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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1897-11-04, Page 10r able, but if it snows or tains and the air is chilling, the animals should be given stable protection. It is also important that the stable should not be too warm in winter. A temperature of 40 degrees is it very satisfactory one. When it is as high as 60 degrees in the barn, stock turned from this into it freezing atmosphere to water, are very, apt to be severely chilled and take. cold. If the stable is at 40 degrees, animals are not so easily chilled when turned from the stable. Every stable should have it tberinotino- ter as aglide in keeping the tempera- ture of the room as uniform as possi- ble. A Manure Shed. Four Pennsylvania fanners express themselves concerning manure sheds r`- in the columns of The Rural New Yorker. A correspondent from Belle - Ville believes that rhe practice of keep- ing manure under cover is a good one. His experience with stable manure onvinceq him that the uncovered manure pile is a source of loss to the Sa3tl farmer. A farmer writing from Chester coun- ty tells that almost All the bank burns in southeastern Pennsylvania now k have, au "oversbot" for straw above $ and shelter for stock and manure It below. Another correspondent in Chester county heard from said: "There P; need be no question Fkout tine value of a large shed at the h, r the pro- tection of the manure and stock. If there is no shed, the cows ought to be kept in the stable most of the time, and the manure hauled to the field its : fast as made. Hauling manure in win- ter through snowdrifts or rain and soft ground is not it good practice for this .f latitude. The very best plan is to have sufficient shedding to corer all manure wheeled frorn the stables, with some t open yards besides." From Northampton county came the a following: . Manure such as generally seen in the barnyards of Pennsylvania, composed of straw, refuse stover and all stable cleanings, will require the ordinary rainfall to keep it at a proper moisture I for decomposition. A roof would he detrimental to this class of manure. 1, However, there should be great care �. that no water -frons roofs or tiny other t source hetc 11 w d , a o e run on or ri leech h through it. Manure composed mostly of stable droppings, if to be kept it length of time, can be kept tinder cover it kept moist with water, or stable drainnge ; if not keep :at the proper moisture; it is fru• better to pile in a compact heap outside. A covered harnyard invites an un- profitable condition to the farm. It �.. should never be the question how to store manure, but how to apply it, always remembering that manure is worth more when first made than it will ever be worth again and should be applied direct fro t the stables or at the earliest possil e time when it can he utilized. The strawstack should not be a fea. tore of the barnyard, a .rd, as straw has 'e commercial and feed value in excess of the manurial value and should he util- ized in the most, profitable way. In- -stead of covering the barnyard, where the ultimate object is profiF, it would i. be advisable to build a shed and buy potash, phosphoric acid and nitrogen ri fie commercial f rm and nix espec- ially for each crop o sm uppl ent the s manure, and the p oflt wll be a real. j ity. TO CURE CATARRH Do not depend on snuff), inhalants or other local applications. Catarrh is a constitutional disease, and can be suc- cessfully treated only by,means of a Constitutional remedy like Hood's Sar- saparilla which thorougghly purifies the blood and removes the scrofulous taints which cause catarrh. The great number of testimonials from those who have been cured of catarrh by Hood's Sarsaparilla prove the un- equalled power of this medicine to con- quer this disease. If troubled with Catarrh give Hood's Sarsaparilla it fair trial at once. Mr. Fisher, Minister of Agriculture, does not believe in enforcing the tuber culosis test. His idea is to educate the farmer up to seeing that it is to his advantage that tuberculosis in cattle should be stamped out. DESPISE NO MESSENGER, In a great monarchy no subject ca fell what other roan may or may not be a messenger from the king. Angel of mercy seldom carry harps and arrive amidst radiant light and a vas flapping of wings. It may be a little child who shall brim yon the longed - for good news or, as in the case of Nirs, Charlotte Davis, it may be a quiet old lady who drops in to make an ordinary friendly call. And help was badly needed, as it always is when pain and illness crush these frail bodies of ours as the rushes bend and how before the swollen stream. Refert ing to the old lady's call Mrs. Davis draws aside the curtain from an experience of the summer of 1878. She sa$'s: "I fell into a condi- tion that was strange and new to me. I didn't know how to account for it, not, could I tell what it was going to lead to. I had always A bard taste in the mouth, and was constantly retch- ing and spitting up a soar fluid. The sense and feel' • o it were horrible. NLIy appetite faaifecl until food had no attraction Fur ine. F. 'en after taking the least trlorsel I bac great pain at the chest •Ind curler the shoulder blades, But the compiaint seeuned to be seated more particularly in the stomach. There the pain was very keen :and violent. Sometimes it felt like a knife cutting me asunder. I got no rest day or night, and was confined to my bed for weeks together. In as much As I could take no solid nourish - went I grew weaker and weaker as the weary titre dragged by. Indeed my only food was nnilk and soda water," ' [We clay remark at this point Chat. Alts. Davis's entire digestive systern was, at the time she speaks of, danger- ously deranged. The failure of the appetite was a signal indicating that the presence of food in the stomach could not by tolerated. As it could not be digested it would only serve Aggravate the inflatumation which raging there. Such A state of things is bad its possible. The very source of all power and life was virtually par- alized. We must eat in order to live, and yet—in $uG,yh a case—to eat is only to invite suffering c n rte addi ii t tl ha sufferrn an , d to hid for a more speedy death. Hence the terror of that ailment, which some silly people (&rho have never had it) speak of its "only an attack of indigestion And dyspepsia." Would they allude' to au inhabited dwelling wrapped in flarnes as "Only a house on fire?"] Mrs. Davis, and plenty of others Whom we know, are :able to rebuke that addlepated sort of talk. [Very likely. Gall stones are com- posed of bile sand, which is carried into the gall bladder and then adheres until the larger stones tare massed or formed. The bile has stagnated, owing to the poisons of the liver, until this dangerous complication results. In other words, gall stones mean bil- iousness, and biliousness means indi- gestion and dyspepsia. But. let us listen again ti) the lady: "I lay in great aggony," she says, "week after week, dmring which time I passed two gall stones. The doctor's treatment gave me no relief, and what I suffered for over a year is indescrib- able. One day an old 1wly called at my holuse, and seeing my condition, strop - C urged me to take Mother Seigel's ( urative Syrup. I staid, 'Yes, of course, I'll take any thing that will help me.' After the first bottle I passed it third stone, but this time with- out pain. I kept on with the syrup and was soon as well as ever. Since that time, now fourteen years ago, I have kept in good health and perfectly free from my old ailment. 1 will answer inquiries from any sufferer. Yours, &c. (Signed) Charlotte Davis, 8, Edithna Street, Stockwell, London, September 27th, 1803." "The first bringer of welcome news," says Shakespeare, hath but a losing office." Quite true but the messenger who tells of help and rescue wins a better place in our memory. Does he not? Yes, says allof us. }i it:^ vy Men, of a. I Exchange Echoes. The Huron News -Re. -.ora A SAVAGE CUSTOM. 1 26 a Yoar-01.00 Advance Wichita, Kan., Nov. 3.--A courier, just arrived from the Kiowa and Cant Dr. Wells, in slaking an examina I tion of the Carter -Bell ac9tylene ga, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 11th, 1817. anche Indian reservation, brings news of the horrifying self-destruction generator, in the local ofllce of the I company, on Upper Wyndham street sometimes if some people really know of Mawsookawam, An aged Indian woutau, who, following out the tradi- Guelph, about eleven O'clock thii morning, was badly burned about flit ... . 1St PI'1Zt3 $200.00 .... .... 200.00 The Protection of Live— tiers is her tribe, dressed herself in her and, throwing face• the agoq ent, he generator A. Neltes theecdoctort which come to its, come to us by pure 3rd Prize50.00 ' ' ' ' • • • • 50.00 richest apparel, bet -self across the fire in the tepee, examine the mte or. At recognize this. No act of kindness, Z Prizes of .... 15.00 each , ... 54.00 in Winter. 5 Prizes of .... 10.00 each ' ' ' ' 50.00 slowly burned in two. This its he dict aG an explosion occurred arc I the blaze Sew in Dr. Wells' face. Hit Stock -----�-- in human nature in some cases. A $500.00 to be the way that Comanche the Indians who believe they have out, + eyebrows and eyelashes were burner - lived their usefulness have from the I tiff, his moustache singed and his fact Director C. S. Plumb, Indiana Experiment remotest times sought release from life's rhe woman tuy badly scorched. Mr. Nelle& roes also alightly burned. The accident wai Station. Food is fuel to the animal body. It cares. a ecl gather- ed together her children and grand- caused through a burning jet not hay. ing been turned off before the top wan re uires mute fuel to keen u steam in ba oiler when the weather is intensely children and told them she had decid- ed upon death by fire and they assist- removed from the generator. Fortum ately for Dr. Wells he closed his eyes cold than it does when it is mild. In ed her in the preparations. She bless- fresh fagots as soon as the explosion took place, the same manner, other things being, ed them all, then platingg equal, it requires more food to sustain ()it the fire,, threw e•selt upon it and Miss Craig, daughter of Mr. Robert l an animal freely exposed to the chill- without a moan allowed the flames to her. Those began to Craig, of For us, who was some timE ing Masts of winter, than it does for consume present I ago appointed successor to Miss Neil. one given protection. chant a death song. The tent caught f son as head nurse in the Galt Hospital, In experiments conducted at the fire and burned up. Quanah Parker, has entered upon he• duties in that Indinua station, milch cows exposed to all sorts of weather in winter but head chief of the Comanches, was roti- fled two days later by a traveller who institution. Miss Craig was arnone those who graduated from the Toronto: provided with night shelter made aa sed that way and tound the .char- General Hospital last week as trained very unfavorable showing as compared red body of the old woman in the sun. He it to be it decent nurses, and stood first in the class of This highly with those given the shelter of the caused given graduates. speaks very of Stable, excepting for a brief airing when the weather was suitable. The burial, and was so incensed against the children for allowing the outrage that Miss Craig's abilities in that direction, It may also be stated that Miss Bella exposed cows ate the most food, lost be forbade them taking possession of Peters, another Fergus lady, stood slightly in weight and also in milk the property• fifth in the list of graduates referred yield. The sheltered ones gained in to. weight, and otherwise made a better showing than the exposed lot, LA GRIPPE SCOURGE. Another sad death, which occurred in Seaforth since our hast issue wits At the Kansas station, hogs kept in conditions of winter exposure did not BEEN A VICTUM. WI -10S NOT B WHO HAS that of Mr. Ridley McTaggart, who died at his residence in town on Satur- produee pork so economically as these HAS NOT HAD JUST THE EXPERIENCE MR. CURTIS?—WHO MA NOT day, Oct, 231 d. The deceased whogiven reasonable shelter, although tireof same kind of food was fed to each lot. In the feeding HAVE THE RELIEF SOUTH AMERICAN NERVINE AFFORDED HIM? was a native of Nora Scotia, ryas of Highland Scotch parentage. Mr. Me - Taggart his family repotting experiments with steers At tine same station, Prof. a result of a severe attack of with wife and carne to to this town about 10 years ago but Georgeson says that steers, to give the best returns when being fed for beef la rippe I suffered greatly from � prior to.caming Iters lived near Exeter and at one time lived In Waltoh. should he provided with shelter. wee less and loss of appetite. 'saw Death wits caused by blood poisoning. Z'Varin, low, open sheds in the feed Iot testimonials of the curative powers of American Nervine andeter- i N i d d Southwas A sliver catered his hand and nothin comfortable shelter to steers. mined to give it a trial for toy case. thought of the matter until bleu While live stock should be protected P from the inclemency of the weather, it Purchased it and Almo:at immediately poisoning set in, which ended fatally. A widow and famil of rown-u sons y g p is important that the stable should be began to improve. My strength re- turned to me very rapidly. When I and daughters are left to mourn his loss' well ventilated and not too warm, Disease propogates easiest where the had taken three bottles i developed a vigorous appetite. I'am as wellto- Mr. McTaggart was a highly respected citizen, it member of the air is stagnant and impure, hence day as ever f was, and am safe in say- 0huryh of England and a Conservative The interment took special efforts should be wade to keep the stable air pure. Without doubt, ing that, I can attribute it to South American Nervine, and no words of M polities. place Monday to McTaggart's cemetery, Us tuberculosis is more prevalent among tnine in recommending it could be too borne. cattle closely confined in stables where strong." C. J. Curtis, Windsor, Ont. Mr. Barber, the gentleman referred the ventilation is bad, than it is where Witnessed by F. H. Laing, druggist.— to in the following paragraph, which the air is good. Live stock should cer- Sold by Watts & Co. we take from a Manitoba paper, is it tainly be allowed out -door exercise when the weather is utild and comfort- brother-in-law of Mr. George Chesney, f able, but if it snows or tains and the air is chilling, the animals should be given stable protection. It is also important that the stable should not be too warm in winter. A temperature of 40 degrees is it very satisfactory one. When it is as high as 60 degrees in the barn, stock turned from this into it freezing atmosphere to water, are very, apt to be severely chilled and take. cold. If the stable is at 40 degrees, animals are not so easily chilled when turned from the stable. Every stable should have it tberinotino- ter as aglide in keeping the tempera- ture of the room as uniform as possi- ble. A Manure Shed. Four Pennsylvania fanners express themselves concerning manure sheds r`- in the columns of The Rural New Yorker. A correspondent from Belle - Ville believes that rhe practice of keep- ing manure under cover is a good one. His experience with stable manure onvinceq him that the uncovered manure pile is a source of loss to the Sa3tl farmer. A farmer writing from Chester coun- ty tells that almost All the bank burns in southeastern Pennsylvania now k have, au "oversbot" for straw above $ and shelter for stock and manure It below. Another correspondent in Chester county heard from said: "There P; need be no question Fkout tine value of a large shed at the h, r the pro- tection of the manure and stock. If there is no shed, the cows ought to be kept in the stable most of the time, and the manure hauled to the field its : fast as made. Hauling manure in win- ter through snowdrifts or rain and soft ground is not it good practice for this .f latitude. The very best plan is to have sufficient shedding to corer all manure wheeled frorn the stables, with some t open yards besides." From Northampton county came the a following: . Manure such as generally seen in the barnyards of Pennsylvania, composed of straw, refuse stover and all stable cleanings, will require the ordinary rainfall to keep it at a proper moisture I for decomposition. A roof would he detrimental to this class of manure. 1, However, there should be great care �. that no water -frons roofs or tiny other t source hetc 11 w d , a o e run on or ri leech h through it. Manure composed mostly of stable droppings, if to be kept it length of time, can be kept tinder cover it kept moist with water, or stable drainnge ; if not keep :at the proper moisture; it is fru• better to pile in a compact heap outside. A covered harnyard invites an un- profitable condition to the farm. It �.. should never be the question how to store manure, but how to apply it, always remembering that manure is worth more when first made than it will ever be worth again and should be applied direct fro t the stables or at the earliest possil e time when it can he utilized. The strawstack should not be a fea. tore of the barnyard, a .rd, as straw has 'e commercial and feed value in excess of the manurial value and should he util- ized in the most, profitable way. In- -stead of covering the barnyard, where the ultimate object is profiF, it would i. be advisable to build a shed and buy potash, phosphoric acid and nitrogen ri fie commercial f rm and nix espec- ially for each crop o sm uppl ent the s manure, and the p oflt wll be a real. j ity. TO CURE CATARRH Do not depend on snuff), inhalants or other local applications. Catarrh is a constitutional disease, and can be suc- cessfully treated only by,means of a Constitutional remedy like Hood's Sar- saparilla which thorougghly purifies the blood and removes the scrofulous taints which cause catarrh. The great number of testimonials from those who have been cured of catarrh by Hood's Sarsaparilla prove the un- equalled power of this medicine to con- quer this disease. If troubled with Catarrh give Hood's Sarsaparilla it fair trial at once. Mr. Fisher, Minister of Agriculture, does not believe in enforcing the tuber culosis test. His idea is to educate the farmer up to seeing that it is to his advantage that tuberculosis in cattle should be stamped out. DESPISE NO MESSENGER, In a great monarchy no subject ca fell what other roan may or may not be a messenger from the king. Angel of mercy seldom carry harps and arrive amidst radiant light and a vas flapping of wings. It may be a little child who shall brim yon the longed - for good news or, as in the case of Nirs, Charlotte Davis, it may be a quiet old lady who drops in to make an ordinary friendly call. And help was badly needed, as it always is when pain and illness crush these frail bodies of ours as the rushes bend and how before the swollen stream. Refert ing to the old lady's call Mrs. Davis draws aside the curtain from an experience of the summer of 1878. She sa$'s: "I fell into a condi- tion that was strange and new to me. I didn't know how to account for it, not, could I tell what it was going to lead to. I had always A bard taste in the mouth, and was constantly retch- ing and spitting up a soar fluid. The sense and feel' • o it were horrible. NLIy appetite faaifecl until food had no attraction Fur ine. F. 'en after taking the least trlorsel I bac great pain at the chest •Ind curler the shoulder blades, But the compiaint seeuned to be seated more particularly in the stomach. There the pain was very keen :and violent. Sometimes it felt like a knife cutting me asunder. I got no rest day or night, and was confined to my bed for weeks together. In as much As I could take no solid nourish - went I grew weaker and weaker as the weary titre dragged by. Indeed my only food was nnilk and soda water," ' [We clay remark at this point Chat. Alts. Davis's entire digestive systern was, at the time she speaks of, danger- ously deranged. The failure of the appetite was a signal indicating that the presence of food in the stomach could not by tolerated. As it could not be digested it would only serve Aggravate the inflatumation which raging there. Such A state of things is bad its possible. The very source of all power and life was virtually par- alized. We must eat in order to live, and yet—in $uG,yh a case—to eat is only to invite suffering c n rte addi ii t tl ha sufferrn an , d to hid for a more speedy death. Hence the terror of that ailment, which some silly people (&rho have never had it) speak of its "only an attack of indigestion And dyspepsia." Would they allude' to au inhabited dwelling wrapped in flarnes as "Only a house on fire?"] Mrs. Davis, and plenty of others Whom we know, are :able to rebuke that addlepated sort of talk. [Very likely. Gall stones are com- posed of bile sand, which is carried into the gall bladder and then adheres until the larger stones tare massed or formed. The bile has stagnated, owing to the poisons of the liver, until this dangerous complication results. In other words, gall stones mean bil- iousness, and biliousness means indi- gestion and dyspepsia. But. let us listen again ti) the lady: "I lay in great aggony," she says, "week after week, dmring which time I passed two gall stones. The doctor's treatment gave me no relief, and what I suffered for over a year is indescrib- able. One day an old 1wly called at my holuse, and seeing my condition, strop - C urged me to take Mother Seigel's ( urative Syrup. I staid, 'Yes, of course, I'll take any thing that will help me.' After the first bottle I passed it third stone, but this time with- out pain. I kept on with the syrup and was soon as well as ever. Since that time, now fourteen years ago, I have kept in good health and perfectly free from my old ailment. 1 will answer inquiries from any sufferer. Yours, &c. (Signed) Charlotte Davis, 8, Edithna Street, Stockwell, London, September 27th, 1803." "The first bringer of welcome news," says Shakespeare, hath but a losing office." Quite true but the messenger who tells of help and rescue wins a better place in our memory. Does he not? Yes, says allof us. }i it:^ vy Men, of a. y o SeaForth. Mr. Bar be• is located near Killarney, in the Turtle Moun- tain district, slid his many friends will be pleased to learn of his fortunate s escape from such an unenviable pre- dicament. The paragraph reads : Mr. Will. Barber, of Lenin, while going from his farm on Saturday last, to Mr. R. Church's brick kiln, stew sowethingg rustling among the bushes in a. bluff near by, and naturally being inquisi n tive, drove up. He alighted from the t wagon and immediately a large lynx Angels sprang at him from among the small trees. Being an ofd hunter, Mr. Bar- t bet- immediately perceived his danger and dodged to one side, leaving one of the horses as a mark for the lynx. The long clawed animal hung for some minutes to the neck of the horse and in the meantime Mr. Barber took it plank from the wagon box and took the offensive side of the case. He somewhat stunned the animal with the first blow,, and the young grey hound which accompanied him, kept the attention of the Ivux white he dealt the kuoek out blow with the plank. When held up by the hind legs the animal measured over seven feet in•length. Mr. Skinner, having failed to carry out his agreement to install An electric light„ plant and supplyAlie town of Listowel with seventeen or More arc lights of 1500 candle power at $45 each per annum, the Council, at the meet- ing held on Alondaay evening of Last week, decided to accept the proposi- tion made by NV. H. Green, of NVinv- hann, which is to put in an electric light plant and light the town with twenty-three torr lights of 2,000 candle power, at $91,48 each, which is equal to $1,000 per annum. If there was any reason to doubt that the town would have been well lighted bad Mr Skinner gone on with his contract, with, the six additional lights and the increased candle power-, there can be little room to question] the efficiency of the pro. posed lighting contract, if carried out. As Mr. Green has the reputation of being a square and upright business man, and who has had considerable experience in electric lighting, it is Altogether probable that the present electric light scheme will go through and that the town will have electric light by the date agreed upon—the llth December. An event unique in the educational history of the Province will be observ- ed in Toronto, on Oct. 31st and Nov. 1st and 2nd, when the semi -centennial i or ubile c f t establishment e he of the J Normal School will be commemorated. The programme in connection with the exercises is of it most interesting character, including addresses from the leading educationists of the prov- ience, reminiscences by foriner mem- hers of the staff, and unveiling of por- traits of the old principals of the school. C. A. Barnes, B. A., Inspector for East Larnbton, has been selected to deliver, the address in connection with tine unveiling of the portrait of Rev. Dr. Davis, who was principal when Mr. Barnes attended the Normal in 1864. Gradut s of the fatuous school, from all—sfttiorls of the Donnin- ion, will he ill al.tendance many of whom are filling positions of influence and responsibility with credit to them- selves and their alma mater, CARE OF THE COMPLEXION. It is a well known fact that it torpid liver produces it sallow hue and a (lull Yellow cornplexinn. You need not ex - Mt a clear beautiful complexion if the blood is rendered impure by a sluggish i.ction of the liver, which cannot pro- perly perform its function of purify - ng and filtering all impurities of the blood. Ladies, Dr. Chase's Kidney - Liver Pills if an invaluable retnedy, for by their action on the liver and blood they promote true beauty by render - ng the blood pure. This is the secret. The report that Mr. C. R, Devlin, immigration agent in Ireland, pro- poses to resign and return to Canadian politics, is denied by his father, who has just creme back from Ireland. Sir Donald A. Smith has formally decided that his new title will be Lord Stratheona, seen worth while tocgive thanks for vy Men, of THE APPRECIATIVE AN K " $5OOoOOIN GOLD t r "On cosy hand one bearsars ofof the -lett ti l net to say 'thank you,"' writes price t Eri`vard W. Bok uu "The saying of is $10. If i f 'Thankdies' You,"' in the November � I Ladies' Horne Journal. "I wonder 2O PRIZES. sometimes if some people really know winner can how little of what comes to them is their due and right, and how much of ... . 1St PI'1Zt3 $200.00 .... .... 200.00 what comes to them is by favor and The majority of things 2nd Prize .... 100,00 • • • • 100,00 courtesy. vast • • .. which come to its, come to us by pure 3rd Prize50.00 ' ' ' ' • • • • 50.00 favor, by courtesy. And we should • ... recognize this. No act of kindness, Z Prizes of .... 15.00 each , ... 54.00 however slight should go unnoticed. A 'thank you' is a simple thing to say; 5 Prizes of .... 10.00 each ' ' ' ' 50.00 it requires but a few moments to write it, but it often means touch; it means 10 Prizes Of .. 5.00 each 50.00 everything sometimes to the person receving it. It means a renewed faith -----�-- in human nature in some cases. A $500.00 word of thanks is never lost, never roasted. If it sometimes seems to be To the Twenty people who solve this Puzzle, if there are so many correct, lost upon the person to whom it is we will give the above Prizes IN CASH. directed, its expression has not been lost upon some one else who has heard it. It is certainly not lost upon our- WITH YOU SEND N O MONEY ANSWER. R selves. The most of us are quick enought to thank someone who does us great service. But the small court If more then Twenty should be correct Y , every correct one will (in addition esy, just as great as the large service to the Money Prizes) be awarded our famous "Faithful Tini•ekeeper Silver in reality, we overlook. It doesn't „ seen worth while tocgive thanks for vy Men, of small things. And yet what would which the net we be to -day, and where would some factory of its be but for the small courtesies of price life? They are what make life worth is $10. If living. pefered, the t,* It is all very well to have the each winner can last Thursday of November set apart as a day of Thanksgiving. But choose& genu - it would far better if a gre'.tt many of us carried the spirit of the day into all ine Gold• the other days. Perhaps if we did so eased Watch we .night have more mercies to be of the same thankful for on Thanksgiving Day. * * Do not let the spirit of thanks stop value. at ni,ght•fall on Thanksgiving Day. As this F• , TH • UL A word hero m eaning "true to the Time," Our Proud positdon in the watch Trado. The qualities of our Watches which are acknowledged to be the F• • ST foremost in the English and American Markets. o•here & END,@ � R — A word which means they will last o life -time. Let us extend it to all the other days wonderful offer is only made to advertise our far-famed Silver Watches, every of the year, to the people whose lives y , touch ours. When we receive a favor Competitor must read the following conditions and comply with them. at tire hands of some one, no matter how small it may be, let its say the I. Send your answer on an "International Post- largest amount, and an on. If not more than twenty words, !'hank you. If they should Card" which can be bought at the poet-ofllee (price I win and receive the watch And Chain, and if these be written let Lis write. them. Let ns 2 cents). There is no entrance fee or cha,ge what do net buy anything from the Catalogue, the whole not delay them, but take advantage of ever' of the prize money will. be equally divided among the instant when our heart is tLuched. 2. In addition to the Cash Prizes, everyone who tbem• giving $25 each. All amounts in this sends the correct answer will thereby win one of our advertirement are token at the exchange of $5 to £I. Let there he more thank your said by "Faithful Timekeeper" Silver watches wbich we sell 5, A f,;rm will be sent free to you which must be everybody—thousands of them. And in England for $10 eacb, and which could be cold oiled up ani forwarded to reach us by December 25th the world will be, a better, brighter retail in America for $15 to $28 eacb, of all Goods ordered on account of thee Prizes. and happier place to live in because of 8. Every winner of the Watch is required to pur- 6. The names and addressees of the cash prize them." eha•e one of our 8PLENDIa VALUE inexpensive Solid winners will be printed in the Times, Daily Tel.- Silver Albert Chains to wear with the Watch, as per graph and Standard, of London, on Dec. $let next, our unprecedented offer which we will send. These and subsequently in the Neta York lfearld. Drafts chains are 11all-marked on every link by the for the Prizes will be posted same day. ice In cream. En fish Government. If the same Watch is required 7. Write your name and address in fall every Witt G.Ad-filled case instead of Solid Silver, it Chain time you write to us to avoid mistakes. It has been our opinion for many to match may, if desired, be chosen. 8. Orders for these Prizes may be sent in separ- years that it is blotter not t0 put ice in- 4. With our Watch and Chain you will receive our ately.lrom time to time, and you will be credited to cream if it can be avoided, but if it mammoth Catalogue quoting R•bolemle Factory with the total of all when ),on send in the report needs CCOlin,- Prices for Jewellery, Plate, etc. The First Prize will form as above, t0 do s0 with a vibrating be given to the o.ne who solves the Rebus, receives 9. Wben sending Orders please remember that the cooler, of which cold es through the i the watch and Chain, and orders altogether the pipes largest amount of G•onds from the Catalogue • the letter Anso gc en England is 5 Dente, per half ounce, Water Tana. second Prize to the winner who orders the second and if skray'cieut postage is used fire latter is liable W'e do not know that the per cent of to go astray. fat in the cream has much to do with Send you answer at once 4 You are sure to win a Prize if correct, while the quality of the butter, but we know even if not correct it coats you nothing.,, this—thero is less loss in churning rich cream and churning at as low a tem- ADDRESS — perature as it will chum, than fnchurf]- f I ing poorer cream The kat which must be churned h ehmekops Alliance & Ernest Goods Stopes, at a higher temperature. With the poor- er cream there will be more buttermilkLIMITS Incorporated according to Act of Parliament—Capital .990,000 ($/.50,000). than ith the•rfuher cresta, and when tested ivitIA the Babcock tester it will LARGEST ENGLISH WATCHMAKERS, be found to contain fully as great, if iS4 UXR>1-d Street Zondon not a greater, per cent of butter fat.— ■ Board's Dairyman. Cable Address: "CLOCKLIKE, LONDON." Business Established 1885. Did You ever See TO Ilow Careworn Faces can IO be made to look Fresh Reflued And Younger if not try Prof. Dorenwend's A',>, Method. NY 't'� ') See him on his visit to i CLINTON + —AT— �atteuburHouse,- ADDRESS �� � � - Saturday,- Nov, 13, Until 7Thousands owe their good looks to his art and skillful dev;oes. Be has Gentlemen's Wigs and Toupees, Ladles' Wigs, Half Wigs, Baigs, Wavey, \ l`z`e`ub`e' $Witches, &c. It will Any you to sae and have �Ja'V1 uary heGoode tried on, you will thea be able to real- •9 jj j Erne state of your personal appemm�co. oQRF r) WE4 �Rememher at Rattenbury House, ray •` 100P l=E S 198 Clinton, on Saturday, November 13th. Burglars Break a Bank. Airs Valentine, who lives neat., saw three men runningnp the street, but or further than this nothing is known of h b' h t V Ah or Until January 999 Eor $100 rtie News -Record Will be Sent. Teeswater, Ont., Oct. 31,—(Special.)— an four r' lock yester- day three d c c y t day morning the office of Messrs. Gillies and Company, private bankers, of this village, was entered by burg- lars, who blew open the safe and secured more, than $2,M0 in bank bills. The cracksmen, who seem to have been highly skilled professionals, first visited a blacksmith shop, where they secured A sledge hammer, punches, a short crowbar, and other articles. They then l,ried open the out.er door business. h and proceeded to ntsines_. The .ink safe was a brick vault closed by an iron door with combination lock. They knocked the knob off the door, and blew off the lock with gunpowder. The safe within was one with a door of chilled steel, throughout burglar- proof. This was attacked in the most scientific manner, land soon yie)Jed to the skilled manipulations of the mid- night marauders. From the havoc wrought by the charge used to open the safe door it it is supposed that nitro-glycerine was the explosive made use of. The force of the ex}�losiort must have been ter- rible, its the massive door was not, only thrown outwards with terrible, force-, but was fairly ground to pieces. Strange to say, there was not it .nark of drill, punch, lir hammer on any part of the. door. The .nodus oper- andi adhei ing iandi was shown h some soap to the ed es of the door. p The pre- sence of e soap would seem to indi- cate that the cams between the edges of the door and the safe proper had been forced or poured in. Several people sleeping in the vicini- ty heard the first report, but did not realize that anything was wrong, and it was not until about fifteen minutes afterwards, when the second charge went off, that they were thoroughly aroused. Mr. Geo. Colvin then rushed out and gave the hlarm, but the burg- lars had got off safely with their booty. t err num cr, aw t ley got out of town, or anything else concerning P ti rue U to the time f writing . p o no arrests have been made, and it' seems only too probable that the clever bang- lars will get off scott free, LIMB PAINS. CONTRACT RHEUMATISM AND YOU WILL SUFFER UNTOLD AGONIES — USE SOUTH AMERICAN RHEUMATIC CURE AND YOU WILL HAVF. RELIEF IN A FEW MINUTES, ASD A CURE IT THREE DAYS—TESTIMONY PROVES IT. "I was for three years a great suf- ferer from rheurnatisin—pains in my limbs were particulararly distressing. I had tried almost every known rem- edy, but -received no benefit. I was advised to give South American Rheu- matic Came ib trial. I purchased two bottles. When I had used one and it half bottles I was perfectly cured. I consider it, a wonderful remedy, and takes Pleasure in recommending, it." F. Nugent., Niagara Fall,;, Ont —ld by Watts & Co. ---Corot Photocraii by. _ _ -.__— The Chagsagne process of color photo- graphy, which created a small sensation In London last spring, proves to have been greatly overestimated In the first published descriptions. Sir Henry True- man wood, the British expert In photo- graphy,, hoto- Rrn hY.. who vouched for theprocess originally, hits recently publicly acknowl- edged that the process is not an entirely automatic one, as was claimed. "The operator requires to know generallywhat the colors should be, and the results largely depend on his Judgment and skill In applying the color in the right placos." He still believes, however, that a certain amount of the selective absorption" originally claimed for the process dour exist, but finds it difficult to justify himself as to how far the process is pure - Ly mechanical and how fnr it is a mat- ter of skill,—Engineering News,