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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1902-10-9, Page 7) x Ct f • 1 HE HAS ikIXTE QQ IPANY YOUNG , 'MILT .6NAIRIll GIV'1 S PIN'1Ie,R TO FRIENDS. Soli of Late Peter Releinson rle- brates His Majority by nifne Baguet. As a rule a halt does not invite his hest Mimic]. tied his tafrpr to dine togetedir with hila at a swell restaurant. Still less common Is the sp eC aaIeof a youn g millionaire giv- ing a dinner costing $5,000 to some sixty persons, about.equally divided between his friends and his tailor, bootmoker, haberdasher, hosiery slllrtmakor, hatter, etc, Nor yet is it given to every young lean to be- come 21 year's of ago and be the possessor of $15,000,000 in his oWn• name at the Ozone time, It was this happy circumstance that prompted E. A. Robinson, son of the late Paler Robinson, of Lon- don, England, to give a grand din - 11e1' to the above mentioned company at the Trocadero to other night; LOYAL TO ITIS FRIENDS. Besides,. during Mr, Robinson's minority ho was faithfully waited upon by a bevy of obliging trades - Men, and ho wished to express bis appreciation of their kindness, So bo mixed up his friends and his tradesmen, and fed than as most of than never had been fed before. Everything was of the ]nose ex- pensive 'kind in London. A' Vien- nese band played a on:•a'e "Imperial Edward" march and other choice items during, dinner, The menu was , printed' in •gold, 'lbero was turtle soup , to follOw royal Whit- stable oysters; ano the sweets pro- perly included soigne Rothschild. Yet it must be recorded that the menu nearly broke the manager's heart, for it was lusisted that some of the most curious of the chef's masterpieces should be omitted in favor of such things as roast chick- en and water cress tied saddle of mutton, and, worst of all, , as the manager aorltted with a sigh, the whole menu had to be printed in • English. Thera was chanpagnc at 44 shil- NDXT P ZING'S BHNEN T17C1S IS THE TIME OF YEAR TO START IT. Nearly' All the Bulbs and It/any Annuals Sown in the Aurum, It is a long look ahead for next spring's garclen, but dower lovers know that to experience the joys of the first awakening of nature pre - partitions must bo made. Shrubs, busl1es, hardy plants atdbulbs be expected to be planted in the early spring and settle down to im- mediate business after having been kept in an unnatural, dormant con- dition all winter. How much better then to set out all such plants dur- ing this month, when, growing ae- eustomed to their environment, they will live their normal life dbtiog the e winter, and, with the first opening of spring, strengthen root and gain vigorous blossoming possibilities, l:Tardy shrubs, bushes and Plants" should be set out now, well watered, ferLilized and when cold weather colliescovetedwith loaves or straw. The peony, that favorite of our grandmother's 'garden, will rarely bloom if delayed in planting. Some of the iris and lilies may and do In their bounteous, generous way, but not very often. No hardy bulbs do as well with a sprig setting out, and would the flower lover be joy- fully greeted in tho earliest spring by our little iriontls, the snowdrop and crocus, with their followers, the hyacinth, tulip, jonquil and daffodil, they must be planted during this month for best results, as they should make some root before the Cold weather mines to insure good blossoms in spring. PEONIES HAVE TUBERS, not bulbs, a distinction without much difterence. Once planted they are there for a lifetime, not being .subject to diseases nor marauding insects. The tubers aro ever in- creasing, and so avert' year adds to thoir beauty and worth The iris and various lilies are great multipliers of bulbs, and, though mare tender ,than the pe- lings a magnum, and Chateau La- onion, they seem to holed their own ntte, 1877, at 2 guineas a magnum, so well that they increase and brut - 1 and liquors in the shape of Cour- Only in old, neglected, cleserted veletas, 1815, and brandy, at half gardens, where one would almost• a crown a glass. • imagine, them to be wild flowers, CONOERT FOLLOWED DINNER While Peonies look best in clumps .by' themselves, iris are ideal for border! There was not only a .dinner, but beds, as are also most: of the lilies. there Was also 'n concert. Thirty- Successions of bloom can be had in three of the most eminent ladies and both iris and lilies by plantingdif- Y gentlemen from the music Balls were ferent varieties. The lily of the val- especially retained to look itt` to- ley increases its "pips" so rapidly tweon 11 p.m, and 5'a,ni. to enliven as to become a nuisance if not pro-' the after-dinner proceedings. There vide(' with a bed. wholly its own. Its fragile, delicate beauty and fro-/ g'l'ance will Marin, Crocus, snowdrops, hyacinths, jon- quils and tulips must be planted this ram Y o month. Crocus and snowdrops are', one pianist because exhausted an- delightful in the early spring . if , other might take Ole place three planted on the lawn. Some like to' men were retained as accompanists. were - comedians and comediennes, burlesque actresses, .comic 'jugglers. tenors, bassos, 'celloists, duettists and dancers, a human cornet and a CHICKEN FATTENING. • -- ward of the bright blossoms, thrust—� Farmers Should Roar Pullets for ing their • heads up before the grass the Supply of Eggs. has wakened to its growing possi- P f J ; 1 bit Kies, is easily earned. mist, be prepared, and each kind; P p plant them in designs, or if one has a name) 101 ..a country hmne-'it is a I pretty' conceit to spell it in crocus' or snowdrop on the lawn, The re-! Professor W. Robertson, tsar, t to For the others larger bulbs, beds Dominion Commissioner of Agric 1 taro and rlairyiug, has just: held a should be Planted separately, though conference in Montreal with the 1h000 should be,.chosen tel'ietias of, poultry anti egg branch of the 11Ion- the sante bulb, whose early gild lot-' tical Merchants' Association. The y president and members represented er habit. of blooming will lengthen that owing to the oens ion which out the life and beauty. of the bed, ' Itis been directed lately t- the pro- are marked by the secdsman as Ors from tiro fattening of cllickOlrs, attention ray instnnee all varieties' of tulips they feared that farmers' were fat- EIPT-3I31. EARLY OR LATE. toning and killing a 10150 number of hi planting, therefore, alternate pullets.' If that practice were fol-_ either inrows or by single bulbs an) lowed to any great extent, the fuer- early and a late variety.' The bed t chants feared there would be a great should be' well drained. 'A 5011511 ex - reduction in the production of egg•:,, I posure will of 0011105, give curlier consequently they advised that farm- flowers, The soil should be light! ors be encouraged . to put in the and sandy, enriched with a good5fer- crates for fattening- Onle- cockerels, tllieer wall worked in. 1 and that they should 1.061• as ninny When coin wcnther collies the Meds as practicable of good pullets for should be well covered, not because: the supply of eggs during the wine freezing will harm the bulbs, but 1 ter ns well as for the supply of eggs that they 111ay escape sudden thaws. 1 during the summer. (Cho export of Every garden should have bulbs to eggs' from Canada which in1'1890 o1-• bridge ever with their bloom the ly amounted to alio value of $807 Lest until:cuing of spring. _flowers that 086, two years later had grown to I must have time to leaf before buds! $1 285 806 and in 1901 had in- turd blossoms conic • In the preparation for next” spring's garden it must notbe for- gotten l t r gottc.l 11.11 here Circ litany of ou further recommended that, the farm- ann)1010 lint do much better if 5110 r ern be advised to kill off the cocks seed i1, sown in the 'autunui. If ono, after the first of Juno. This is -ole- wants the wild cucumbers to do 1 suable in order that eggs collected well, if fact to grow at all,it during June and later may be infer- should be sawn in 1310 fall. horn - tile, and therefore possess better h,g glory seeds, ton, will giro earlier keeping qualities during the hot growth, while sweet pees, 11 5O1V11 in. weather, a sunny- spot this autumn, will ns-' it is reported that large gunnel- toilish one by coining up before ties of eggs are now imported into snow has fully determined to leave.' the United Kingdom from continelt- In anticipation of the ,toy they will tal counteles, notably Russia and 'gine the work is a pleasure, Austria, /nese eggs are received in large cases peeked fli straw. Ow- ing to the excellent reputation won bey Cnnaflian eggs, English dealers in Many instances are re -packing these conttincutal eggs into cases 5111111111 to the Canadian' Standard egg case, holding .thirty - clo0On each, Al- though the eggs aro hot iabellecl or sold as Canadian eggs, they are sold as eggs in Canadian cases, unci t0 that extent they have an unl0ie advantage, While this 11000100 is creased to 91,691,640. T111.1 EGG MERCHANTS e, compliment to the quality-- and 1'eptt'tntion of' 'Cana:Vinoeggs, .it •is, also, a direct injury, since 501ne -r'e- tailers may take il; that triose con- tinental eggs la Canadian cases, al- though not labelled "Canadian," aro Canadian eggs, 0r that Called tall eggs aro similar to them in size, qualil,y, and condition, Jho egg merchants, also, petition- ed that the Govcrnlncnt 011011ld as- sist them to 50Cm•0 a number of veer tflaied cars for the carriage of eggs 011 the railways.. Department of Agriculture, Otto - trouble myself less and less about what n. book is; the main point is What it brings 1110, What it suggests t0 100,—Goethe. Disguise thyself as thou wilt, Slavery, still thou art a bittor drought.; and though thousands in all, ages have been made to drink then, thou are so less bitter ori that, tecounfe•-Stesate„ HELP F0R.MOTHERS, Baby's Own Tablets Are What You Noed When. Little Ones Are Cross, Fretful,': and Sleepless. If a chill is c1000,'h'olful and facers , Badly, the mother noes feel abeoltitoly certain 511111, Soule de- rangement of the .stomach or bowels is the ea05e. And eke can be just as certain that Baby's Own 'Tablets will put her little ono eight, 'those Tablets' CIl1'e all t110 1111(101' ailments of little once, such as iucligcstion, oo'asLipation, simple (mere, diarr- hoea, lvoral9 and teething troubles, They are guaranteed to contain no Opiate and can bo given with abso- lute safety to the youngest enol most feeble. child. Iever'y Smother who has used them speaks of those Tablets in the warmest terms. Mrs, 1:1, Bancroft, Doerwo0d, Man., sxys '1 have used lksby's Clwn Tablets fee stomach and' bowel troubles, for simple feeees And teething', and think 4110111 the hest medicine in the world, They always strengthen chil- dren instead of weakening thein as most other medicines do. ' You can get llaby's Own 'Tablets at n,ny (Mug stale, or by Mail post paid at 25 cents a box by writing direct to The Dr, W111imne' Meilfcina Co., Brockville, Onto or Sche 1C3- tady, :N.Y. THE PR1QBHCTION OF MILK I INT'S PH TEM BREEDING QB DAXRY POWs, Dominion Live Stock Oomnlission- er Tells Of the Function of the Dairy Oow, It is ssarcolY necessary to saY that the production of mills is the greatest #unction of the dairy cow, The gcononriGal prodlargo of g meantftfee .of Milk, butter or cheese, dotormines the value of tho•cow, olid the host olYarts of breeders. of dairy stock should always be direct- ed towards this goal, if the dairy cow 'does not yield a prontabl0 flow of mills, She ceases to Have any rea- son for existence- 'Beefing qualities are of comparatively litLlo im- portance, except in cases when a good cow loses the pec of a portion of her udder, or in some way be - Conies undesirable as a nillcei•, FANCY POINTS. It naturally follows that to secure Ythe best practical results, little at- tention.:sllould be paid to what are corumooly spoken of as fancy points. It only in very exceptional eases that color of the hair, size and con- tour of the horns, graceful carriage, and conical teats, can mike any possible difTerence in the actual value of a cow, yet these and many other equally 0selese fancy points are held in high esteem by many breeders and 'judges.' Beauty of form and breed type are always desirable, 'and • breeders may well en-. deavor to combine these in as great a degree as possible with capacity at the pail, but the, latter must ever remain the first consideration. POINTS. INDICATING PRODUC- . .TION, The 41rs't:great exceeutial point to be sought in the dairy cow is con- stitution, without which she cannot stand the strain of irony years' Heavy feeding .and milking, The. wide chest, good heart -girth, and general oesmarance of vigor etre the chief indications of -constitution. Other points largely indicative of production are '.—a wide strohg nuzzle, a comparatively open back- bone or chine, intlicating a tendency to mako '.mills rather thanfat, a capacious barrel, capable of Mak- ing use of large quantities of' Med, . anda roomy, - well -shaped udder, with large mammary veins and mills wells.' A well known Canadian breeder :has tersely summarized these qualifications in. the words -a big mouth, a big belly, and a big hag. TESTED ANCESTORS. Experienced men aro able to select good cows with a reasonable amount of certainty, but the most expert dairy judge is largely at sea when he attempts to select a good bull by appearances alone. When we coma to the question of raising good cows, we find that the only; road to suc- cess is in breeding Mein cows of known capacity and . from bulls whose. female ancestors have also been tested for merit at the pail and churn. It is almost imperative that o good bull should be backed by a considerable number of good pro- ducing darns' and grand -dams, if satisfactory results are to be expect- ed from his daughters. ADVANCED REGISTRY. About twenty year's ago some - of the prominent American breeders of -Iolstein 1''riesian cattle, impressed with the importance of the above question, started what is known as an "aidvaticed registry," in 'which cotes 000101 be recorded only after making 'a milk .or'butter record greeter than a certain Iligll stand- ard, This system • of registry was greatly -improved some eight years ago by the adoption of what is known as "oli sial testing." 'Under this plan all tests made are directly supervised by a capable dairyman sent as a representative of an ex- periment station or agricultural col- lege, who sees the cows milked, weighs the mill:, and tests some in duplicate with the Babcock tester. The correctness of.these tests must be sworn to by all concerned in conducting them. The system has now been adopted by the 0uerreey, Ayrshire, and Jersey. Associations of the United States, but in Canada only the . Holstein -Friesian breeders have recognized the importance of the movement, They have recently established a "record of merit," in which a cow may be entered only after making an official test for pro- duction bf butter -fat. Tho 'standard requites thata two-year-old heifer shall produce 5n seven days at least eight pounds of butter -fat, a three- year-old heifer ten pounds, a four- year-old cow eleven rmd a half pounds, and a mature cow thirteen pounds.' Phis is the highest stand mrd adopted by any association and it will doubtless have a very bene- ficial effect on the butter producing qualities of the breed in Canada. Other breeders of clait;v cat Ile might well tato up this matter also. SOME OP THE TESTS made by the Cnnadinn Holsteins, nearly a!1 under the supervision of Prof. Dean, of the Ontarto Agrice l- turnl College,, arc given herewith. These are all for' a period of seven daye. The amount of butter may be compared riper oxi in a Lel y by ;adding one-sixth to tho amount of ' butter- fat, nitres good butter averages about 85 per .cont fat: Breeder's of other sorts of dairy catele aro In- vited to send authenticated records of t1151.1' cows. ACTED COWS. 'lrlilk. Stator 1j Jessie Veeman A,,. 584.8 20.90 2 Calamity Jane 572,5 20,09;, il. t aatje Delloer 2d., 445.1. 19.32 4, Amite) Pesch 4th,,d 494.8 19.09 5, Carmen Sylvia 520.1 . 15,46 6. Daisy It 1)e1{ol,.. .496.1 15.32 7. Rideau 1)elleh's Lena 867.5 15.32 8. (Sill 1""lower .., 845.9 15.2'7 9, :Ruby Clretqui,., ...,, 458.5 18.85 10. Fanny T.•',,, 481.1 13.62 11, Jemima Wayne„. ,479,5 118.56 12. I tidy hietertie. ,..,, 997.13 :18.39 13. Lorena Diamond Notherlalltl.,, ,,, 861.7 14, 'Mimic Win... 400.3 15, Violet of Ltd11 .. ;. 480.2 P01311 YEAW1I OLD. 1, Poitilla Eeho .Oo „E 511,9 Unless the soap you use has this brand you are not getting the best Ao1S for the octagon Slur, '140 2, Olothilde Belle.., „ 505.0 14,60 3, Woodland Molly Ve 868,7 14,42, 9, Axle D*IOol,., „, ,,. 421.9 14.22 5. 0oatje DeSoer Od.. 847,2 ,19 6, Edgely gena,.. 351,8 12.88 7, Lady Greet)ofd,von- dale., ' 370,4 11.73 THREE YEARS OLD. 1, Inks Sylvia 568,2 17.55 2, Calamity Jam„ 2d, 444,8 15.46 3, ;Josephine Dolol • C olantlta,.. 462.7 14.92. 4, Aagglo Ii'as ,,579.0 15,49 5, Daisy Texal 201.,,.,, 487.0 14.44 6, Into Mercedes ire- Kol ,. ,. ,,.: 398,7 14,06 7, Plora Wayne ,of Riverside... ., 460.1 19.82 8, Daley 1400MA-111de,- 451.2 12,90 9, Daisy Soldene C1oLhildo:.. ,. 323,5 11.61 10. Lody Acne 8(1... 367,7 11.20 11. Tidy Abbokerk Do - 1001 381,0 10.99 12. T'ensen's Beauty 372,7 10.66 13, Ionceole 2d,.• 291.6•; 10.36 TWO YEARS: OLD. 1. Alta Pesch... ,.. 586,1 21.65 2. Nancy Wayne of Riverside.... ,. ... 411.3 12.04 8. Belle Do1oh., ...... , 376.1 11.51 4r Verbelltl 41.11 363.7 10.96 5. Daisy Mechthilde 2d 357.5 10.71. 6. Cornelia Schulhlg270.8 10.18 7. Emma Abbekerk..,316.4 9.78 8. Dewdrop's Clo- tlulde,,.:., ,. 267.0 9.52 9. Netherland Crony.,820.5 9.50 10. Inka Mercedes De- lOol2d .. 857.5 9,19 11. Princess Pesch,., . 258.7 9,11. 12, Janet of Lulu... .. 285.0 9.11 13. Lady Margaret of Lulu 236.9 8.71 14. Polly Wayne 2d322.1 8.69 15. Lottie of Lulu 835,8 , 8.63 16. Heide. Wayne of Riverside... ,., . 282.1 8.58 17. Lenora Diamond Netherland... , 214.6 8.41 18. Queen DeKol 2d 804.11 8.88 19. Pauline Fairmont.,241.5 8,31 20. Rideau May ,,257.4 8.21 21. Daisy Texal 3d 250.7 8.04 22. Midge Deka— 260.0 3,02 1', W. HODSON, Live Stock Commissioner. MOULD IN BUTTER. Nay 130 Prevonted by Using' a Solution of Formalin, Reports have bean received that a few lots of Canadian butter have been delivered in the United Bing- dole somewhat spotted with °mould on the butter paper and between the box and the butter. That has oc- curred on saltless butter. As mould 1s - ce tiny plant or fungus, it isim- portant that butter makers and but- ter dealers should know by what means they can entirely prevent its growth on butter packages, butter paper, or'on the butter itself, Mould can only conte from pre-existing mould, or iron spores, which servo the purpose of seed of fruit for its reproduction. 1f the spores be de- stroyed mould cannot begin to grow. The conditions favorable .for its growth are a certain degree of dampness and a . moderately low temperature—that is to say, a tem- perature below sixty' degrees. Some forms of Mould. grow at temper- atures as low as 32 degrees Fahr,. or the freeeing point of water. Formalin is an-eltectivo fungicide, or, in other words, it is a destroyer of .fungi and of the spores ,of fungi. A weals solution of formalin is ef- fective for the destruction of spores of mould. A good course for the butter maker to follow is Lo pro - pare A STRONG BRINE0 F SALT, adding one ounce of the formalin to one gallon of the brine. The but- ter paper should be soaked in this sohation. The inside of all butter packages should, also, bo rinsed with it. The butter paper while still vet t : with the tl l c brine containing - formalin should be Planed inside the butter box, and the butterinlnedi-, ately packed in it. The brine con- taining, the formalin will destroy all apohe1 of mould 011 the butter lim- per i -per and on the inside of the box. A brine can be used for a long per- iod if eriod,if it be Polled once a week. As the formalin evaporates during the boiling process, it will be necessary to add to ovory:gallon of brine, at- tar it has boiled and cooled, one ounce of formalin, For the protecLion of t11e butter which is to bo shipped to the Unit- ed Kingdom, it is important that the butter be cooled La n tempera- ture under 38 degrees Pair., from the second day after it is made, When butter is allowed to remain cet n. high temperature changes begin which spoil its delicate flavor and freshemode aroma, Each creamery shotild have a cold storage room at a temperature under 33 degrees Fahr.; only refrigerator curs should be used for the carriage of better; and it should' be put in cold stor- age: compartments 'ort the steam- ships, and be carried at a tempera. tore. under 2:1 degrees. A tempera - tura of 20 degrees Fehr, is still bet- ter. Department of, Agriculture, Otta- wa. Virtue will. bo ]1111(1 of health and boattLy and good habit of the soul; and vice will be a disease and de- l8.s;, termite. and sicicne5s'of ft: -Pinto. 13,05 Give nieneither poverty nor 'riches; 13.00 feed me With food. Convenient for 101; lest I be poor, and steal, and fake the name of illy God iu 'a111.—Prov- 16.1G orbs.. SQ0r1..'L,511Tp'S 2'190PL38, Tho Pepellation's Inereasa in Ten' Years, The POpulatioll of Scotland at the Mot census, the report oe whieb was Issued recently, was 5,472,108-» melee 2,178,755, females 2,298,848 a total increase Yl s c i oa o in a1 891 el 446,456. The rate of increase woe not the Sa100 for both sexes, males iner0ae- in at the to g rete of 17.89 per 00115., and females at the rate of 10.34 per cont. There has he011 a loss to the pop - elation by the emigration Of 43,- 881) persons. Fifteen Scotch counties show • an actual decrease of papulu.tion, the prhrclpal being Selkirk, to the ex- tent. of 15.78 per cent.; Wigtown, 9.30 per eent,; and 0aithuess, 8.90 per coot. On the othere1 bond, Lin- litligoW, a d,Lin- litflg010, Lanark, and Stirling show increases of 070r 20 per cent. There aro in Scotland 28,106 who speak Caelie only, and there ore 202,700 who speak both English and Gaelic. Tho return S'liowS a gratifying re- duction in the number of small over- crowded tenements. HAD MADE HIS WILL FULLY EXPECTING TO DIE, HAD ARRANGED ALL EtIS EARTHLY AFFAIRS. XIcw Death was. Disappointed by the Happy Restoration to Health and Strength of Mr. Teeny.: Sumner, Assa,, Sept. 29,-(Spe pial.)—Mr. Louis Teeny,of this place, Was so ill with Inflammation of the Bowels and Kidneys that no one ever- expected him to recover. A11 hope had beoa abandoned and Mr. Teoey had made' his will, fully expecting that he would die. In this extremity' -)Si'. Cosgrove, Postmaster, thought of Dodd's Kid- ney Pills and immediately gave Mr. Teeny a dose. This treatment was continued at intervals ivith the re- sult that in a very short time the man who was thought to be dying, was on his feet and going around as if nothing had happened. This remarkable.. cure of such an extreme ease has created quite a sensation in the neighborhood and many kind words are being said of Dodd's Kiee.ey MIS for tho wonder- ful work they did in Mr. Teeny's vase, This remedy has always been re- cognized among the people as a sure cure for Backache, lnleumatism and all Kidney Troubles, but this is the first case ever reported in this vicin- ity where they have been used with srtteh quiok results, 'Mr, Teeny himself is .very grateful to Dodd's Kidney Pills for his hap- py restoration. People in and about Sumner have just about concluded that there is nothing in the wiry of sickness that Dodd's Kidney Pills will not cure, and there is scarcely a. hone to be found in the neighborhood that does not contne.ain a box of this wonderful medici Men, women and children are find- ing out every day some new virtues in it and it is very interesting to hear themget together and con - pare nates as to what Dodd's Kid- ney Pfils have done in their various homes, A crane said to be the largest in the world has been erected at Kiel. It weighs 950 tons, and can. lift 150 tons. IL is 150 feet high, and work- ed by electricity. iT1T501 Otte), Orvr or Torino, 1 LIMAS 000SOr. f 38 FRANK J. (,11I:NEY wakes oath 11101 11e is senior partner of the Bras of 1•`. J. 01110N57 & HU., doing business in tha City of 'Poiodo, County. and State aforesaid, and that said Ann will 0,ay the sunt of ONII I3Ulinit•11) 1)UL- A101 for each and every case of CA- lAltltld that cannot be cured by trio use of .:STALL'S CATARRH. 01.115bl. 112,1N1( .1. C HISNEY. Sworn to before ma mud- subscribed in ttty presence, this (it11. Clay of December, A. W. GLEASON., SL(L Naar?” _Public. Ball's Catarrh CUM is taken Iinter- Nally,and acts directly on the blood anti mucous- surfaces of the system. ! Send for tcstinlOuinls, free. . le, J. CI3i Nleg k c0.. Toledo, 0.. goldby all Druggists, The. Hall's faintly 1'11]9 me. the .bast. • 1"1'iend—"Row do you 11,114 your new teacher, Freddy ?" b"reddy—"I' don't know ; I haven't misbehaved yet," , fi Spp^+-ggJN'rained Ank Cured Another Remarkable Case Where St. Jacobs Oil Worked x Wonder Lir,, W. H. Allen, jr., of 17 Dem mark street, Aston, Birmingham, writes andel' Bate of May 20th, 5890 1 "1 um a driver •for the Key- stone Bottling Co., of Birmingham, and I had the misfortune to • Ltd pitched oII my waggon, and besides being bruised from head to foot 'my anitle joint ryas put out and nay foot severely sprained, l tried many enrbl'OCatialts, but receiv'e'dno bene- fit; i them went to the hospital, but after having been treated fee' a con- siderable time, I left,' 11et any butter. I then determined to try St. TaOObs Oil, and I. can assure you that before I used the contents of ono bottle my ankle was as 0011nd as ever, and I was able to go to work as if nothing had happened." a 6444x/toe. 091,44, ieb-eanyze„) a,icet? te jjj��///yyyJJJ. feV 4-ev1oy 0 o .„a role a maw. WHOLESALE. W -D MART) are A101N • Ault QUALM( VIA' Saxb4 a.atra110. ]•tenet- qe ) l({'� �,�3t(�(J! 1 �1+if lflj �� e, 1J VIo i i ° Moo PANTS, Krt)OKERS, OVERALLS, 8MO01(0. &O, Ask your dealer for these goods. BEST EVER. LD- DARLING 00MPAMY,: L21tlT0b, Vane11V0, c., 13 Q " r Lifl6tfifly The Dawson O I SIO 0r 9 'P®31��To, Can handle your APPLES, PEACHES, PEARS, PLUMS, ORONO, POULTRY (dead or alive) BUTTER, *1009, U01EEY, to good advantage. Let us' have your consignmento, 1t will pay you. Stumps end pole on application. There are 400 sorts of humming birds known to naturalists, They aro found only in America A firm of Dublin photographers took a portrait photograph a few years ago that was practically life- size. It measured 64 inches by 33 inches. Board's Liniment for sale everlr+rhere The total income of Oxford Univ. r tl erity is about £110,000, and of Cam- bridge 2350,000. Stops (ne c'onea and works oB• Ilse ('old Laxative Bror no-Qldnino Tablets curd a cold in ono lay. No Cure, No Pay, Price. 25 cent:. A square mile in the rich river vat- legs of China will support 3,480 per- sons. IN 001N0 TO NEW YORK The yearly bill for novels supplied: .to the library of the French Cham- ber of Deputies is usually between $4,000 and $4,500: Monkey Brand Soap makes coppes like gold, tin like silver, crockery, like marble, and windows like crystal. The French Comethe Francaise is the only theatre which pensions its actors and actresses. After 20 years' service they receive $1,000 a Year. Mieard1 s Liniment Cures res Bandruff, The barometer rises higher ail Irkutsh, in Siberia, than anywhere else in the world. • rotonestionernotswonnownsonwenestwanowanovirowrootnecemt Take the Lehigh Valley Railroad Messrs. C. C. Richards R: Co. route of the Black Diamond Express. lGentlemen, My daughter 13 years Everything strictly first class. I old, was thrown from a sleigh: and Sumptuous Dining Car Service, a la !injured, her elbow so badly it re - carte. Through Pullman, For I raainod stiff and very painful for three years. Four bottles of MIN - ARDS LINIMENT completely cured her and site has not been troubled for two years. Yours truly, J. B. LEVESQTJE:, St, Joseph, P,Q,, Aug. 18, 1000. tickets, Pullmans, time of trltihe, nod further particulatrs, tall at Grand Trunk ticket office or on itto'bt. S. Lewi'a, Passenger Agent, 33 Yonge street, Board of Trade build- ing, 'Toronto. The longest race ever run on stilts took place from Bordeaux in 1893. The distance is 303 utiles. Fur 0rrr 51'ety seam. AV 00.8 own Watt -Teem 0011050. -• Nei 1Vinslo Soothing Syrup has been used for ever six,= Friers by mill bens el mothers for their children wh teething, with perfect LIMON,h soothes .the Wild, toitehs the gems, alloys all pain, cures, wind collo, and ietha best moody for Diarrhoea. Is pleseent to the taste. Sold by druggists In e1.01.1 port of rho weed. Twenty -Aro coats 010111,,, Its value is incalculable. He sure and ask for AIrs, Winslow 5 Soothing Syrup, end take no other kind. The New Zealand apteryx is the only existing bird which is without wings, Mlnard's Liniment relieves Neuralgia The 33 biggest landowners in Bri- tain possess,- on an average, 183,000 acres each, To I MMRRE A. COLD I9- EYY'r, DAY, °Take. Laxalhe Bra= Qldnhro Tablets. All drum. Nem re:unu the money it ,t. 0,11, to aura E, W. a ovos stoostnre iron snob box. 210. Tho malting of wooden shoe pegs yearly y c P exhausts the product t of 3- 500 acres of timber, THE MANY ADVANTAGES offered passengers bound for Buffalo and New York by the Grand Trunk's fast "Nein York Express." leaving TorOnto 6.15 ) m. daily, aro seen at a glance when the splendid equip moot is considered. A full dininf car service until Niagara Falls ft reached, a cafe parlor car running through to 11118alot and one of Pull- man's finest sleeping cars from To ronto to Now York guarantees pa trans comfort and luxury as well n: speed. '1'he caro and dining cars an acknowledged to be the handsomest in America, being electric lighted and equipped with electric fans. City office, northwest corker Icing and Yonge streets.. Thu 'Taliput palm of Ceylon has leaves which aro sometimes 20 feet long. and IS feet broad. KinardI s. Liniment. Cures Burns etc, Brussels has' a church clocic wound up by atmospheric expansion induc- ed by the heat of the sun. ° WABASH RAILROAD During the months of September and October, will sell one tray see, and class tourist tickets at greatly reduced fates to California, Wash. ingten, ()vegan, Utah, Montana, British Celunabia and other Pacific Coast points, Tickets will be sold via all direct routes, '.Uhe Wabash is the 'shortest, Best and quickest route : from. Canada to the abovd points. Finest equipped 5assenge1 trains' in, America,. Rates, time -tattles and all parti- eiders from any ticket agelit, or J. A, Richardson, Diet. Passenger .Agent, N. le, Corner ICl/1g E Yonge Sts,, Toronto, and St, ')'hones, eStat.,, ,YanYeca'ttm`rm®aaw. Yellow is Ole only 'flower color which is not chanted by the Slimes of sulphurous acid, THE M08T. POPULAR DENTIFRICE°, CALVERT5S CARBOLIC TOOTH POWDER. 50000rvee the teeth. Sweetens the breath. strengthens the gums. ENGLISH SPAWN LINIMENT removes all hard,'solt or calloused Lumps -- end Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Ring Bone, Sweeny, Stifles, Sprains, Sore and Swollen Throat, Coughs, etc. Sere 550 by tine of eve bottle, War- ri rated the most wonderful Blemish Curo over known. 5011) by all druggists. YOUR OVERCOATS and faded Saito wmtld look better dyad. If no agent of ours in your town, write direct Montreal, Box 135. E01T155 AMERICAS' DYEING 00. prate. To scud for our Sheet Music C so ee and 18 ^7. •5 3' ` 3 'Special Rates,, (Vo are equippped to supply 00005' Music .Teacher in Canada. TE WHALEY, ROYCE CO, 11,11n!tsd 306 Main Street, 158 Yonge (31,sne1;, WINNIPGO, MAN. TOR0;t1 ..:Orta`. 16llUM0ll1 ar`rcnslIOlsioi 6unau.Sw,su V, Stock Uerkoe and Celt Pohang, /adiei4.51 en ogee trate 11,000,niel. tree Y1rcl oils* .r one in ter Wel 11rltw rM d Wangle rata ISA ll!s5oi„9sor 117ra,Cenaa n.o.11, rot ill. ySaUHU 801QUTe8, Vatrgan,10.5, V, e. p^�•f�pw,U•q �.�s:Lm.eg ate , a .a-*1'ni.C+' al -F".{4..6 :Ille]16fOr3EM :1ti° —07 USING -- Standard American W else —AND --- Sarnia lamp rill. Wholesale Only. NF YOLERI ROSES 5•PREB.T.Cli3'lT E9T0. Dominion Lista Steamtltip> Msntreol to IJnrpool. tooter! to User- =I.. Portland is Lirsrpeel, Vin Quatno. Low Im gao and )lest Sbaaeo1n s, Nuyarinr nsnanmtedntilnr fee tarektrest ofpa,seaserit auluont and 5tnteraa ahs &Mla).Llpo, Spaniel attsnNcs had been given to f a Secant 0 eon gee 'ltir' - �y s of d l d 01.10 hnaaply to any Yyy fananaemic.Coor,aod all paMiaalnrs, apply to any agptSll of the CoYI)fory, or Riehardo Nino 5 oe, D. TTortonae k 00., es 77 stalt., Bottor. Montraal and l ertlan44 WOOlb R PHUT . O �NCri2AI 11146 �. L.JONIEs ENG.C9 -1 55 Say- 5lriatIet—•1014303(