Exeter Times, 1896-6-25, Page 3THE EXETER TINES
Thomas 4. Johan.
Common
Affliction
Permanently Cured by Taking
AVERSpaI'alla
d
0AS-DRIVEIi'8 STORY. .,
"!was afflicted for eight years with 'Malt
2t eum. Dining that time, I tried a great
many medicines which were high) rec-
•onnmended, put none gave me relief. I
was at last advised to try Ayer's Sarsa-
parilla, by a friend who told me that I
must iiurcliase six bottles and use them
according to directions, I yielded to his
Persuasion, bought the six bottles, and
took the contents of three of these bet•
ties without notioing any direct benefit
Before I had finished the fourth bottle.
my bands were as
Free from Eruptions
as ever they were. My business, which
is that of a cab -driver, requires me to
be out in cold and wet weather, often
without gloves, and the trouble has
never returned,"—TaouAs A. Johne,
Stratford, Ont.
• Ayers. Sarsaparilla
Admitted at th4 yV orld'a Fair.
Aper's ,Pili. ?Cleanse the Bowels,
For Weak Backs, Lame
Backs, Painful Backs or any
kind of Bad Backs, Manley's
Celery -Nerve Compou des
;he Great Back Strengthener.
Wm. Rogers, 5 Ottawa Street,
Toronto, Ont., writes :—"For a
number of years I have been
troubled with a lama back. Some
4. of the doctors I cononited called it
Ixeieefitr iti
Lumbago others
mher
treatment. Nine months ago I was
rocky enough to try Manle 's
Celery -Nerve Compound, and, titer
taking two or three bottle•, the
pain entirely left me, and 1 M�+e
had no return of it for 8 uiw,iths
now."
a..
THE
pFEXETER
TIMES
FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS.
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE INI CANADA.
dER1ie elft rt 11 El�rY.
KEIEU FAILS TO OM SATIVAOTI N
FOR ft*f B ^" MA! ti•R
Kootenay
d by 1 p
Contains the new ingredient, and
is ma a an a ectrical rocess
that will revolutionize medical
science throughout the world.
Kootenay enay
cures all kinds of
Kidney troubles, and is a positive
cure for Rheumatism.
Spring
IT CURES
DYSPEPSIA,
HEADACHE,
BILIOUSNESS,
And every- form of bad
blood, from a pimple to the
worst scrofulous sore,
and we challenge Canada
to produce a case of
Eczema that Kootenay
will not cure.
Medicine
8. 8. HYOKMAN MEOIOINE CO., HAMILTON, ONT.
tasonnitamszennoornameast
RAPID CHURNING.
The rapid manner in whichcertain
modern churns convert cream into but-
ter is one of the wonders of the dairy-
ing age. Butter can now be made
while the breakfast table is being laid,
five or six minutes being all the time
needed to churn, while in a few more
.minutes the butter can be made up and
brought to the table.
AN EASYFALL.
The 2 -year-old daughter of M. J.
Preston, of Worcester, N. Y., fell head-
long from a second -story window a
few days ago, turned a son ersauit and
landed on the stone, pavement, 16 feet
below, in a sitting posture. Rushing
down, expecting to find her child dead,
the mother found the youngster unin-
herured, chewing gum which she had in
mouth at the time she fell.
AGRICULTURAL
COW'S RATIONS.
The nutritive value and the cost of
various' foods for cows are thustreat-
ed by a practical correspondent of the.
Otsego Farmer;
"In order to feed the cow Intelligente
ly and to the greatest profit a person
not only needs to know her mechanism
and requirements but the nature and
the composition of the different fodders
and the value of the different concen-
trated foods. No farmer should keep
a dairy of cows unless he knows approx-
imately at least what their food costs
and the profit derived from its con-.
sumption. I regret to say there- are
only a few who keep the profit and loss
side of their dairy. But the low prices
of dairy products the past season should
force every dairyman in the future to
keep an account of the record of each
cow; at least he should know for a
certainty whether she pays for the food
she consumes. Profit in the future
will come to that one who keeps the
best cow and who knows how to feed
"A. great many experiments have been
carried on, especially in Germany, to
find out the igestibility of different
foods; from which we find that animals
differ much in their capacity for diges-
tion, and foods differ much in th it di-
gestibility. Those are the more .ilua-
bie that can be the moreroadilydigest-
ed and assimilated, On the amount of
food cannoned by an animal will dee
pend not only its maintenance but its
ability to grow or develop flesh or pro-
duce milk. The food supply must be
more than enough for maintenance, for
it is evident that no food can go to the
production of milk or fat until what is
needed to raintaln life has been sup-
daixy ofcows thattare no
oient to keep them alive or in equili-
brium—that is a state of neither gain-
ing nor losing.
Another point to consider in the
feeding or stook is palatability. I pre-
sume there are many farmers who will
ridicule this assumption. For one I be-
lieve's the cow's sense of taste and smell
is as acute as a. human being's, Her
likesanddislikes are as noticeable as
for food oce's. an To created; bsshe `mays not
like ensilage or even roots at first, but
it will not be long before she will. A
great aid to palatability is the amount
of water contained in food, the more
succulent the food the more palatable
and the more digestible it will be, Food
that sharpens the appetite like silage
or roots, aids digestion. The greater
tha palatability the greater the con-
sumption and the greater the vigor,
hence thew reater the profit.
it has be nhsz amounte taof certainoammount
is necessary to maintain life, It has
also be found by experiment that on
eighteen pounds of dry matter for 1,000
pounds of live weight an animal will
simply maintain its aquilibrium,
neither gaining nor losing, If cows are
kept for profit, only in. the food fed be-
yond that ready for mainteaanee will
there be any profit, Animals fdd less
than the food of support will grow poor,
and it will cost more to bring then
back to their former condition of flesh,
that is, they will have to consume
more food and at greater expense, than
if they had had sufficient food to main-
tain their former condition, A dairy-
man that hopes to gain by pinching
and scrimping• his stock through the
winter will invariably lose in the end.
Tha laws of nature must be obeyed.
The cotes' wants must be supplied at
whatever cost if they are to be of pro-
fit to their owner. Far wiser is the
farmer who gives away half his dairy
than he who attempts to starve the
whole through the winter.
of��coarsThe eofood, somethicertainais bulky
to distend her paunch and make it ac-
tive. A ration should consist of two-
thirds of coarse or dry fodder and one-
third of concentrated food in weight.
The Germans have laid down a number
of standards. For a miloh cow Arm -
•bey and Stewart recommend a ration
l:o or 1:5 5—that is tone part albumi-
noids, nitrogenous or flesh forming, to
five carbohydrates or heat forming. The
nearer this ratio is followed the more
profit will there be and the more econ-
omic the result. Of course, every farm-
er cannot profitably feed the same,
Some can raise their albuminoids in
the shape of clover, peas, etc., cheaper
than they can buy them in bran or
cotton seed meal. Ii; is desirable, how-
ever, to raise a well balanced ratio on
the farm. Corn is not, or is Timothy
haexclusively vely . Stock ) become on either ; they must ebe
supplemented with good clover hay,
bran n or oil meal, As to the kind of
bulky food to feed, I do not think it
makes so much difference whether it
is straw, hay, clover or silage, provided
it is palatable and enough concen-
trated and succulent food is added to
balance the ration; although I think
.if it was left for the cow to choose
she would take silage with a little
bran and oil meal thrown in.
"With the present prices for dairy
products and no better prospects in
sight, it behooves every farmer to
cheapen production. We must raise
more corn, clover, oats, peas and roots.
With these we can be independent, and
our money, what little we do get, will
not have to go West for grain or into
the pockets of the freight companies.
"For the past winter we have kept
on an average thirty head of cattle,
twenty-five minis cows and five heifers,
exclusively on corn, beets and bran.
The corn was raised from seventeen
acres, three of sweet, mostly fed green,
four common state, and ten western
for silage. We had two acres of roots,
from which we raised 1,500 bushels,
mostly beets, which, by the way, were
fed whole. I think the beets would
have largely taken the place of the
bran, but we bought the latter that
we might sell .our hay and not deplete
the fanm, for hay at X10 is too expen-
sive to feed stock and at $18 it is a lux-
ury. We practice feeding only twice
a day, but an ample allowance is given
each time. This gives the stock plenty
of time to digest and assimilate their
food, and none was wasted on that
score.
The experience of the stook goes to
show that they can only exist for six
months on corn, roots and bran, but
positively put on fat and yield a hand-
some profit in milk. Cows that were
thin in the fall are now in a prime con-
dition, which further shows that the
food given, if not at all times well bal-
anced, at least was relished and served
its purpose. We can call it a utility
ration and make the cow believe, if
some do not, that it exactly meets her
needs. The main thing is to have her
satisfied, and we should be if she yields
us forty pounds of milk a day on such
a ration.
THE LOVE OF WORK.
Man is said to bea lazy animal.
Some of these lazy philisophers have
eancluded that nhman works when he
is not necessitated to do so.
It this were the rule we would have
very many poor farmers.; for we believe
that no man can succeed as a farmer
unless he is in love with the work be
has to do. Ile may love it for its re-
sults or profits, but he is not fitted to
be succeitsowssfnulsakunlesse. he loves the work
fpr
No man can be a successful dairyman
who does not love his cows; nor can a
man be a sucoessf ul breeder of horses
or cattle unless he becomes so attached
to them as Individuals or in the mass
that he takes delight int feeding and
cari for them, and has real pleasure
in s ing them enjoying themselves.
Neer undertake to do anything
abou cattle, horses, sheep, or even hogs
unless you have some concern for their
welfare and comfort, apart from the
profit you expect to realize.
If you do not in some sense love
your work you will never succeed m
anything you undertake. Suoh indiffer-
ence and laziness must always result in
failure.
NOTES,
Do not keep too many dogs on the
farm,
See that the lambs do not get drench-
ed. in a sudden shower.
Do not forget to water the calves and
yearlings in the back tot.
Good blood is all right, but good guar -
tors, good feed and proper methods
make success doubly sure in the raising
of hoge.
While there is good pasturage is a
good time to push the growth and fat-
tening of undesirable animals. When
they are ready to market, sell them.
If you have fences on your farm, see
that they are properly kept up. Broken
fences and tumble-down gates are sura
indications.of indifference in the owner.
Ventilate your cow stables ; keep your
cows clean'; give them good food and
pptve water ; keep yourself and your
stineoundings clean while handling
the product from the udder to thebut-
tertub, and you will hear little about
animal odor."
Keep the pigs clean. and feed them
properly and they will not scour. An at-
tack of scours equals the dropping of
about one week of growth, consequently
it will pay to use in the way of better
sanitary conditions and prevention
foods.
The dairyman must depend largely
upon leis own judgment as to what
breed of cows to keep. He should, if
he is making butter; choose a breed
best suited to producing butter ; if he
sells milk he wants a cow that gives
a large quantity of milk.
There is a good object lesson for the
farmers of some sections in the records
made by Iowa dairymen. In one of the
dairy counties in that state the amount
of butter exported last year sold for
nearly two -and -a -half million dollars,
Times never get very hard under con-
ditions of that sort.
A bard working animal is always
thin, and requires more food to support
it than does one in idleness, because
the muscles and the fat are consumed
in heat production. This heat passes
off through the skin and leaves the
body at a normal temperature. If this
escape is arrested, fever follows; it it
escapes too rapidly, chill and its conse-
quences result,
LIICANIA'S QUEER PASSENGER.
Aa English Wonsan Who Travels Constant-
ly to and Fro on the tunarder.
"One of the most eccentric visitors to
New York," says a man whose business
makes it necessary for him to go to
London several times a year, "is an eld-
erly English woman who has been a
passenger on the Lucania every trip
that this boat has made. I came across
on the Lucania not long ago, and one
of the officers called my attention to
this woman, and told me what he knew
about her. She looked as if she might
be about sixty-five years old. She dress-
ed quietly in black, and there was man
in
g in her actions to attract any atten-
tion.
'The officer that pointed her out to
me said that she was English, and that
her friends had made many unsuccess-
ful attempts to keep her ashore. Ap-
parently she has money of her own,and
in order to throw her relatives off the
track she books her passage under a
different name on every trip.. She en-
joys the sea and the 1ucania is her
special fad. She makes very few ac-
quaintances and I don't believe that
any of the officers know much about
her his tory. When she reaches New
York she knows that her relatives can't
bother her, and she goes ashore and
waits for the ship's sailing day. It
would greatly surprise the officers of
the Lucania now to find after they had
pulled out of port that this mysterious
woman was not on board.
SEASICK ANIMALS.
Lions Become 1 nkiudllke, Monkeys Apo
Humanity and Dogs Are Woeful.
Human beings are not the only ones
who suffer from seasickness, by any
means. One hears a good deal about
the pangs that have filled the men and
women with woe, but little is said of
the menageries brought to America
every year, or carried hither and yon in
wave -tossed boats.
Lions and tigers may be majestic
when they have unwavering earth or
rock against their paws, but a seasick
cat of these tribes is as forlorn as any
man every was and doesn't look a bit
more kingly than a wet rabbit. Even
its roars and growls have a weeping
sound in them, quite in keeping with
the general appearance of the beast.
A monkey is as pitible an object when
it is seasick as any other beast. so strick-
en, and its forlorn facial expression is
so human -like and the way it clasps
its paws across its stomach is so natural
that the man who is not''seasiok neces-
sarily sees something to laugh at in
the misery of the creature. , Not so
with the seasick main. If he sees a
seasick monkey he is sure to swear furi-
ously, thinking the poor thing is mock-
ing him.
It takes a dog to be woeful at sea.
It has a way of doubling all up, with
its tail between its legs and headhang-
inn down, that shows a deep-seated
pain. To free itself the dog goes
through all sorts of contortions. It will
stretch out on the deck, groan, and
squeal, sometimes rising on its haunches
and lifting its head, howl long and
miserably, as some doge do at the sound
of musio.
A KANSAS RULING.
A Kansas court has ruled that "a man
who calls upon a woman regularly and,
takes her to entertainments occasional-
ly is legally engaged to marry her."
A crystal river diephonous because it
travels slowly ,.soft is the music that
would charm forever; the flower of the
sweetest smell is shy and lowlq.
*HIT UNCIESIM IT
ITEMS OP INTEREST ABOUT THE
BUSY YANKEE.
Neighborly Interest In Itis Doings—i,Slattera
of Moment led riirtb Gathered from His
Daily Record.
A wild mail baa been seen several
times in the woods near Batavia, N.Y.
There were 40 ,more divorces than
there were weddings in Fresno, Cal.,
last year.
A Washington physician has placed
an Ice water trough for dogs in front
of his house.
Three Armenians living near Fresno,
Cal., were murdered near that plaee
on Saturday.
During the past month 28 Canadians
have been refused admittance into the
United States at Detroit.
In Wyoming the women have the
right to vote for all offices, even for
presidential candidates,
The United States Church Army, a
body similar to the Salvation Army,
bas been organized in New York.
Mise Bertha G. Tommie, of the Wi st-
inghouse Work, in Pittsburg, is the
only woman electrical engineer in the
country.
There are living at present eleven
ex -Governors of Vermont, including
the venerable war Governor, Frederick
Holbrook,
A part of the ceremonies of dedicating
a bridge near Nashville, Tenn., ooh-
sisted of breaking a bottle of ice cream j
soda over it.
Capt. John B. C. Andersen, who has
died in Philadelphia, was regarded as
cam of the most skillful navigator% on
the Atlantic.
The Aultraan & Taylor warehouse at
Mansfield, Ohio, filled with threshers
and separators, was recently destroyed
by lightning, Loss $;1,00,000.
Mrs. Mary L. Foote, who was re-
cently elected. the Police Justice ofGay-
lord, Kas., ran against her husband,
and defeated him by a large majority,
Professor Leopold Julius Boeck, the
Hungarian patriot who died. in Phila-
delphia last week, one in his young
mauhood a friend and associate of Kos-
suth.
Rev. Dir, Rhodes, living 12 miles east
of Timpson, Texas, while ploughing his
field, unearthed 30,000 Mexican dollars.',
The money was buried in a leather
satchel,
The Niagara Falls Power Company
have contracted for additions to their
premises and plant. to cost $3,000,000,
for the purpose of furnishing power.
to Buffalo.
In 1861 the United States had ship-
ping of 2,500,000 tons. In 1890 this ton-
nage had decreased to 982,000 thine,
though the foreign trade of the coun-
try had increased threefold.
Frank Hupman, of Chicago, white
beatinghis way on a. Lake Share
freightrain, was murdered at Huron,
Ohio, by Frank Tierney, because he re-
fused to give up his watch and Money.
A crippled Pelham, Mass., woman re-
cently crawled a quarter of a mile
on her hands and knees to notify her
husband, who was working in the field,
that the house was on fire. He ar-
rhiled too lata, however, to be of any
eThe eitizena of Portland, Me., have
subscribed $175,000 towards building a
grain elevator of 1,000,000 bushels ca-
pacity for the Grand Trunk railway,
and the latter will furnish $95,000
more, thus guaranteeing a regular line
of European steamers for Portland.
In Boston there resides Miss Eliza-
beth C. Adams, granddaughter of the
first President Adams, She Iived in
the White House during the term of
her uncle, John Quinsy Adams. She
and her brother I. Hull Adams, are 'the
only surviving grandchildren of the se-
cond President.
The memory of Thames Hughes, the
distinguished Englishman is especial-
ly green in Chicago. because, after the
fire, he sent that city a collection. of
7,000 books to serve as a basis of a
new public library. The books were all
English, and many of thine autograph
copies from writers then living.
The Rev. Dr. I. J. Lansing, of Bos-
ton, whose parishioners hare just asked
him to resign, first came into public
notice about two years ago, by making
some reflections upon the personal hab-
its of President Cleveland, for which
he afterwards apologized. A short time
ago he denounced the late Gov. Green-
halge.
There are from 90,000 to 100,000
tramps in the United States, costing
that country from $18,000,000 to $20,-
000,000 per annum. Four-fifths of these
men are under 50 years of age, able-
bodied, and have at least ability to fol-
low useful occupations. One list shows
that tramps are represented in nearly
every trade.
Among the students graduated this
year by the Baltimore University Law
School, and who were admitted to the
bar, was en Judge George W. Lind-
say, of the Orpheus' Court. Re cele-
brated his70th birthday two firth y weeks
ago, and it is said that never before
in Maryland has any college or school
turned out so old a graduate.
Mrs. E. Clark, of Port Huron, Mich.,
hid a casket containing six hundred
dollars' worth of jewellery in the
stove several weeks ago for safety from
burglars. One evening, being chilly, a
fire was started in the stove with the
usual result. When the fire was ex-
tinguished, the jewellery, which includ-
ed several watches and valuable dia-
mond rings, had been ruined,„
To encourage the destruction of spar-
rows in Gratiot county Mich., the au-
thorities pay a bounty county,
them. Over
40,000 were destroyed last year, and
one sparrow hunter has made an aver-
age of $60 a month by killing them.
In the past four months fifteen cot-
ton mill companies have been charter-
ed in South Carolina, with a total capi-
tal of more than $1,000,000.
The Southern Baptist convention,
which held its sessions during several
days in Chattanooga, Tenn., made a
new departure in its proceedings on
Sunday. Its ministers filled the thirty-
eight pulpits of all denominations. The
filling of pulpits in the unorthodox
churches hitherto not recognized by the
Baptists was done for the first time in
the history of the Southern Baptist
convention.
Warbourton Bros. have been driv-
ing a well in the South part of Tal-
mage township, ch. After reaching
the depth of 388 feet the powerful cable
snapped and they lost their drill. They
lowered a drill grapnel, but found no
resistance, though they wed over 500
feet of line. It Is believed the drill was
lost' in some deep subterranean cavity.
Before it was lost, . the drill bored
through twelve feet: of solid. rock.
It is said that two species of native
birds are is seeming quite rare in South
Carolina—the showy redbird and mock-
ing bird. The threatened extermination
of these birdie is said tie be due to the
demand for them in the north, and in,
the case of the redbird, the introduction
of the English sparrow is to biome..
The mocking bird, however, is quite
capable of holding its own against the
pugnacious foreigner.
A remarkable succession of misfor-
tunes occurred recently in the Irving
family, of Qldtown, Me. Not long ago
the old homestead burned down, leav-
ing the family with but a shed for
shelter. Two of the sisters moved into
a store and started a millinery busi-
ness. The store was burned down, and
they lost all they bad. Soon after that
three women members of the family
were thrown from a boat in Pushaw
stream, directly opposite their home,
and drowned. A week or so since two
other sisters belonging to the family
were murdered in Oldtown,
DARK NEN AS FIGHTERS.
They Are Good Soldiers 'When Properly
Trained andOfgeered.
The plain truth is that the natural
fighting powers of the Asiatics and A1-
rzcans is very nearly equal to that of
Europeans --so nearly equal that when-
ever the dank men are even decently
organized and armed, or led by a man
of capacity, the white men's advantage
disappears and they have to fight with
all the care and generalship and even
numbers which they would require in
Europe, It is assumed that these
things will never scour; but the as-
sumption is a very large one and by
no means borne out by past facts. We
all know and adroit that the necessary
change bas occurred in Japan, and no
European power would now invade
that country without taking all the
precautions it would take if it were
invading a Buropean State. Indeed,
Russia is actually accumulating a
great army in Eastern Siberia -90,000
men, it is said—in fear lest the Jap-
anese, if too much pressed, should in-
vade her. The Anieer of Afghanistan
is accumulating European weapons
year by year, and is actually manufac-
tuning them in such quantities that
should we ever come into conflict with
his successor, the general in command
will have to be as careful as if he were
face to face with
A EUROPEAN FOE.
It is not General Roberts who will tell
altybody that the oonquest of Afghanis-
tan would be an easy task or a milit-
ary parade. And now in Abyssinia a,
European army has been actually de-
stroyed by au African poster whose sol-
diers, though no dowbt of the Semite
blood, are most of them darker than
an.l g.e.it tribe of Asia i s. The Itali-
ans were of the best blood of Europe;
they belonged to an array trained for
thirty years to meet .European oppon-
ents; and they died in a proportion to
their numbers most unusual in war-
fare, yet they were swept in utter rout
oat of the hills, and had Menelek but
pursued, as a European general would
have done, would have been swept out
of Africa.
The white powers must in future or-
ganize their expeditions into Asia or
Africa more carefully; must avail
m
theselves of science to the uttermost;
must choose the very ablest command-
ers; must, in fact, make war with as
much precaution as if their enemies
were Europeans, They will not any
more be able to conquer dark men as
Mexico was conquered by Cortes, or
Surajah Dowlah by ,C]:ve. Anel, se-
condly if their huge enterprise is to
be carried out—if, that in they intend
to be predominant in Asia and Africa,
and it is nothing less than this that
they are attempting --they must agree
within the range of that enterprise to
PULL TOGETHER.
If they are going to vent their spites
on each other, or satisfy their jealousies
or gratify their ambitions by secret al-
liances with the dark powers,. by find-
ing them weapons or providing them
with military counsellors, the great en-
terprise in the end will fail. They
will furnish the very little necessary to
enable the dark men to beat white men
on the field of battle, and, as it is by
battle that conquests are effected, the
conquests of Africa or Asia will become
impossible. Suppose the •Hovas had
fought on the slopes of their high
plateau as the Shoans and Amhahas
fought, all the force which France
could despatch to Madagascar would
never have captured Antananarivo.
And it is more than probable that if
the Hovas had been honestly led by a
man like Menelek, and if they had been
confident in their weapons as the Abys-
sinians were, they would have antici-
pated the horrible scene before Adowa,
and France, instead of Italy, would
be weeping over defeat by a brown
power. The .dark men have always
been willing to 'fight; they are now
slowly learning the conditions of suc-
cess in battle, and, as they learn them,
are becoming much more dangerous
foes. European soldiers, Lord Wolse-
ley included, must get that fact fully
into their minds and provide against
it, or they will be taught by, experi-
ences of which that just acquired by
General Baratieri may not be the
most disastrous.
A NEW CAR VENTILATOR.
Travelers will welcome a new system
of ventilatinn railroad cars that is
said to do away with the transom and
yet prevent unpleasant drafts. The
air is taken in through screens under
the hood, and in passing tq the rear
drape down thhougti the coiling. Across
the middle of the double roof is a par-
tition which coihnpels this air to pass
down into th'e car • after passing this
cross-section partition the air passes u
again into the rear half of the roof and
out through the rear hood, taking the
foul air with it,
POWER OF AN AVALANCHE.
When one is told that, according to
Dr. Preller, the total energy of the
avalanche which occurred September
11 near the famous Gemmi Pass, in the
Alps, was 4,400,000,000 meter tons, it
gives a vague and indefinite idea, as
in such huge figures a few ciphers,
more or less, have little influence on
the mind, but by reducing to every day
quantities, such as we deal with, a bet-
ter idea of the statement may be ob-
tained. The above amount of energy,
which was expended in about one min-
ute, is estimated to be sufficient to
light about 90,000 lamps five hours per
day for one whole year.
,Children Cry for Pitchers Castorla
for Infanta and Children.
+'C asteriia is So well t.dapted to ahildrea t1iat
trecommenditaaluperiortosow prescription
known to me." R. A, Asoma, M. D.,
111 80. Oxford St., Brooklyn, 2t. Y.
" 2he use of'Csatoria' is so universal and
Its merits so well known that it seems a work
of aupereragaGoa to endorse it. Few aretbe
'ntelligent familieawrho de not keep Castorilt
.rithin easy reach."
Gunge M&aru New York D.D..
tate Pastor Bloomingdale }2etorrm e4 Chinch.
.Ota
Castoria cores Colic, Oonsttpatfo44
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eraotatioa,
Sflis�� pW�ten s, gives slope and prow otes #
Withoutinjuriousmedication.
" For several yearn I harp reconmeededt
your` faustoria,' and shall always continue toe
no so its it has invariably produoed beneflolsl
RDwzx V. Panes, K. ]!.,
"The Winthrop," Mtn Street end 7th Ants
Bow TorkGeo,
rag Carrara Comes" 7'1 Mousy Smarr, Its" 'ons.
BUILT UP TNS
SYSTEM IN Q
WONDERFUL
MANNFRI
anItteittaieseefr
4
f tviosiN bd. C3 E L L, E.D.
'ORriit-TOiN,QnT,
•
a?)
a rr-`t a �, c.
L a ya,.. .. '�sn x.
James A, Ben, of Beaverton, Ont.,
brother of the .11ev. John Wesley lien,
$.D., prostrated by nervous 'headaches
B. victim of the trouble for several
years.
South Amerioan Nervine effected si
complete cure.
In their own particular field few men
Wre beter know than the Rev. John
esley Bell, 8.D,, and his brother Mr.
Zanies A. Bell. The former win be re-
cognized by his thousands of 'friends all
over the country as the popular and able
missionary superintendent of the Royal
Templar, of Temperance. among the
20,000 members of this order in Ontario
his counsel is sought on all sorts of oc-
casions. On the public platform he is one
of the strong men of the say, nettling,
against the obits of intemperance.
Equally well known, is Mr. Bell in other
provinces of the Dominion having been
for years a iiiember of the hiailitoba
Methodist Conference and part of this
time was stationed is Winnipeg. His
brother, Mr. James A. Bali, Is a highly
respected resident of Pena -erten, where
his influence, though perhaps more cir-
cumscribed than that of his eminent
brother, is gone the less effective and
productive of good. Of recent years bpw.
ever the working ability of Mr. fames
A, Bell bait been sad) marred by severe
attacks of nervous headache, accom-
panied by indigestion. Who can do fit
work when this trouble takes hold *1
them and especially when it become
chronic, as was, seemingly, the ease wi
Mr: Bell? The trouble reached such
tensity that last June he Wet complet
1T prostrated. In thin condition a Erten
recommended South American Nervin
Ready to try anything and everyttiin
though be thought he had coveraa th
Het of proprietary medicines, he secure
a bottle o2 this great discovery.
second bottle of the medicine was take
and the work was done. Employing b
own language; "Two bottles of So
' American Nervine immediately :relieve
my headaches and have buut up ui
system in a wonderful ;tanner." Let i
not deprecate the good our elerggyin
and social reformers are doing fn t
world, but how ill -fitted they would
for their work were it not the rel
that South American Nervine brings
them when phy+e cal ills over
them, and when the ssstetss, a's s
suit of hard, earnest and centifitio
work, breaks dowit. Nervine treats
system as the wide reforms treats
evils he is battling against. It strtless
the root of the trouble. Ail 4
ease comes from diaorganlzatigqn of
nerve centers., This is a aoientinie'
Nervine at once works on these n
centers; given to them health and
or; and theta thereours tame} l} t
system strong, hearty, lift-nxatnCai
blood, and •oervoue teoubles of et
variety are things of the p ' at.
C. l'lUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
'ifbs': *ibi?`kfi. dredlidie Drug Store, Agent.
senneeeneententee
It QOdlS Pllt)SphOdlIl�.--The Great English Remedy.
Is the result of over 55 years treating thousands of cases with all known
drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment -s
combination that will effect a prompt and permanent euro its all stage
Sexual 17ebaity, Abuse or Excess:, Nervous Weakness, Ex'
Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Sihxrdari
which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. VP•oa
Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cased that seetaed
almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi-
cians --cases that were on the verge of despairandineanity--cases that were
tottering, over the grave -but with the continuedand persevering use of
Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were
restored to manly vigor and health—Reader you need not despair—no mat.
ter who has given you up as incurable -the remedy is now within your
teach, by its use you can be restored. to a life of usefulness and happiness.
Price, one package, $1; eispackeges, $5; by rasa tree of postage:
One willplease, sixguar'anteni k crne, Pamphlet free to any address,
The Wood Com puny, Windsor, Ont., Canada.
Wood's Phosphodfne is sold by respoaaible wholesale and retail dreggiets In the Dominion,