt
of odee. Otte paelcage $i, sit, $5. (Int wittadase
flszSlU ettOe. Pamphlets free to neve eddies&
"the'Wood. Cionimetty Windsor, Ont.
Wood's Phosphodine 14 sold it Ill:war
by I. W. Orownint,
THE CORNFED PHILOSOPHER,
Many a young man tells a young wo-
man he loves her better than his life,
said the Cornted Philosopher, but re-
fuses to change the life lee is leading.
CST
For Infants and. Children.
The fat-
qignsture
1111111
10570ori
41.2:4'961 g IneIP16
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles inci-
dent to a bilious state of the system, -such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after
eating Pain in the Side, .fcc. While. their most
remarirable success has been shown. la curing
Headache, yet Cesarnst's Iarriat Lrrnst Pitts
are equally valuable In Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the Stomach,
V.vimeVirty
chetheolilvyuecrarnea regulate the bowels.
Ache they would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing complaint;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, suad these who once try them will rind
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will net be willing to do without them.
But atter all sick head
I is the bane of so many lives that hereis where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
Ia dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
_not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
I please all who use them. In vial's at 25 cents;
I Lye for $1. ,Sold everywhere, or sent by maiL '
I 0A1lS1311 MEINOlita" 00., New York.
hat fill, Small DORN 110,11
BOILING CRIIVANALS TO DEATH.
--The last instance of boiling to death
took place in Persia in 1830. The offen-
der, who Via13. gliiitY of stealing State
revenues, wars put in a large cauldron
of cold water, which was slowly. heated
to the boiling point. His bones were'
distributed as . a weristng among the
provincial collectors.
Children Cry for
C STOR
NOT TO BE TOO WELL DONE.
There is a happy mean in everything.
It is seid that a shrewd old lady heard
het married daughter say
If roy husband doesn't do sada and
suc,h a thing, he'll find hinaself itt hot
Water.
My child, said the old lady, 'a maxi
is like an egg. Kept inwater little
while he may boil soft; hill keeled bine
there long, and he hardens I•
DIREDIRININGNIIDANIDARRINN9IDNPREat --"'''
OUR( ALL Iffnut PAINS wi,li
Pain-Kslier.
A flIodiolne Chest In Itself. ,..
SImple,,,Safo and Oink Miro for
CRANIPS, DIARRHOEA, COUGHS,
•-• COLDS, RHEUIVIATISIV,:
•
. ' NEURALGIA.
GO and SO tient Dicitti00.
BEWARE 60 tiiiITATIONe.
' Boy tiNty THE optlillIN E.
r PERRY DAVW
Ii116111611111filMiigglailtailinallE
STRENGTH CAME BACK.
The Anvironee more rings with tit*
strokes of his hammer.
Mr. Them, Porteous, the well knowEl
blacksmith of Goderich, Ont., tells how
sickness and weakness gave way to heattt
aadstrength. "For the past four years raj
"Ak
nervehave been very weak, ray sleep fitful
and disturbed by dreams, d'onsegtiOutli 1
arose' dia the morning unreeted. I web!
frequently very dizzy and Wad Much
trolibled with a mist that came before nil'
• eyoS, my memory Was often defective a,
had fluttering of the bea,rt, together ve
sharp, pain through it ab time& In
condition I was easily worried and
enervated and exhausted. • Two niotithd ago
began taking Milburn's Heart and Nerve
Pills, since that time I have been gaining in
health and strength deily, They bays
restored my nerves to a healthy condition,
removed all dizziness mad heart tron131e, and
now I sleep well and derive eorafort and
test frora it. That Milburn's Ileart and
Nerve Pilla are a good remedy for Nervous.
neat, Weaknetes, Heart Pro -able and altullor
complaints goee without saying." Pr„iili40
50 etsa hot at all druggists or T, Milburri
19e Co, Toronto, Ont.
taxa -Liver Pills cure Dysi3epola.,
Spain lias greatov mixieral resonteeS
than any other countv;y'Itt EilrOPet
eluding iron, copper. Able, slivbr. anti'
OlerlY, quick -silver, lead 4yad gypsum.