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Exeter Times, 1898-9-22, Page 7- I•EGAL. a - 411,1a. • ..".'N , HOW The most big good A nxixture third Jaya . Ground . . m a taghtlY Have acoffee .apout. AS the long tea, The water abouid. always oupful of slightly cold- water,. Scald your then pour add. six ouPfuls er; boil for pout of a cupSul back of the Serve with ting the adding the fee last. weaker, the taste. For blaok Of Water used less no Willie clings to the coffee. . The reason water first . would inamediately prevent it The cold ing is to .Coffee left to a bowl, gelatine. served With • ALMONDS, Marzipan. lows: Blanch nd put a ' • with lemon twenty-four .thein fine water and -. through a pound powdered saucepan loosens itself sides of cold work. cold; let paste is rolled • ent kieds oven . and Deviled - are called in Europe a prepare h • Melt one tablespoonful few minutes; half , teaspoonful spoonful till it is f' t hard-boiled me-cueggs, ful fine -chopped [51 English nainuteis, remove tablespoonfuls six shells spoonful cheese one crumbs bake in Vienna mutton from pounds in and cut the move part arid out the chops roll them • ning at the shape with lightly to ing -pan over not adding ' ' ht minutes, eight times. When f s• 1' ening s ig Dress them tablespoonful spoonful spoonful pepper, sides of the one overla ter of dish, 'and. wax beans, tato-Chips. Many housekeeper6 fish in any • ina theways ,--- ' is prepared oe d k and especially . ton Cooking to bake a . ' • Remove • the fins from. fishd weighing in cold water fourth loaf) crust has minutes. cheesecloth moisture, i ' ,ey, chopped, onion, oho onion juice), , '. each of salt f 1 u of mei .t. quito dry, ,'",.„' as EIJI' -a-b- -'' the stuffin - a Pass l'P''' '' from whie ed, arid paiaS to the laea,d • - • 'curving it Arrange pan, oge• t th rot, end which is pierced raised from " ' it a butter salt pork put into it Minutes baste white breth, 1'3 ' tete. eke 4 ,; Al 11-tAnnittrilii-Y )-111,101111/411. ti,, hiCla nriip, Ileil-141140 .0.01,,,ivepaaninaaa,a• TO, MAHE GOOD COVV4I•24 essential thing towa,rd 110N- ooffee is to use only (the/hest. of ane -third Mocha and two- will give good results: coffee should altsvays be kept covered tin can or jar. . 4 . pot that• has a s ont it ''Nvi LI' not clog' So easily' Me spouts, that are preferred for used, .for making coffee be freshly boiled.. To one , ground Coffee add one egg beaten, °lie -half . a cupful of a.,nd the shell of the e-gg. teillfeeapot before using, the above into • the . pot and of freshly boiled Wet- three minutes closing the , the coffee-pot, then add half of cold water and place Ion She range for ten minutes. loaf. auger and crearcapula sugar first into the cup, then cream, pou,ving in the con- .11 the 'coffee is preferred add hot scalded milk to suit . coffee use lialf the amount given above. If less coffee is egg is required. The .shell ham except for the 'white which it, and acts as a clearer for - .for putting in the eola, • is that the hot water . cook the. coffee, and from giving out its flavor. water put .in after the boil- . . settle it, over should be poured iitici anct made into a je n WI It makes a,delicious dessert chocolate cake, .-........ EGGS AND MUTT01.4 CUT- LETS. ' -Marzipan is made as fol- half a pound almonds, •Wood. - Id water th.em at once in co erp juice; let them lie for hours, drain and pound . , with two tablespoonfuls juice of half a lemon; rub sieve; mix well with half a sugar; place in a - - - ' ' over the fire and stir till it ' from .the bottom and saucepan; remove, and. when it on aboard till perfectly rest one hodr, then use. The• crut and cut into differ- B k ' 1 of small cakes.. a e in s ow brush -th tat sugar glaze. Eggs-liaked eggs in shells ' • d ' - erica and deviled eggs in Ara coquilles.of eggs- They may d• ' eli f ll ' anner• in e 0 OWIng 111 • tablespoOnflii butter; edd one flour, stir and. cook a add half pint milk, one: • one-eighth .tea- Balla one -el white pepper, stir and cook a thick white saU.00; add six on e teaspoon- parsley, half teaspoon- mustard; stir for , a 'few fire add two from the . , , a cream. and fill this in • sprinkle over each atable- an over e grated oheese, ' th ta,blespoonful grated' bread little melted butter' an a i • 3 a hot oven till light brown. Cutlets -a -Select a piete of the rack, about three weight, remove •the bones meat into six chops; re- of the fat' on the outside a pieee from the , rib end, 80 are a.bout eight inches long; into round .shapes, begin- thick end, securing their a toothpick; pound . thein fry- flatten. Place a large fry -will the fire, put in •the chops, any fat or butter; fry them turning them three firm to the touch, of- ht resistance they are done. , on a warm dish. Mix' one butter with half tea- salt and. one quarter tea - n_ spread this Over both cutlets, lay the 'cutlets ping the other in the cen- d garnish thwith an e sides a baked tomatoes end po- ' .--,-• . BAKING. FISH. neverprepare waY •except. frying, igneer- in which a handsome fish • '' by baking or boiling. Had- cod or lake whitefish, are a . nice when. baked. The Bos- • School IVIagazine tells how fish, as follows: the eyes- from the head and - the body of a. dressed about four pounds. Soak .. about Wire, ounces .(one- of bread from which the ' ' been removed, ' for flit ----e°4 Put the bread in a pieee of and wring out ell - the add a tablespoonful of pars- t bl f ls of two a espoon u. d ( a, teaspoonful of Plth sr one-fourth • teaspoonful th and pepper, one our cuP-• t 'd. b tt'1 d. • sea e a er, and, 1 . eau. t e eaten o wo h b ' yolks f t the bode f ' the, fish with - ° ' • arid SON( up the open- the tail t roug e soc e s g ' li h th k t ve bean tern:3v- h • h ' b ' the eyes a, , a' skewer titteugh,, close to hold it in place, thus .' • ,... ' ' • into e.rirtel , . on a fish sheet in abaking ex s with bits of onion, car - Th f* -13, : sheet, parsley. .hei s 1" sr htl with., ..o. es, is ng, Y the pan, like the. drainer - • • ' • ' •'a dish. Lay thin slices o ou the top of the, 'fish, and hoe Oven. 111 about. fifteen tvith iteupful of hot awl reduce the tempera_ forty, rainu •es, as mg e ' . t b e th it vrawo 1 -nn rn i n .i:i'eati 1:644-11 the lialaor. frOM the Pans 'Then renativt Part end Protoetion of the 'Toots, Es - pork, and pOur et 'white eauee madeof two tonleapooufula of butter end flour 'rectally, would, We reeommend thia, rev - . thod tnivard the end ot .00 00040)3. HINTS. FOR ,DIcKsoN' SL CARLING, --- .Elesilisters senators, Notaries, conaeyancers, . ...nit:aim r .Money to Leen at.,41 pOr cont. and a peacoat, OFFICE :-FAlia•ON'S BLOCK, EXIOTEIt. fax cAlironslo• 114• 4, L. IL jilCUB°11' ' A ineniber of the firm wM he at Henson on and a eupfixl of white oitook over t he Hain and sprinkle' over thil, fine, sea bread Very cloth .elipping, espemally if the weather is very liot, expaaes tile pia. nts rri.4 n ..,, , k 1 1.'1 7 v i li ii 1 Li inii•INITI-1-4ANA ' 1,,.•,-------- SaspercuseisisititessiustissoillsillistIstesullonsmiteitter . orumbs that bave been Stirred into paella(' butter. Bake fifteen min- utes longer et until the erupabs are and in tinae lases up their vitality. Eel- low nature which' is always safe, and allow the ireas to Ternain. If mote -,..--•,...,,,...... SHOEING AND FITTING. • • ) 5 . ' brown.' , ' . Slide the fish froin the sheet on to a warn blotter, remove the skewer, fertility is needed, supply it in the. form of a dreasing of bone -dust, "In proporing a Iowa' for winter we Thin Subject of fitting is so broad, a a_ . '•, aada ‘e,e,v,er'.",._se "7.,x1,Y diff.erelit 13'elm,,,ts that , 19 09• 1.).11.9.r.:5) , . .. squeeze the juice ef %lemon over the . .t. , a with bar .. frequentla see 1 clname wi - la 4I, LS ITny08$11.301 to treat it fullY . . . . onowasanoul Ill111113 .011018111111111IIIIMIIIIIIIIMI111111.tiii: fr flab, 'and garnish with parsley and . sli°e/i ot leMoUs Strain the sauce, renaove the fat; and serve in a Sauce boat, Tomato sane/3 may be used in. the yard manure, .It la uusightly, un- Isla/ries/me, unn,eeesaarY and unnet- urni, and the effect desired r8 tide ateli and .overhitlanced by, _the am, seet of unless unlimited time awl epete is grar- en to the 'consideration; therefore we will for thepresent,e f' e ourselves . ori in , to but one feature, viz,, the libadafit- •.'4, ' . .•,, -4 ----- 1, Is . ''''S's, THA THE T ' FACSIMILE ...,. . , , , T -4.---.a. ooL4LiNs, •ji,i,, " . .. , . . litIrd.Ster, SOliCitilli qanvoyancer, Ito, / ' . imarrnit, . oave, : toppioR :: Over 0,Neire Bank. -...;...-.....- -...,..-;...--.-,-,---,.. vizroT & GLADMAN, ,1.1 arristers, Solicitors, &tams Pablic) . . ,. . ' (ko . .0'611VeYfilleef8 ("Vo' ' arMoney • to • Loan. . OFFICE, - MAIN - STREET, EXETER. 5. v, 101,1,10T. P. W. GLAtIMAI,L Mr/IMEMINIM stead of white sauce. Baste thor- weed seed left an. the lewn te naunt n 0141119, or the fisli- Will be drY• and torment you next aieason." • ting, and in conjunetion with the sub- '• -111 '..-711--i-----=-71.71fi i also. treat, 'in con- 7 Tailin,MIIII ii it ' BABY'S FIRST 'SHOES. . Everyone who has had the cave 'of NOT SO LEVER AS HE THOUGHT „ • . . ___. •Sect a passing way, • formation and the necessity of study,- • ing it when attempting to fit a shoe, •.4., IN, 1 I Ti . . . .. Javege hate rreparatiOnforAs- Malating•theT4OCiAndRe uta- . . . . . . . _ ,,.... _A— -111 SIGNATURE ,. .:, small ehildten can notice bow the prog- Art Impudent neries ..141venture With ,Sir. says a Practical horseshoer in the a nie,toineemsailutroWe Q f . . . ....---- 0 F— baby just beginning to wa 0 rue of a lk,i retaxcled by the 'Shoes, a IS .lyn ' IN Willed. . Impudence oceasionallar meets with , Horseshoer' Jo na . . lir .1. La shoeing a horse intelligent before _ i, , , . , . .,.... .. i., 1NtA.N1S1.4(10Iitio*OtIO' • , Putting on of ' any man will, ta )) even those withflexible kid soles. How; ever soft the , kid miay. be it ora-mPs • • the tender foot, and it is alWayasoine time before the baby adjusts itself to the new' conditions. ' •The dif- its just reward, and possibly none Would envy. the feelings of ,the youth who, when Sir Evelyn ' Wood was ali-• Pointed. 'quartermasteragenerta ta the British forces, atteeaPted to show his the. his • starting the operation, first 'study the conformation, He will look first at the limbs, and -then the position the feat occupy toward the limb. Then follow- ing up hie subject he will look at the ' • , _ te , - _.4 .0 _...leerfut„ Promo sDi esti., n,C1 . . . 'Hess andRest 0 Mains neither . a. ,..a. a'. °_,- • -,,,_- , upuitn,raerpaine.nor Elluesau. li 0 T ISTAII IC OTIC. og.a•de ., , , ... 1.4 IS ON THE Siia MEDICAL _ R. .I.. IL RIVERS, . B. TORONTO UNI v.Litsrilt, 11.1 D. C. M. Tanity Thayer sity. Offlee-Crediton, Ont., . . length of time varies' with , ferent children, SoM8 taking to , the strange foot -gear readily, while oth- ers take days to do so. • , In one case knOwn to the writer a preeociou.s, baby what, walked early pos- ti • . • refused to put his Soot to the . hoes on there ground with the new s ., wit at expense of wisdom.. Sir Evelsn was. little ,known at the office, and it hepPened that Wale of • • _ the Glenna in, a certain room. were en- gaged .in '41arking." - -,whe.)2 a quiet" looking ••gontlenian walked, in. The moat iropudent of the young . men, thinking that the strangee was a, yisi- tor had Mistake into the position the. feet occupy on the ground. Re will fin smile Inas, I mean the . , lower portion, for this is MIT main point of observation, with long 'drawn Pasterns, bound or curb hooked, oth- era short in pastern and. atraight hock- ed.. Some feet' he will find long toed and low • heeled, Others the reverse, . - .Aketpeceoffei.nrialrEharrairli Pea/V. J'exj- .earSomer ÷ Redialle SA* - sheaseSeatt r •lf_pparnuit , ' NtatrbemOrtoda,,, releases:I- Gritted aisorp . , l'inkTvga flan?: ' tio 0 .L4 "' . 4 : "" RAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLT1 elFt ...., 1) fiS.VOLL1NS8c A1VCOS. -$"epitrate Oilicee.' Residence saine as former. J. andrew At. Offices: Spook maws bullnint 10 sir 1st; Dr Rollins' some as . formerly, met dco .; Dr. Amos" fi(1.010 building, south door,vely 1.A. ROLLINS, M. [5. T. A. AMOS', M. D • Exeter, On When they were taken off he was ready . to .stand or step, but when they were h ''t" llmlen g on e regarded hem ea m Y, a - no open objection, but could, not . be coaxed...to walk. ," who by e,oine wrong room, demanded in a peremP- tory voice; ' "What is your business here ?;••'• ' eisf b • ?,, , y usiness. .repeated theastrang- er, in a tone of .mingled surPrise andsome with a short, stubby toe and upright heels ; again he may find the long -toed and low -•heeled foot to be wired or dip- " '11• ped in. Then to the position. We will find toeing out, some occupying •, :-Apll-rreCtReMedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach.,Diarrites, Worms ,Convutsions,Feveris ti- 4 a• * - ei--•,:s ness atm .14o ss Or otaa, .. • , •,iie 3 ; 0 1-•-,, - „ , . 1 • . . T W.B.t.toiwNING, M. D. , M. 0 J • P. 5, avadnate VioLel,q,a, -Culver, • ' cfli cc and residence, .Dominion Labe a to]y _Exeter.. • 1-)R. RYNDMAN, corotier.fpr t ae 1-^ comity ot Enron. Office, oppaiSie Oarneenreastore, Exeter. In this dilemma laaby's-mother thane- ed. to tee .the story of . a similar ease sternness.. ' . , • • • "Yes, sir, your business," persisted a straight or direct position, and some, thou' la• •th ' ' 'd •dedly pig - g ease is rare, eci ss_s_ .7ac Simile Signature of - • AUCTIONEERS. in the family of an army officer, Where • -- the difficulty was solved by the use Worn the clerk. - • • . "It is with the duke," • was the answer. • ,e . . eon -toed Here are thiee distinct po- . _ • . • sitions that the feet occupy on the aae-silf---e,,are-4/ • r • NEW' 'YORK. ' Oftetoria is put up in one -she bottles only. It V., BOSSEM3ERRY, General Li• -4--i .4, censild Auctioneer Sales (meditated Ili aliparts. Setishuitinn guaranteed. Charges moderate. Ransom. o, ons; . of a .pair of mcicoasins, such aaa.re by the Indians, a diminutive pair of which hacl been, given .her by a. sqiiaw. She purchased a stout -chamois skin , , , He has been suddenly suananassned_ to windsor, and Lora woiseney'a..in bed with the mumps," ventured the young grOUnd. It may be asked, what has the lir:alas or their conformation to dowith the b . . s • A. Simply is. •• vit, • ,I2S9 _ --- anise -eta ' :7 is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to sell on anything else on tho. plea or promise that it is "just as good" and "will answer every par - Saas" flee that 0.A ,. . T_TENEY EILBER Licensed Aim. LA- Veneer- f or the Counties of Ituron end Middlesex . Sales °undiluted at mod. erate rates:" Office, at sost-offiee ored. ou out, • • MOM, sfacremasnal and manufactured a pair, guided bY a pair Of squaw's moccasins, which were araong her souvenirs of 'a trip to the p ' ,acific coast. 'footgear abentcarryingon his oke atth• in xi, on 3 the expense of this inexperienced stranger, as he deemed hima "Your naanae, sir' I" 'demanded that in oe or its elope/ shoe properly adjusted will serve the purpose of sustaining the flexorlig- ' amen ts according to the demands of MGT COPY 07 WRAPPER . m,„,,,,,,, aaaaaa, a, ' pose." you get -S -T -0.E -I -A.' me as. simile is on Idginnine .144.4. sway of wrapper. The new worked like a charm. •Baby aceepted it With satisfac- stranger, an ina_perative tone. .- . . toed. 4 . • - i tne case. For instance, the long -toed. . , My. name is Planta.genetZama., al s- . .. .... a . alliaavaa 'a a , • is - , a 41'''' ' VETERINARY. .. a • . until h tion an wore the moccasins s was old enough to walk on the street " .1 that relation to her gracaous majesty ' ,and low-heeled foot will, as a rule, be • • * found on horses' with .long ' pasterns, "Indeed! and • mine is Sir .Evelyn .. _ . . 1 t ermaster-general to ana. as may be seen in many ca.ses, :ferment & rennen t EXLITER, ONT. • a .t " •,. ,, 0: • la a• .. , (v.t pi pith° Ontario Veterinary.° it I f I ., , omen : One doorSonth ofTown mat, and desired to put on shoes like oth- boys." arcs quer the forces, and I.see now bow her ma- the same kind of conformation in the er After the.first pair- theywere made with double soles, which were suificientl th k f" y ic or outdoor wear.t The moccasins . are - not for sale in . the shoe stores, but may be found in infant's department. in some first-class dry goods store. The pattern thus ob- tained, it is easy to make them at home, and there is nothing so comfort- eble and so satisfactory by. way of a first abbe. . ' • _ a- . . , , lovv•er part will generally. be accom- Jest9 ls servea• The unfortunate elerk, who was not anied h bowed' hock' this is a oona.- P y a, , his ' d mon case, and is, to some extent, to be yet aware tha e imam ence had cost .when. e genera use o him ' dear, looked round with a grin,expected.to 1 l' f eon- .t t' t t •th lame for formation is considered. Now, in such a expee nag o mee ,wi, app , his talent, and became suddenly arNi are ease, it will be noticed that many fit- that all his companions were .working teas will shoe with a lon outside mule- shaped heeledg • t• • • ary shoe. The mac 100 is a away with the naost extraordinary wrong.th &eons de- earnestness. Instantly the full force one unless .o er con i 1 of ma.nd. If we find. that the long -toed, .o he situation dawned upon im. f t • • d h' s nog "Hertel's!" he ejaculated. "I took low-heeled foot lookst • ht. ahea.d, • e• we should to be correct in our prac- for 1 • phosphoric acid in nauch the same pro- portions as are required by the wheat . crop: i se . o reason, 11 Itstands't ' that if the wheat is not above the average, , 1 as fromo p an mad, hsufferedf lack f' l' t f '• such being the case, what fertilizer. is left in .the soil fax the clover which follows? Clover needs no nitrogen ter- „ . . , tamer' but it requires as much phos - h • '' • h -wheat,' d t p ono acid as t e an • wo en three times as much potash. _ , _ . i Harmers will find it pays them to i CARTES ,,,irt42 ' ',11:;1'" !TITLE tai. IVER . • PILLS. A. --- aaa , • ” .. . .„,. 9-1.11E WATE111400 • MUTUAL 1 nen Ialannalloicoo . , 'established la "sea - ' • HEAD OFFICE • WATERLOO ONT / :Ibis Company has been over Twentv-eigh . Tt ars in successful °per ttion in Westernind ontsrio, find continues te inSOreagainst lossor ilsniage - by. Fire. BM !dings, • Merchandise Bimini -oedema and sli other deseriptiocs of insurable property. Intending insurers have the option of insuring ou the Preiniain Newer coaa sawn,. . Durin t *nest ten years this company - has 7 „ 0 to,unil.rolioies, covering property to the in tun t o F241.1.1372,038; and paid in I osses atone 5709,752.0(r. , Ansel is IsTro,loo.oe, cons'eting of Cash ii Pauli Government Dopes' timid the mimeses- O ed Breininiu. Notes on ha'nd and in force 3a-11.AL:flea M.D.., President; ,ff M. TAIriAm s t 'repay ; J. 11.,110S11110, Iespeetor . 011AS B 1 3 3 , .d geu 1 kr Exeter aud vicinity - . •• CHILDREN'S DEFORMITIES; • you a crank with a grievance . . . taco of fitting it, resort to the extra and then he subsided.• length on both heels, and not on the f el•• f • th • 1 •which se •• - er 1 Jae ca tar c over, m ea the. timothy will look out for Itself. • . .. It is not unusual to see children of both sexes with ears projecting in such . . . . a way as to be a positive .deformity. The 'mothers appear oblivious of this fact, and any suggestion frorn an out- 'd ''s met with indignation and dis- si er 1 gust. -The mether thinks.•.her. .little ones perfect, and, perhaps, naturally ugh resents any hint that they WM , . , , could. be improved... • is possible o correc many o It 't t • f the . trifling errors n appearance y steady tifliiby and judicious ' horae treatment, provid-.-:- ed , it is centinued 'regularly, and not spasmodically, fax this often does more . „ -. . . harm than good, by disturbing exist - . „ . damns without fa mg conlly settling new ones. If a child's ears have a ten-, dency to project from the head it is _ • ' . well to wear a ribbon or a cap suited w . , to this arpose A misshapen nose may P • , one heel alone. The latter method is HER EXTENSIVE DOMAIN. injurious, inasmuch as it tends to — throw the foot out. of balance by fora- undue strain on the interior liga- some Interesting Figures arid. Facts About , ments of the le and. also creating Ihiglaud's Immense Possessions. . • . . g'• • • ' f' a tendency to friction on the ;mints o From the. latest statistics publish- the foot bones.. But when it is found that the toe is long, and heel. low, and e 1 appears that he n is Empire • d 'tt B •t" h E the foot looks out after the manner extends• o 11 334 700 . ua,re miles sq- . / in cow -hocked horses, than we can, vnth • .. . . . of which ooly l21,481. ore. in the son.all justice to the . place, apply the. long, islands Which are the home of the Unit- outside heel to the shoe, turning or • nailing it ontwa.rdly as much as the ed Kingdom 'of G-reat Britain and Ire- - • • . • - ease may demand. Now, in the case land. Queen Victoria is ruler over of the straight-pasterned and direct- 400 000 000 ' 1 , , peop e, and only, •38, 00, looking feet, the plain necessity is to 00u a theta dwell within the confines follow the lines of the foot and keep the heels of the shoe regular ' and of the United Kingdona. In 1897 the re- . . . . even, neither being longer than e ' t th venues o Great Britain an er colon- f ' " • d la ' . 1 other. We will notice, in. all 'such casa ies wee about 41,125,000,000 while the es, that the limbs and feet occupy di- share raised in , the United Kingdom reet lines frona the hock down to the • , veay point of the toe; regularity Of was only half the amount.C " India, Australia, . .. conformation is marked.. The foot is . and Canada are, of nob - • . too long of toe, the heele are mod- course, the nchest of Britain's posses- erately high and symmetrically shaped, • • ... . . the pasterns are short and well knit mons. an the provances of India the , P ; , The mineral fertilizer can very well be applied in the fall on the wheat, . though a top -dressing oC severity-fiyet to 12,5 pounds of muriate of potash . th • • '11 f- per acre in a spring will prove e f t 1 Th 'A h h t f 1 cc un . e aci p osp a e can sa e y be applied in the fall with the fertil- izer for the wheat. . A good fertilizer for wheat is, Per . fft ecre, i y poun s o ne oo , d f d ' d bl d '300 pound& of acid phosphate, and seventy- fine pounds of muriate of potash,. to be applied in the fall In the spring 150 • • a pounds . of nitrate of soda should be broadcasted. To insure a good catah of clover, there should he applied in t he fall, in addition to the fertilizer for the Wheat 250 unds of acid phos- p a e. In the spring ahere, phate. ' PQ • t least 125 pounds of muriate of potash per acre .should be broadcasted. By following this plan all that can be done. to in- • sure a (latch will have been done, and thenitrogen• the clover win. .gamed by .. be worth twice the cost of the ramer- . al fertilizer applied fax athe clover. . STokEeadaeheandrelieve 'dent to &bilious state Dizziness, Nausea. .eating, Pain intim . roman:table succesabas 1 , I 1 Headache, yet Currna's . are equally valuable d - ti thi Vie Part0e&kget ti Y late the liver a mug Even if they only ; • i ._. . acne they would who suiTer from but fortunately their and those who these little pills valuable they will not be . Butafter all sickhead a- 36C:baba= of so many we make our great while others do.not. all the troublesinet• of the system, such as Drowsiness, Distress. after Side, 8m, While their most been showniu curing CK Ti. imusa LrrErt Pit- in Constipation curing S. Etleso0AlleffsCOElpeasIl 1 I et, while an of th toroach, and•re Wale the bowels. cured . be almost price's= to those this distressing complaint: goodness doss not end OECD try them will ilnd in ao many ways that. willing to do without theme. FIE llvesthattere Is where •boast, Our pills euro is NivERA, h,.. . 1.11111. litAiNb erg a S.A. ..lb• , • ovary that owe the worst tam a Nervoue'Debillty, Lost Vigor and BEANS • Failing Manhood; restores the, .. weakness of body or mind (mused'd by overArorlr, or the errors or ex- s whitely dares the most obstinate men when all otheceases of youth. ThiRemedy ab. rd ritakreinims' have tailed event° relieve. .':',old by drug. nets atsiper package, or six for $5 or sent by mallon mutt of price lu• addressing Trin.LAMES MEDIOINP 30- a••-•••••••• on - 'a' • • • • aaa al-, Sold at BrOwning's Drug Store Exeter be trained into proper form by very gentle and careful handling. The bones of a, child are soft •and readily moulded , into the- required. shape. •000 • Personal beauty and symmetry are • great factors in a successful life,and it is -well worth while to take the little , and the hock is straight; 75 per cent. Queen's realro: extends over more than ,BURR , , square mi. es o of sach conformation calls for an even- 1 500-000 • '1 f territory,and heeled shoe In mterfering this kind through her Viceroy she rules 292,000,- ' - . ' ' peop e. e anct an posses ions of conformation will generally be found 1 Th C ' di ''' s• ' to strike almost centrally of the foot, cover '3,470,257 square.. miles, and. the iit n e cases men lone su jects num er nearly a while ' thether • . e d ' Canadianb• b5 , ,000 . souls. In Australia the Queen is toward the heel that the damage 110 be dons' • , has 4,235,250 loyal subjects. It is the - ' . —. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER Prim are verysTnall KNAPP'S FARM FURROWS. and very easy to take. one or two pills make . a dose. They are strictly vegetabe and .do Stick to the farm Better coarse notgripe or puree, but by their gentle action • clothes. than empty stonaachs. please all ndao 'use them. In vials at 25 cents; 1 Svefor $1. Sold everywhere, or smithy mail. • The best things are free. So live as CASTER MEDICI= CO., New Tett. to get plenty of them. • If the -meat spoils, think no more of Small rill. Small Dm Small ha' it, but bread. •' --..--,....,-- ilEAD MAKER'S 0 B ........., NEM hii.$ re car Sarmayeao largest the 3, eat • . THE, EXETER TIMES - P 7s published ever ' y 'I hursdny morning at Times 'Steam' Printilio• Ho is .i.) . 1 - e Ma'n street, nearly appooite Fitton's:Jew/Au store, Exeter, Ont., by . JOHN.WHITE 8n SONS, Proprietors. • • RATES OF ADVERTISING: First insertion, per line • • 10 cents Eii eli snbsequent insertion, per line.. '3.. cents . - • To ineure insertion, 'advertisementsTh Should o.0 be sen 1 in not later than Viredn ' . A mdoy morning. . ur JOE PRINTING DEPA RTMENT is one• of theiergest and best equipped in the County of Iluron. All work entrusted to us willre ceive our prompt attention. • -- Itceisienus Regarding Nevrepaners. 1--Apy person who takes a paper regularly from the post office, whether directed. in his name or another's, or whether he has pub- Scribed or not ie responsible for payment. 2-41a person Orders his paper dieeontinued ' - he must pay oll arrearii or the publisher may oontimie to send it -until the paymentis made, end then collect the whole amount, whether the paper is taken from the cams or not. . 8 -In suits for subscriptions, the Rent may be instituted in the place v here the paper is pub. lished, although the. subscriber limy reside hundreds of miles away. . ' • 4 --The toasts hove decided that refusing to talc)) neWspapers. or periodicals from the post efiloe,, or removing and:leaving them unealled ior, is intim,. Mete evidence of intentiona fraud. • • , • • "aaileasaantoviaaanataaaarvaaraewatea. roub e and time that are' mvolvedna correcting the thousand little irtegua larities and triflin Jleformities that. ve g ry many cihldren are born with. Be- cause a thing is, many persons are suf- ficiently given to fatalism to think that it ro.ust be, and, following the sup- erstition, that says, "If it is, it's' be- caus God wills it " is a poor way to • a, . . . , . •P y , bring up to best the . island an world -about 175,153 squere mile - equalling in. size - ' CLOVER AFTER WINTER WHEAT. the United St ' 1 d• States, me u mgAlaska, • • d ' • ' 1 Failure to et a " catch" of clover an being twenty-six times as erge , g as the little Britain that rules it. after winter wheat has frequently The rest of Great Britain's calonial ' possessions are not, territorially, so been a source of great annoyance to e ng is an ris farnaere ueing the ola. standard four- inportant. In th E 1' h d I • h c.hannels are the Isle of Man Jersey year rotation, especially in those sec- ' • as • ' ' and Guernsey, in the Mediterranean tions which have been cropped for .SQ211e young men must scurry over the world like a' box an search of its lid, .before they. can hit upon ' their calling. Lucky is the man who is con- tent to walk in his father's shoes. . Money ie a good medicine, but not a cure -a.11. . • . Less strong drink; more hard chin's. number of cases used as sleeping apart - • • ments with the utmost impartiality. This does not, however, apply to the .fourth floor, to which very few of the houses in this class except the hotels are able to aspire. Although it may sound improbable, it will be found. that • ' the .basemerit ' many mote people live m -that is to say, underground -in Lon- don than the fourth floor; bat the their estate sons daughters of men. - .. How far," asks a• mother, "ought one to yield to the whims of children, In the matter of clothes ?" to, force a child into manifestly overgrown or u.n- garments or those, Of very un- • ,rotation usual cut and fashion is undoubtedly to entail teal suffering. Everyone crin 1 mall some such experience in his or her own childhood•where the hated ar- elwhether t el lc e, hat, coo. , Tess, or whatfoundla-nd t b ' 't ht ' ht s d no , ecame. a ven a. e.nigs mare an made life a burden. ' . are Gibraltar, the Maltese and Slyprus many year,s This failure has been as-, islands ; in the Gulf of Alden is a group • • ' of ,dependencies; 'in the Indian Ocean entreat, to many things,. generally a are Ceylon and a few minor islands; in lack of water, or the probably in:Login- A.sia... are India and the Strait Settle- ary disease known as clover tiickitess. ments ; in the Asiatic archipelago are • 1 ti ' th f The usual ,prac ce in e mar -year Hong•K , North B • rx and. Labuan Kong,or eo a , is to apply a heavy ton -dress-•• island; in the Pacific the British flag - • - -Each floats over ,New Zealand. and the Fijis; ing of farmyard manure to the corn on the American continent, besides in the spring,. with, perhaps- a• , a Canada-Britainlight holdsYa 6. New- • , 8), • y ov r • . aPPlication of well -rotted manure in Guiana and Honduras • in • ' • ' the fall in connection with the two the North and South Atlantic are a- • UNDERGROUND DWELLERS. — Half a 1111111on Londoners Live Below the , . Pavement tine. ' * , There are over 150 square mites 'of ' ' street In. London. , squire retie has an average of 120 streets, and e hstreet h ' e of about 100 ac as an ayerag houses, There are, therefore, aver 1,- 800 000 h • • L d , ouses in on on. on ligures stand higher in the accompany - in g tables because the division of fourth: floor ineludes all others of a greater • f altitude. • . Tabulated, this is how the figures 1 '' ' ' for the 1,800,000 houses stand Ua__ndI Sleepers. erground. . . .... . * • - 247,000 .F. i 416,000 1TSL IlOOT• . . • . • • • • 9. _ Second floor. . . . . . . ,, . 400,000 Third floor, . . . . . . . . -. . 890,000 Fourth floor, and over . ... . 341,000 '--- • CARE OF THE . ' LAWN ' F. P. Sperry says: The »Columbus (:). • • ' , • ' Horticu ura 'Society on 'Lawns and ,a. . , a . How to Treat Them, made some ex- cellent points on watering and clipping. - aea "We should not w t r as a Ile said: , , a esquare ' ' dozen such islands' as Betnauda, Ba- to five hundred pounds per acre, of • llama,' J'a,ma,ica, and Ba.rbadcres, and commercial fertilizer. This is sUppos- added to all these are the millions of miles of British' territory and the rail- ad. to answer, net ani- fax wheat, but • ' ' • • also for the elover and timothy. crops lion of British' aubjects an darkest a Africa The ,sraallest of Britain's for- to follow. So long as a good clover • • • eign possessions, .but at the same time erop can • be Secured, a .good -timothy one of the most important is Gibraltar, • •• • • c , • to follow. If the clover which • , .. . - . crop is snare , . . , inclucies only one and nine - tenths nil s and is the home fails, the timothy fails also, and the i e , ,, ,. . Of these houses about half are hotels, apartments, chambers, lodging houses, or tenement houses. A qua.rter ate shops and a similar. number are of- - ' ' • flees, flats and peirate houses. /t is interesting to discover where th ese people sleep, and in oraer to do so it is netessaxy to divide the popula- , ! -- ; 1 800 000 In obtaining the number of persons -the average being about four grown-, up persons to a house -we get the t rtIi. figures of 494 000. or nearl ks a ng , 9 500,000 underground sleepers. What t th • re I' t mus ear coml. ion be under a mos- have e- pherie conditions such as we r ntly had thrust upon us? ' WFIERE WOMEN RULE. ' , We occasionally hear of towns in imeri• can and New Zealand in .which rlie woman voter is dominant; bat how many' of our women readiets ape aware • . rf the feet that in Great ' Brit- tinf ithell •there is a large • eentre of population in the same -shall' we say happy?- condition 2. says the West- painstet Gazette. There is Caertaar- then, 'w.here • the WODIen voter ' . , s on the Local goVernment register are zit) less blibm 63 ,per . cent, of the whole. This' • a . 'a MOre , double the, proportion existing in any "other town, and the 3xplanation given ot it is that the in- lustries ..of the. town have greatly' de- • ":•ayed, and its roam depeedence. is up. m it reputation a'.is it health resott. Hence 'a large nilinher of its house. leldera, are women who keep lodging- 'abuses, • ' ' ' ' • e--aaaatata-a.—a, ruleth more an once a wee ,, k but let that, 01100 be a tlaorough wetting down,are: -. - . • • Int custom of watering every day • is, •• ' a ' 1 we believe, the eath of more awns than any one thing practiced. 'It tends a to keep the roota neat t,he surface int . , t t t 'It cl ' stead of allowing hera ,o s ri e tep . , , .• - . - . . into the soil. Tho is from, this of 26 000 people. rotation is broken with, the result of , •• several years unpr fitable work t get .......__.......—. , oo the soil into. good heart again. , SIGN LANGUAGE. It ii clearly understood that the Eiow did Eleaner announce her en- bulk of the farmyard manure g t ' . nt to the fa,mil ? • • oes o gageme Y the corn each year, tue whea - ' t reeeiv She just wiggled the finger that had • ing• the •remainder supplemented by on the diamond ring , , . commercial fertilizers. Now it should aaaaaweaearaeaiese, be perfectly clear that the corn. a-nd tion of London into five classes. These • a d 1 Basement, or undeo-ground s eep- ers first floor second lfoor, third floor, , and fourth floor' sleepers. The dwellers in private house's sleeP mostly upon 'the second, third, and . •. foutth floor's. Roddy any -except, Perhaps, one .or• two cif the butlers in ee in the base- the. larger houses -sl. p ' SOVEREIGNS AT 15 SHILLING -S APIECE. As the result of a wager a number of sovereigns. were exposed the other .day • , for sale et 15 shillings apieee te the winAow of a London store. Only ;mei eustonaer appeared, and he, after ex- • • . .- • . , the declined to buy. gta,ss reason easily affected by the hot Ban, and as a re,sult rapidly barns oat, and - • • . if, neg acted. or a ay or •i . ss "" • • - wheat subethatially exhaust mantire • and conntarcial fertilizer, arid the cloy-, er must Make out the beat it Can. If the soil ie very rich naturally, the cloy_ er will: make out well; in the long run, , Ment. • 1 Taking the. shape and offices we find that the first and second floors are almost invetiably given over to the - business. In Some cases nobody lives araming money, A somewhat' simnel' case occurred some . years ago when Sovereigns were, offer - ed for saki at 1 penny apiece on Lon - don Bridge 'without one being sold. - • • can be rolled! up like a sheepakin and, . a, • ' f ' ' la n at- ith be iity is aoreeer lost, A. W av. ered less frequently,. but thoroughly, ,• allows its roots to go deep for mom- . . , . ture, and is thee fortified a,gainst dranght and. ,eudaeo changes," The deeper rooting. of the' gram is also e• protection against killing out in win - . - . . aa -a., . . . ter, "Cutting," contieu,es lair. matinee ix ict t b done oftener than once s ou-• •no , 6 t ' ' t le a week, and better ye is once In e days, and then not too close, all:awing the. grass to remain on the lawn and work tth' way to the roots of the plea, ,„ ._ „ .„., mere terming a. ratiloh for the s -r- a ke biliousness, dysp psis, beadaehe, Li e pation sour stomach, indigestion are mired 'by Rood's rills . They do their • o.d easily and thoroughly, . •^ Ill Best after dineer pins, 1 26 oents. All &senate. . Prepared, 'by O. I. llood ar ato., Lowell, .., she onbi kill be take with Rood's' Sarsaparilla , ' promptly howevet, the soil booms poor arid 'the consta oloVer - fails: Most farme in the East have already . teethed this' stage. . work' rah • •ta -• ` ' d .. e iropor nee of malting a. goo catch of clover being admitted, we. no.. aurally seek a method by which there Will be no hit or miss about the teat- ter. We all know the importance of the Mineral fertilisers in growing clover, and it Is Witte Probable that s the cause. 'of so Much failure ip due to . ' a deficieney of potash arid phosphOrie , • . acid in the 'soil immediately affet the afaa• matnrity of the wiled, Farmyard mare. 1 Mrs 0011 1.132 1 a m.rogen,, po OA an - ta,' ' 't '; ' ‘1 h . a On the premises at night, but in .others the third and fourth floors may belet an chainbers or flats, or mai-utained as sl e ' s • " t t for the assistants e pmg aptly men s • In the smaller shops the proprietor and his 'family not infreqaently reside in the) upper portions of his busineas pre - misee, and in very large warehouses and, shOps a housekeeper and his wife may generally be found to utilize the basement, 'of the house fOr their own habitation.. , In the hotel. and Iodging house diets- ion we find that the rooms on all the fl 6" • f th h 0 a are 'ti th g seater o rs o e , o s ' i e a ,,,,, . IN TIIE 1.10NG AGO, wiggiee_Dia yoli ever ride in a borstiess carnave? ---- -- - - , waggiee_Nnt, same./ was a baby, assaa,, COULDN'T TAKE ClIAXCES. Smith -One caret always judge a man's patriotism, by his oonversea tion. se not ,Tonea-No, X suppo . ; Sinith-Take Brown, tor instance ; Would you tall him a coward?. ' ' •Tones ---Well, er-I might,. , if I wee sure he 'wouldn't fight e ..• • ." L'A• conirnittee of three a iliPPinos, aP- minted by Aguilialclo, hag' left Hong • • ,!toeg, in order to confer with Preeident VfeKiniey upon the tuture ,of the Pli'l l• - ppine Islancle, •