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The Clinton New Era, 1902-04-18, Page 6Aril 18th, 1102 The Poultry" Yard. selecting While in every„,thmkof.penitry ther are good, bad end indifferent 1ayei, no all poultry -keepers take the trouble t •diseriminete and 84 the egg's of only th .good layers, The points that distinguis a good from an indifferent layer are th increased activity of the former, and eh neually has a smell head and extr bright eye, but these latter points wan a trained eye to detect, Good layers ca be foim4 not only among pure breeds an first crosses, but among ths. ao-edie mongrels, but in every case they are th most active in the flock and the hungr est, which is easily explained by theism that they are often, laying when th others are not, and a laying ben is al ways more eager for food, or at leas -wants more food, than one not laying A very good layer seldom, if ever, my large egg; it is of medium size only and for this reason often getsoverlook ed when eg& are cnosen for setting Some poultry -keepers choose the bigges eggs for this purpose, but the medm sized ones will batch just as fine chick ens as a rule,. The eggs of a good laye should always be set, for her progen All about they Tack Cats on rage 1111 \?. 41$ EALTH Pop the Partner. isonitry `AtIments wee Remedies,. For Roup—Separate the sick from the well, put former in warm, dry quartet*, hijcet camphorated sweet oil into their . nostrila and throat. Give fresh Water and nourishing food. Tbe general health of i For frosted wattles or, combs, prepare woman is inseparably re. a salve of vaseline (one pound), spixite ' lated to the local womanlir of turpentine, kerosene, oil of tart and health,When the del- oil of sassafrae, one sPoonfal erich. cately womanly organisin ,is diseased, the body loses To prevent, egg eatins4' in fowls, make plumpness, the cheeks lose a paste of flour, red pepper, mustard' their roses, and a nervous and water; put into some empty egg and fretful condition be- shells, and place thene. where the hone comes habitual. Thousands of sick women will find them. One Vase is enough. who have been cured of For feather -pulled. fowls, make an oint• diseases peculiar to the inent of lard and sulphur, and rub on sex by the use of Dr. the. bare spots if the feathers have come Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- out because of Parasites.' There i$ no tion have testified to the "positiVe cure", for fowls that pull lea - restoration of the general health when the local dis- titers exeept the hatchet applied to the ease was '...red. What is frequently supposed to be neck. . • "Favorite Prescription" eboiera is nothing more or less than establishes regularity, dries' unhealthy drains, heals in- ' indigestion. It may be caused by feedflatumation and ulceration Mg too concentrated feeds and lack of and cures female weakness. grit and the drinking of impure water. - / Sharp 'rib is a necessity, and oyster o TH LIMAN 11T4W Eg4, are very like y to take after her; a cock erel descended from a good layer is o more value in the breeding -pen than on freem a moderate layer only.—C. D. L. In Farm and Home. • XinfertIle Eggs. It is generally best to set several hen at. the same time, so that unfertile o addled eggs can be thrown out on th sixth or seventh day, and a redistribu tion made of the remainder, giving full supply to each hen as far as the -will go, and leaving perhaps one oz' tw birds with none at all. These eau rer -set again with fresh eggs, and they wil be little or none the were° of the exti•a week's work. • It is always advisable to throw on the useless eggs as seen as their pro ence can be detected. They are simply, taking up space in the nest, and perhan prrrentin,g full justice being done to the -others. It is often possible to pick them out on the fifth day, but .tb97 cap gen erall3r be detected with Certainty on the seventh. The procedure is eittrentely sim ple. Encircle the egg to .be tested be tween the thumb and forefinger, length- ways, and hold up between the 'eye and a gas jet or candle flame. If it is fertile • It will appear to be -quitaopaque, the • air space at the thick end shelving clear- ly against the desk centre;* while, if the egg is =fertile, it will show quite clear • all over. Such eggs as the latter May at 4Thee be thrown out. If the contents seem muddy. and appear to shift as the egg is moved in the hand, very likely it is addled, and may be thrown out also. If there is any doubt as to such an egg it may be replaced in the nest, and re- tested a day or two after. Its true con- dition eau then be ascertained with cer- tainty. If such an egg rattles. when slightly shaken, it is going rotten fasts -6 Farmer and Stock Breeder. , • Brown Eggs and White Eggei. 'Among the many popular fallacies which are prevalent at the present day there is none more common (even to a large extent among educated people) than the belief in the superiority of a brown egg over a white one. It 'is cer- tainly true that a rich -colored brown egg looks more teznpting on the breakfast table than does one of the cream-aolored eggs which are most frequently seen. A cream -colored egg in inost eases is a stale egg—it is a bkown egg that has lo its color to a greater br Rise extent, and with its colors -teas. -ha's gene the blqw, of freshness which is so charactetis -neW-latil ogu-Although,- as a rule, the richly.es'sored brown eggs are firSt Selecto at the morning breakfast table, y•et at the seine time if the white eggls :were of that pure white color which is characteristic of the :Minorca and Leg- horn and the•Andalusittn—that is to say, if they were always of a pure white col- or, not a cre.ainy color -1 ' fancy they *Would be taken up more rapidly. The hotelkeeper Who has to disPlay on his breakfast tables ft number of' eggs would make them look naore attractive if he would only place before his guests eggs which are either absolutely white or rich dark -brown intermingled, But now what is the difference Wean breatqf egg and -a• white •one? Experiments have been tried from time' to time with a view to eomparing the composition of brown egg's and -white ens, and these experimente have reveal- ed the fact that there is absolutely no difference whatever between a brown egg and a white egg id far as their chemical composition is concerned. it is six of one and half a dozen of the ,other, and 'tthe, notion that, because an egg. • is brown • in color,. therefore it is richer ex used four bottles of raver. shells fnriijh it. ite Prescription, and one of , • Golden Medical of writesa stfer:.t, Leg weakness is brou.,ght about large- suer D. Shearer, o Mount ape, tune s Co., Pa. "and can say ti,AL cured of that dread- sometimes caused by improper feeding. rre,,,T,„1,,s whom Rims, 1 ly by an unnatural forcing system. „It is ed disease, uterine t ble. am in better health hick of exercise, lack of variety in foods D OA N KIDNEY P11.100 CluiRC 0AOKAOHE LAME BACK RHEUM AT 16 M DIABETES' BRIGHT'S Diemen DIZZINESS AND A"' KIDNEY & URINARY 01$64064 496 MIRED 9Y IL I • .1 MRS. 1. STBEVES,„Edgett's Land- ing, N.D., writes on Jan.. x8, r9ox 44 In the fair of 1899 I was troubled With a severe pain in the back. mulct scarcely get up out of a chair and it gave me great pain to move about. took one box of Poan's Kidney Pills and was completely cured. 1 have not been troubled with it since." than ever before. nverytme vrho knows Me is 7 • surprised to see me look so well. In June; when dampness and cold. The converse of all r wrote to you, I was so poor in health that at this is the remedy s times X could not walk. You answered my let- -ter and told me what to do, r followed gzsr Colds are prevalent in fowls at this r advice, and to -day ans cured. I tell evez y time of year. Coughing, sneezing and t a with God be 1) Pi ' ci . cured nse. I t ese ew wo s are o any use to • _ - you, you are wekorae to use them. They might • P c e e w i a.. help some other poor suffering womams effectually by putting the fowl in a warm .s Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical place, andsgiving smell doses of castor 1 .r Adviser, too8 large pages, in paper cow. oil, say a scant teaspoonful, Canker la the werse form, kf cold or roup. Give 0, ers, is -&nt free on receipt of 31 one - cent eta .'.. to pay expense of customs water to drink into which a few drops 1 and Mailing Only. Address - Dr. R. 'V. of a solution of copperas has been put, Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. ' ' • Give no hard grails A real case of roup is incurable, and the fowl might as well I be killed first as last. It doesn't pay to ef r•rd Pierce's me nes watery eyes and nostrils are sure nidica- t I The tathent of the Adult. doctor it unless worth its weight in gold, " —Agricola. . • , N one of Dickens's novels—thosS „ • a sured nowadays are not ill the Mr, B. L. Davis, 'Meshoppen• Penn., I - has been brought him, because "it's a Farmer :-- e / • .... - / --., -.;;:::-.::.:::. novels which we are tearfully as- Turkeys 'For Profit. - leait funny—an ungrateful brick - maker. rejects the little volume •witich Ow Writca t The New York T ibtul re.o- . s -------74:4Vc. . book lit for a balky, and I'm ,not a I have been fairly successful in rais-- . •• s .S. . - babby. If you was to leave me a .doll, ing turkeys for •profit, and this is My *-- a.", Ai': s. t4:S' .. - I shouldn't nusa it " method : I raise my .own hens* keeping 'Heron/1th le a sketch and deserip. lion of the device illustrated tor oil. trig the fellooe of a wagon wheel t� prevent shrinkage,. It le simply a nor( br°oNfttomcas, ytr°41tigliesireelw4theurvae,e°11wfadtht or length, supported on legs near each 'end. The trough is partly filled with oil, a small fire kindled under it, with due precautions to prevent igniting the, oil. When the oil IS sufficiently WO Something of this unchastened spirit from four to six; and •always selecting .stirs within our 'frilddle-aged hearts ' the finest specimens,' I never mate them when we read a modern Story, _or see a • akiii,•blit purchase the finest bronze gob modern play. It Is probably the nicest b ler I can get,. keeping him until two kind of a story, and the nicest kind of years old. 'When it is time, for them to a Play, and if we were only fent teen begin laying, which is usually about instead of forty, or alfteen: instead of' April 1, I watch them 'carefully, as they fifty, We should thoroughly enJey them , F.Cro very 'sly about hiding their, neste; - both. Nothing is better Calculated to °make' Us regret our lost. youth than lic- .tnit they are never lousy .if perniitted to thin and the drama EtS they exist to- a? a?. I gather the eggs every day, day. With what glorious emotions we • marking each one With date keeping in • : should have dilated in childhood over a Cool .place and turning twice a week. • ..Mr. Crockett's • desperate brigands, si. I 'do not keep them longer than four Miss ,tOhnston's dauntlese heroes. HON ,'weelii before Setting. I, have lettraed by we should ,have steeped, ourselves—lig- , experience that June is the month for uratively speaking—in gore, and re-, ' tlirkeys, the .Weather being 'dry and veli.ed in romance, s Siollian outlaws, ''‘Vittin, • which . is essential for theni; s_ noble Indians, cruel half-breeds, court. 1 I do not allow •them to set the Bret iy villaine and heroines 01 Wild, ints, time they are broody.- They break up earthly beauty—time was when these easily and will begin laying Within • ten things niade our Pulses jump. But now days. ••When the turkey wanta to set seventeen murders_ exelte. us less than ; the second thne, I fix the nest careftilly, gpe, and duels are no longer the thrill-. giving her eighteen 'eggs, covering sonie ing-, eiffsodes they were In the happy brush over ti, r t t f • . . .past, It is hard to grow old, and it Is the same tizne set a hen On itine eggs„ ,. ' made harder by the fad that •isoroods. , giving all the pohlts to the Mother Um- .. -eave one's 'family doctor, has anything , key. They hatch in twenty-eight daytt to offer to age. We should still like. and Must not be disturbed, while hatch - even' at forty :or fifty, to. be amused, hi& hilt nobody caters to our amuie.ment. I . When the ponits are tv*Penty-four hours When a veteran actor like Mr. Drew— 'old•remove them carefully from. the nest . who Ought to si.Inpathise with adults-,- so as not to injure them (ler they. are . entertains us with a drama that calla very tender or frighterr the mother, and • 0441,0 MiYar the school playsof happy in- eertainly have been written by Miss. nay, and the last act of Which -must: s. frora three boards -712 inches in width and • thein in A triangular • pen ,Inade 14 feet in length, placed in the orchard, Edgeworth, we.feel that we Are Indeed where they will get the morning aim' and friendless in-the.e.vening.ot ,our tiyas:_ ,. z. the -shade d.uring the -hottest -part of the: It is cold comfort to be told, that the . day. I feed the mother corn or buck- - drama is intended for the •debutante, heat. night and moroing, and the little and the noVel.for, her younger brothers iv, turkeys stale' bread :soaked until soft in And sisters. :It is even less 'agreeable, to hear it hinted that if We do not like sweet Milk, with a 'dash Of ,blaelt pepper these pure and wholesome perform- every __other day. I squeeze_ the bread . ances, It is because we want somethihg dry, surly putting down a little at a time evil. Does nothing, then, °interest" the on 11. clean board, aml taking care not to adult save sin? Are bankers; •and brew- feed to much, as it will cause bowel ere, anxious mothers and hard-working • • trouble. 1 spinsters indifferent to all but woe While in the pen 1 feed them four I. Must we either frolic like lanaluz—beiose times a day—at 5 o'clock in the:inornitig,, I iambs no ionger—or devote tousilierves at 10, at 2 and at 7 in the elierting, Slip- . issues, eri ou sinott° Wthboel I Teurnettmripoolorutaan? t.Lyiefte dhArs. spwilentg mihieilkn awnidth‘'cviastzselizeda.tegshteilinIse,tpurie s i ' connected with hive -making of any keep them in the .pea until they are :kind......Marissmiddlesaged snetz--desire .strosig 'enough to jump out, yvhich will, many things besides their nelgiibinir ?Win from ten days to two weekii; After' wives: Women—middle-aged women— this feed mostly cornbread in the same . .are sometimes strangely ,inSifferent to , Way as the White. Ina only twice 'a day their neighbors' husbands., We may be I -'-early in the morning and in the eVen- pure*Of heart,. yet Unable to take plea- Ing—and•letsthemsVOAM at will; but if ' sure in "The Old Homestead" or "Bed they are not at their .feetling 'place -14 5 Bur." We may be *virtuous And Intel- o'clock T 'hunt them up, as I always feed -,ligerit adults. Wili. no one write novels . sis he same place. They soon learn and plays for us? --Agnes Bepplier in • fe." • . • • to 6 of themselves. As they grow ban one which is white in color, is an absurdity. The same -thing applies to the color of the yolk; a dark yolk is no better than a pale .yolk SO far as nutri- tive properties are concerned. It is perfectly true that the flaVor of yolks varies considerably, but that depends upon the manner iii' which fowls are fed, und also upon the conditions under Which they are kept, and it. has no bear - Ing whatever upon the richness or other - :Wise of the yolks from ,rilittetie point 'of view. The reason why some eggs are brown in color While others are white is simply this, that in certain breeds—gen- erally speaking, thOzle which are known tte the Matte breeds—the carbonate of lime whiph is deposited through their blood to form the egg shell is pink -col- , UAW, whereas in other breeds it la white, and wherever Asiatic blood is pres- ent the egg calor is dark proportionat. ly—that is to say, that a fowl with only a tineture of .Asnatie bleod in He veins will lay a slightly tinted egg, whereas one that has more Asiatic blood in her Veins will lay a darker egg, and so on. That is not an absolutely fixed rule, but - that is the drift of it.- The color of the eggs a hen lays depends really upon her pedigree. The same principle applies to the Mar of the yolk. The color of the yolk is due to 4 pigment, and is depends ent, as I have already geld, upon. the feeding and general conditional of living, and to Some extent upon the hereditary tendency also. Petniere would find it advantageous US have several times previously said in these eolamhs) to Stint produeing Very white and very dark brown cggs— In to the indefinite assort - meet colore„we neueriv see in an egg basket. The appearance is so much bet- ter.—W'. lereeman, In Perm an %me. , . . rereletent ruiners In Loudon affirm that tber,'"cominee budget Will include 811 Iniport duty of threeperlee per hurt. dred On grain and fivepenee on flour, • -14teye Oa cough ti trite et( the Oeld texativeyilronio-lOttinine Tableto sure a 'Cain one days litt0a0 Ito Pay, Otte. eetittit older I give crushed oyster shells in •‚• place"a eggshells, 'When ten weeks old t Turning Smoke.Into Goldthey Will need feed only evenings. ,. • 'STEEN 10L174.1MTH og England was ,not a 'thoroughgoing spins- ! ter, for she had so little preiu. 'ewe against the praotiee of stneking that she per•roitted Sir Walter Raleigh his pipe In the re:urea presence. She was sufficiently a woman, however, to twit h'„in apenly on hes devotion to the weed, and4t--Was-on-ene-of-these-oecasis,..— . or so the author .of "The Soverane „HerbeS ehrewdly aunnalses-..that thf knignt replied: can asture Tour Majesty that X haVe, so well eXperieneed the nature 'of It that lean tell even the weight of the smoke in any quantity I consume." "1 doubt It Imileh, Sir Waite,," replied Elizabeth, :holding trt wen Impossible to Weigh smoke, and =whelp scenting a „ joke, "and /' will wager you twenty gold angels that ion do not solve nil' doubt," Gallantly aceepting the wager, R.s: Isigh tilted his pipe With a weighed quantity 01 tobaoco, smoked lit out, and then, weighing the 'resultant ashes, an. flounced the Weight he had smoked eattItY. , "'VOW Maieety-canitot deny that the difference hag disappeared 1n smoke.", "Truly, X eannot," an ered the Queen, Orderinglthe Wage to be paid. 'She, hulled to .the tourtietra around her , and said; alchemists bitvo heard of Who turned gold Inta,Ottleke, but 1alets-1i Is the Anat stsho has tuthed embkiz into gold," • unDroAtt stuntion AVVAlelOBti. It hinot more than half * &minty ago that 0161614ns oonsidefed a surgical °pert ation with its risk, expense and rain as the only ante tor pike, Towle) it is only the out of date doctors that think of ouch. treatment,. It le (noel and extravagant tooperate for a digettee which is fee n ore eerteinly aimed by tho applicetio, of Dr °bete& Olutineet. You iney in okenticel, but for peeof you ere referred to tens of Ithoseande ot estees that h eve been mired by this fairioue preparation, . How Long te NeeP the Dater COW* The answer. is short to the question, "ilow long should a dairy cow be kept?" Keep the cow only so long as she pays a gratifying profit. If no record Is kept of profit 'a,nd loss on. the farm, neither man nor beast will get credit for services rendered, kivery aniniAl should have a ledger standing account. Even justice to Mart and beast alike is honorable The farmer's methods in bookkeeping are not always commended by expert ac- coUntants. Business densanda system, and that system must be correct. When the leaf is turned over in correct. book- keeping, the profitless live stock will be got rid of at the earliest possible mo- ment, Profitless stock is the heaviest tax the farmer, dairyman and breeder la lrnperlously called upon to pay. _ „e tax on real estate in comparielen is only a feather weight in the balance. The fannies son ?should be sent to a business college, if only for three nionths. The ' investment Will pay 5 good interest for life. . IIt Is more than probable that men Who keep no, profit and lose on stock hair() mortgages to pay interest on—that perpetual source of anitoyanCe, No man of. fine feelings lives as long .Or is SO happy Mader the drain of interest pay- ing as he who Is free from debt. Small incomes pay Off debts toe slowly for Mud joy. Pottstown without debt is ennobling to manhood, and a riel mine Of happiness for the liome. Milk the COW only so long as she is profitable, then quickly turn her Int°, beef and eash. e, -II., in Now York Tribune. DM A. W. eimsrs t)g„i OATARHO CURE di icsisuu* sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Ile Is th passages,siops droppings in the throat inti permantenly curet Coto& and Ilay Fever. Pilaw& fret. An dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co,, Toronto end Duffel*. About the Black Cats on"page 8 The Origin of the Loving Zup. TUM loving • cup le very common where, But many years ago nowadays, and we 46e It elrery. there were no such thinge 35 theee queer three handled affaire, and the following' story tells how they first happened to be mailer Once Upon a time centuries befere us, there lived a great and powerfill who was extretnely fond of hunting. He was one day in a forest pursuing a stag, but it was so neat and clever that it eluded him and his band of follow - ere, and led them entirely out of their way, After wandering about in a hopeless faehion they finally Game upon a little hut*, and the king himself Ms- • mounted -and rapped smartly upon the door. A young girl answered his knock, and Boon Showed the men the right path. The king was about to go, when he saw a well near the house, arid at the sight of the Clear water immediately felt thirsty, and, going back, asked the girl" for a drink, Without hesitatlon She went into the house and came out with an earthen jug filled with tive well water. But, instead of ogering hta royal maJeety the handle, as most peo- -pie would do, she held that. herself, and banded him the cup the wrong way. • The king* !said nothing, thanked the girl, and he and his band soon found their way out of the wood. But when be rea,ched his pillage he determined to reward the girl for giv- ing him tire water and at the setae time to teach her a les•son in politeness. •Seeding to bia jeweler, he bade him make a silver oup, with two bandies, and deliver it to' the young girl, With.' out a word as to whence it,earne, 'perhaps a month after this the king again truntea in that same forest, sought the hut and asked the girl for another drink* of water. . This time. she entered the house and cazne out with a beautiful sliver cup, full of the sparkling water. "Now," thought the king, "she has certainly learned a lesson." But never was be more mistaken, Cor the poor, ignorant • girl took a. handle In each hand, and for the second, time offered her liege lord. nothing save the side of the cup. The king rode away -deeply perplexed. • He resolved to teach the girl the Polito *ay to hand a eup without directly re- buking her, and many were the hours he spent in ondgelling hie butt* ',ter Sol= way in vrhich to do 4. At last d bright idea struck him, and he sent for OP 49 i his jeweler a second time.. "Make me," *d. the iira Of the wheel is iminersed and slawly turned around as .the heat- ed ell .penetrates the woo:I....until the entire -11M is treated.- The advantages claimed for this .devlea Over a reetun-• gUlar trough of galvanised iron are, . it requires less. oll, It coutornis . mor�. nearlY to the curve of the wheel being a eastiron, it'servea as a ves- sel In Which' to heat the ell,' as well us to soak the felloes;. it 'is,. more durable -th.art galvanized .dron, and no. more costly. Itis. not patented: • . • . _ •• • • • szseeinsie Ink. „ •• An indelible .stenctr ink, it for gen: emni Marking, is not . difficult to make . • . .we do uot inststtoo s 1 et y Upon our .definition of '. "indelible." 'If st : men= that the marking must , resist rain sad the ordinary wear and tear to which .it may be exposed upon a 'box. then the -result is easily obtain.; ' ed by adding a littioAlpseed oll to the mixtureof turpentine and lampblack .which is Commonly used ...for the pur- • 'pose. . 'If the ink must bp still more • durable the proportion of oil must be 'increased,—aild some "dryer" added. This is.praetically a black Paint, such as would be used for outdoor work, but with a slather large proportion of. riser.The hatter is •necessary in order ,to wake. the ink dry as quIckly as poss. sIble. Unfortunately tbe faster it dies the less durable it is; Week aaphaltunt 7,1aarn:s.,:,e,...tuallicioee.nrges,ir j!,9witoictth: apt.1:p_.9....ettle_eilpove. bred color till it Lae the Atilt:boll: *sod. advantag4, • • ' te,i'c, Presicient Steyn is suffering from . . severe ophthalmia and it" threatened with total Windt:es* pIr 7 . To prove to yonathat Dr. i „I • es ,viirea..T=Ig L7rottl . -and every form of itching, " bleodingand, protruding piles, the manufacturers have guaranteed it. See tes- timonials in the daily press and ask your neigh - hors What they Welt of it. You_caskusejt and got 3litir money back if net cured. soli a NM, at ail dealers or Binuteson,BATics & Co., Tomb% D- .'Triiiii9eCe thhouasar!de.f:lt °esell'iltrotept nilt‘eannd ts "iiiinaber-Of Ititipp .gitialiiive been cieenatch- ed to sonthern Mongolia, wtere thepeciPle ,..re in revalt'against the•se.vere indemnity • '' rigi°11. Franca :Baths* Making.' ' . , . . . , In the Freneh system the butter it enade from very sour eream,•11 wesb ed in the churn, not Salted, but sell for present' use. in •Paris and England, and the keeping quality "le tot much " Studied. • Notwithstanding the ex. treme sournems of the crearn. When churned, the butter has ohnostthe nine appearance as that made :trotn„ !Meet creatn—this is the result of the Washing. The 'finest French butter Is hipped at once to the consumer's, and . generally consumed befire the end of three days; so its keeping *qualitiesare not material. ' No salt is wed for the i home Market. It is mit up in Iiirge I Sella of tvirenty-eight pounds to. forty I poundeS-each-sballssbeingseovered--bysas piers* of fine flannel .ard placed in a willew basket. Second and „third class butter is lade up in one pound rolls and packed in grape leaVea.' Por the English Market, butter Is put up in . one pound rolls and covered with jee said he to the man, "a silver cup, heav- ily' chased, and with mYsroyal crest, • and put three handles on it." The Jew's eler much surprised—for re -member, no such . thing -had even been 'heard-of:up to this time—did as he. was told, and soorf the Mug was iinish'ed. As -before, -the king had,it privately sent to the girl Who lived in:the -little hut. " One day, not long after this for the third time he rode into that forest, and, taking tha now we - nown path, soon reached the cottage, Diamounting, he knooked at the door and asked humbly for drink f • a o clear :water. • The girl ,immediately came out wigs. • the -.beautiful three -handled cu -• and, taking two of the handles in her hands; • :she offered him the third. • So the king fa away well:pleated .tyith his strategy and, reliehing home,. ordered three -hear -lied cu . to be in d ow Spring Goods Dress • Goods Prints • Muslins Ginghatus Laces and Embroideries of all kinds R. Coats & Son FURNITURE 1:BR0ADFO0T, BOX & CO. The deafly increase in our trade is good proof of the fact that Our goods are rightism! . our priceelower than those of other dealers in the trade. We mazinfacture furniture on large scale and eau afford. to sell cheap. If you lbw/ from no, we lave for you the profit, which, in other cases, has fo be added in the retttil dealer. Thie week we have pawed into stook oome of our new designs. Spaoe will not permit us to quote prices, but come and Bee for yourself what snaps we have to offer. Remember—we are determaed that our prices Abell be the oweet in the trade. UNDERTAIiING. In Me department Our stook is completeand we7have undoubtedly the bast funeral outfit in the comity. Our prune are as °Vag the lowest. II - ROADFOOT, 130X & 00.J vv. chimq Manager 13,—Night and Sandsioalle attended to by calling at W . Maley's, (Miners Director) residence. , hest -class Wagons and Buggies I am handling the celebrated itelsaughlin snake of buggiee and otherr makes of first-class Ontario firth* Also of my own manufacture moludingtop_bug- glee, mikadoes,-eto, of the latest and modernS,stylea.. Repairing of all kinds promptlyattended to JOHN LESLIE. Huron Street olintan . • b uggis. es ! Wagonst Do you want a high glade Buggies or Wagons? fn every sort oS ware, and they be -s, We have the [Intuit stock to Select from. All tnelateet styles in the new - came so popular that we now have. est colors-- Our prices are as low as can be found for ilret-Maes material them In an our shops and sto - --' , Bias and Cows. ___. ; The dairyman of 'to -day is of neees- sity *a •breeder of fr. inc. The .two go together .so thoroug• ly. that it would be ,a waste of good material rand .opportuid-' . ty to neglect either. There can: be no doubt that . nature intended that the pigs should be the companion of the cows in the clover fle'ffi, Bot more than that, the swine, Should be -.fed on the : .. .skim milk that comes from the dairy, 'Pigs and shosit$ will thrive on this skim! pilk as .on nothing else. The milk fed. - _ An this way TifilnisIdSsits'largar—Prat:: qhaii if field in the. ordinary market, where only a few cent* a quart can be obtained, and often tot that. Tile waste of time and material in trying to find a good market for skim inilk is the most • discOuraging feature of the dairy busi; floss. Many 4. man' has been induced to .. leaye the 'business entirely on account • • of thia„' .after settling up his accounts for the year he hoe found that he was r actually no gainer for the .year's work. : 'Ile only -Actually sure way of snaking money is to have a well organized dairy. and pig farm. Exzeugh of the latter silent(' •bo kept at all times to consume the skim mills. s By ralsIsi growing - emir ,. selling, turning the money over quickly, Ia goodprofit• eau: be made for every, quart of skim:milk fed. Some keep their pigs too long, .It is better to sell thens IIS vain& ings than to wait_until they ere so fat that few 'Watt them. A good . healthy pig, with plenty of lean and fat on his sides, will usually sell bot - ter than the excessively fat hogs. The ;lover and .grass wil lalways help to nake the pigs Om and on as diet of 1 geed clover awl. plenty of. skim milk ‘ there is no• danger of hog cholera or other swine diseases in the hottest of . weather. Corn and dry grain ere the .. ereeders of disease and illness in '110gs luring the •summer. The hog eholera. , IS undoubtedly the produce of oven. I seated blood, superinduced by heasy eon and grain feeding, 'We cannot stamp Mit the disease until We elsange the —Slet,....-Letsthatsbe-skimstuillisatel grcon. dover and grass froth June I until the , end of- Septembei and • an man n • raise as fine a flock of dean, healthy • Ovine as any • Market men could ask ;or. And the•market for sueh azzinuila • ..-A. 'B. Barrett:, in Indiana Farmer. I X Always ready, with prices far more ,. toristant than for most DIM nrodue.ta. . J IIIC,PERIEN( El.) DlitiGellalb. lv,E GUAIWITIlld ACCURACY " Ys 'PgItrZOT SATIfiPAQTION and workmanship. Before you buy call and see us. Geo.LAViEHIsaac StreeStreet,:Clinton i '. rrawr Doon TO puffy ESA. OPR.ICS • net n a • paper, end packed In small boxes4.14x9x6 inches, twelve rolls in each box. M. Lepelletier is the largest exporter of title kind of butter and Is said te ship 1,200 boxes et meek, his trade amounting to 12,000- 000 franee per year. It is gent in re• ifrigetrating Cara In Paris all btitter Gs sold by' auction at ton markets. Wee Men ere Meetly the buyers. Three or tour hundred lots are ecad every 'hour. &Went officials weigh and SOMA& the butter, and make up the accounte of sale. The different kinds of butter are named from the Phloem where they , are made, and classified according to quality. The best butter le sold at fifty and seventy-flve Cents per pounit Lang Affeeting Laws affecting the gale of milk are oftmi mkt*, but Where a dairyman insists on KIS rights he will make no mista.ke. In England the law requires the milk to attain it eertalt proporv tion of solids, to protect against water, Ing the milk, A datryiuttn who e as atreked gelling milk below the etandarel ulnas his listens') that as 13 • geld his 11111k de It came from the cow, and added no water, and also es etiiva varied the standard of their milk eiteh day, aecording te the feed and the sea. I son, he vvas guilty of no erime and had the right to gen his milk on Its Merits, provided it WAS Wire. ITO brought proof of the faets, and WM #iselargod ttool cuat9diA 1 ei worry, bustle and bald. (1, z eft et sere aod attention Veer doctor's primal?. .. necessary for thiCsafety o; Your family, Wei guar. peefeet satisfaction to Is. Oak tolieb . depart. rtplete With th�. latest m %tither, ;•. s ontrer CoMPOSIND, ti , ads when everything else I.,' ! an never failed 13give • • result% It hag never 'fell, . , k ' people happy . resulte, Itt• ,s. Jririeoretee, , gives new . toile to toe. eysteinonaiies the blood pure is food for the norVee --it =alto siok people well.. We eau supply .3 ou with the pare and gettable Paine'g Celery OCuipentid, • . 4, 11 13 COMPE. truggiat On, Ont, ..4........„,...................... Men and ‘Voirien f° "1°666111' II* apPoinflosagetite $1,1009 a week some to twoi. oti,vrarforia iqat Bona t Sttlargotit6 attutPir creole of *alert ideal employment, neW,bril. limit lbws_ bean slew*, old rsialakked homes SRAM'S XsaanithaTbON Ltd. Brantford, Jahn. 5 1 • - • I had nervous indigestion and a general derange- ment of the entire system. It had been a eon. tinual torture for 12 'years, My blood became very poor and at times my toe and finger nails would be diseased. Alter eating I would sit in auair arid put my feettn-to-m-ettinifTe—keep them from swelling, and at times would take • off my oboes for the misery 1 bad. Whenever I experience anything to reraind me of past aches I cannot be too elated to tell what ° Itipand Tabules have done for me. I still cake one now and then:, because I know how bad 1 have been, ' They were just what neesied. • , • AT DRUGGIST eceni pac e is enOtigh for ast ordinary occasion. The family bottle, sixty n ns a supply for a year. •,-4!