Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 1 Oct 1896, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

HOMEMADE CHEESE. It is a matter of wonder why more farmera' wives do not make their own heeae and be independent o£ store sup- pliea. Many farmers' tables are guilt- les8 of cheese excepc on stace occasions. When we take into cousideration the futility and little trouble it takes for the manufacture of cheese, our won- der deepens. The implements needed are of the simplest kind and to be foimd in every household, with perhaps the exception of the hoop, which can easily be made from a discarded measure, such aa a peck or half bushel cut down to the required size. Choose a cool Bpell, oo that if the quantity of milk required cannot be had at one milking it can be saved and the milk taken at night added to the morniut; oxilk. A piece of rennet the size of your hand, previouisly soaked several hours in wa- ter, about a pint, or a rennet tablet dicjsolved is now to be added to the milk. Place over the fire in any vessel large enough, for our firat cheese making Seventh, care of product from time received in dairy house or room till butter id produced and ready for mar- ket. Butter making in a pains-tak- ing business and that coupled with neat- ness makes up largely the .skill of the successful butter maker. F. W. MoflBly. Clmton, Iowa. COSTERMONGER CARTS. Oddities OD WheclK *rem la tke »(reeli of BODdOB. AH who poas along the thorough- fares of the metropolis, bestowing more than a cursory glance upon the many phases of its busy street life, must be struck with astonishment to observe the various modes of conveyance tised l>y those who resort to the public thor- oughfares for a livelihood. From the more provident coatermonger's pony and donkey cart to the ruaiy old iron tray alung around the neck by the vendor of blacking, and down to the ragged little boy with hia luicifer matches in the last remains of a willow hand liasket or a ci<jar boxâ€" the shape and variety of the means resorted to by the ^_. ___ __ _ coatermongers and other street sellers we used a tin wash Ijoiler holding ' '"^ carrying aljout their goods are al- twelve gallons. Stir in the whey made j most as manifold as the articles they by soaking the rennet â€" or the tablet dissolved â€" stir long enough to thor- oughly incorporate with the milk. Ileal vend. The ponyâ€" lyi donkeyâ€" carta (and the latter is by tar the more usual beast gradually up to eighty-four degrees ; "' draught) of the prosperous coster- Fahrenheit, then remove from the tire j mongers are of three kinds: The first. and let stand half an hour or until coa- gulation takeb place, after which cut the curd into small squares so that the whey may etscape. The whey shoalit be be of a greenish cast and nearly tran- sparent when the curd is "set" as it is termed ; should the whey be of a milky color it denotes a deficiency of rennet or heat. After the uurd has "set," dip off all whey possible before removing the ctird. Have ready a i square oC cheesecloth, scalded <ind tins- is of an oUong shape, with a rail be- hind, upon which is plaoe<l a tray filled with bunches of greens, turnips, celery, etc., while other nommodiiiee are laid in the bed of the oart. Another kind is the COMMON SQUARE CAKT without wrings, which is so construct- ed that the sides, as well as the front and back, will let down and form ket which should be placed over a tub to catch the whey, a common wash tub will answer very well and also a clothes basket if clean can be tised, being care- ful to wa^h and dry quickly after us- ing ed afterward. Spread in a clean buji- ""etves whereon the stock may be ar- f-inged to advantage. The third soj-t of pony cart is one of home manufacture, consisting of the tramework of a body without sides, or ^ tront, or hind part. Sometimes a Lip the curd from the Iwiler, place ^„ â- "'t*''*'''''*? V* ^o'"ni''<l into a don- in the cheesecloth and let drain awhile. ^^ <^" merely by fasu'nmg with cord then with the hand break the curd up "^^o rough Polos to the handles. All fine. Salt to taate, after which gather ! »;'* , u *'*'"^^ kmds of oarts are used the cloth. Now lift carefully and place i'^.u,^^ ^IT^"^ "i *'",'^«'' ^'^^- ^«K- in the hoop, which should be placed ; ? , h„t T. "^"i K*^' txaides these there where it is intended to be put to press. ^„r ,u ,'u^*^^''^ '^^' "^^^ and w"l»- A bench, or even the sink can be used "S^* „, ,;„ ?^. covering, and a squarv if no better place can be found. A clean ^5^^; .u";'' ^'"^^"^''''j'^^,'' „^^^ °' sal') board is to be plaoed under the hoop, 1 !^J!,'^ V" '* P^>PJ«<1 Salt 31b. a penny." which is bottomless. Fold the cloth , ,h„ ^vii i ^ t *"* .^'^'S^ '^^- '*"'' evenly over the curd so as not to wrin- i ,-,„ ^ i â-  '^t'^ rabbits dangling at kle and place the "follower" or cover I "ij^"*f.' |"»'i ^*"n two uprights and a over it. A smaU weight U best at first, I rfo^ stick, iipon which are suspended adding or changing to a heavier in a q!i* *"=" '""'« across m couples. few hours. Let the curd rem.iin in I _A ,? uâ„¢ * •^"^"eyancea are all of press about twenty hours, changing [ f?^ii'*i?"'°f"?*i ^^ barrow being gen- 5nce in that time, a clean wet Jloth ! tf^/// tl^'^^J^ ^"^ '«°f ''°'l » ^^i^e. being uBBd to turn it upon. After re- Z,,^^^ '^'^^ *â„¢ """Kily a,bout 4 feet moving from the preai set away un- ""i!r"^^ til dry, after whicU grease well with mixed butter. Turn every day and re- peat thii: process for a week. Place a oandage of thin cloth around the side ajid keep in a cool dry place secure from flies. IX) not place in the cellar as it will soon mold, unless very dry and airy. In about five weeks it will be uured and ready to set before your fa- mily. We never ime aonatto or col- ccinc matter to tone up our cheese, or to simmulafae richness â€" .simply iiae pure milk, cream and all. Do not skim off any part of the cieam and you can- not fail to prodvuae a fh»>ese, the qual- ity of which will please your family or friund.1. Try it, ulsters, and let us bear results. Do not make seven-cent outter when a cheeeie Ls so much eas- vr to make. â€" Mrs. A. C. McPheison. rACrORS IN BUTTER MAKING. The man that gets there must, in batter making, as in all other under- takings, be an up-to-date fellow â€" up- to-date in all matters relating to his business from beginning to end. It one will stop and thinkâ€" think hard and long â€" he will find that many factors enter into butter-making. First, one's farm should be put and Ibept in proper order. Preparing a farm for dairy fanning includes a good deal more than can be hinted at in such an article as this, ^ut the reader can think of a good many improvements thAt can be made on such a farm a^d by further reading and inquiring can leaxn of many more. Second, faim buildings are impor- .nt factoiu in dairying and while they need be neither showy nor expensive o&n be neat and comfortable. Tiiird, the aeleotion or raising of a herd of cows is a very important mat- ter. It is now getting to be under- stood that every suxx»ssful butter mak- er ia nearing, or has reached or pas.sed the three hundred pound mark. Uy this is meant that it does not pay to keep aaiy cow that will not produce at least 250 pounds of butter per annum and that a real profitable herd should be made up of cows averaging about 300 poundb per cow each year. Such herds cannot a,» a rule be purchased, they must be raised. Fourth oomea the question of feed. Thii» is a big and important question and no infallible rule can be laid down, bei-iuise locality, climate, prices and ac- onsisibllity are sub-features of the feed question. 'I'he preparing of the farm ia a feature that also enters into it. The preparation of the farm can include provisions for valuable grasses. Fifth, the care of cows. This ques- tion interlocks with questions first, second and fourth. I*uttiug a farm in order for dairying should include ample provipion for water for the herd for Doth summer and winter, pure water and accessible. Condition of farm buildings is an important factor in the hertia' comfort. Feed and care are twin factors. With care is coupled milking, one of tbo most important operations on a dairy farm. Sixth relates to dairy houses and ai>- pliancesâ€" the manufacturing plant, if ' *lso been made from hnir. fur, wool and you please. This should include needed appliances, reference to which cannot be made in detail in this letter. Let thoae interested dilligenily and intel- U««atly Igok tiie matter up;. Every kind of harness is used; some 13 well blacked and greased and glitter- ing with braiB. others are almost as gray with dust as the donkey itself. Some of the animsjls are gaudily cap- '^1^?*^. '° "^ "'^ carriage harness, which fits like a man's ooat ou a boy's back, while the plated silver ornaments are pink, with the Clipper showing 1 f?"?*"' otl"^" have rude traces and oeJly-banda, and not a few indulge in old cotton handkerchiefs for pads. The 'next conveyance (which indeed, IS the most general) is the COSTERMONGER'S HANDBARKOW. These are very li^jht in their make, with strings te.rminating at the axle, boiue have rails behind fur the arrange- ment of their goods; others have not Some have side rails, while others have only the fnimework. The shape of these l^arrows is oblong, and sloped rrom the himd part toward the front; the bottom of the bod is not boarded, but consists of narrow strips of wood nailed athwart ""^ttrr • n When the costogllt hawking his fish or vending his g^n stuff he provides nunsell with a wooden tray, which i» placed upon his barrow. Those who can not afford a tray g»t some pieces of Iward and fasten them together these answering their purpose as well. Pineapple and pin-.-aypIe rock barrows are not unfrequentljr seen with small bngh! -v-olored flags at the four cor- ners, fluttering in the wind. Then there are the cat and dogs meat Ijarrowa These, however, are merely common whe«ibarrows, with a board in front aoA a ledge or shelf, formed by a piece of l>oard aailed across the top of the Ixirrow, to answer the purpose of a cutting Iward. Lastly, there is the hearth»t.one harrow, piled up with hearthstone, Bath brick and lumps of whiting. CHESTERJb'IELD'S WIT. Lord Chesterfield was never at a lose for a polite retort. Once he proposed a person as proper to fill a place of great trust, but which the Kiing him- self was determined should be filled by another. The Council, however, re- solved not to indulge the King, for fear of a dangerous precedent, and it was Lord Chesterfield's busiiness to present the grant of office for the King's signa- ture. Not to imcenae his M^ijesty by asking him abrujptly, he, with accents of great humility, liegged to know with whose name his Maj.-sty would lie pleas- ed to have the blank's filled up. "With the devil's!" replied the KiiiR, in a jKiro.iysm of raige^ ".-Vtwl" khall the in- strument," Siiid tlhe Earl coolly, "run as usual, 'Our trusty and well-beloved cousin and counselor'?" â€" a repartee at which the King laughed .ind with great good humor edgned the grant. PAPER FROM ANY OLD THING. Paper can be manufactured out Of al- most anything that can be pounded in- to pulp. Over 50 kinds of iKirk are said to be used, and banana skins, Ix-an stalks, pea stalks, coooanut fiber, straw, sea and fresh water weeds and many kinds of grass are all ai>plicable. It has from asbestos, which furnishes an ar tide indestructible by fire. Leaves make a good strong paper, while the husJts and stems of Indian corn fafive also been tried. WHAT IS OOINQ ON IN THr, FOUR CORNERS OP THE QLOBE. Old and New World BvcnU of Interest Chron- icled Brieflyâ€" InUrcstlsg Happcalags ol Recent Data. The Mormon colonies in Mexico ore prospering, owing to frugal and ener- getic busmess management. An English stam]> dealer says that one collector has bought $200,000 worth of stamps from him in 20 years. M. Jean Cayron, of Vihrac, France, has just had hia twentieth child chris- tened. Eighteen of his children are alive and healthy. French trade for the first seven months of this yeaj is $,58,000,000 bet- ter tham last. Of the Increase $43,- 000,000 are imports and $15,000,000 ex- ports. The minion work in Jerusalem is proi^iering greatly. The Rev. Dr. Kek. missionary, has baitised one hundred and twenty converts from Judaism. Wheat can be grown in the Alps at an elevation of 3,000 feet; in Brazil at 5,000; in the Caucasus at 8,000; in Abytsinia, at 10,000; in Peru and Bo- livia at 11,000. Geoffrey Millais, the second son of Sir John Millais, is a keen sportsman and is writing a book on the deeir in India. His recent work on the big game of Africa ^vas well received. Athena has a "asteur institute.where 201 patients were treated last year, only one dying, and iluit one a man who had neglected his bite for a fort- night before seeking treatment. An encyclopaedia of the laws of Eng- land in twelve oOO-page volumes is be- ing prepared, the first volume to be puuUshed in January. .^Unong the con- tributors are Sir William Anson, Sir Walter Phillimore and Sir Fiederick PoUock. Liaards, it is well known, are at- tracted by the uotes of muaic, and the negroes in th«s Island of iladeria,when ciiicLing them lor food, accompany the cha-'e, Dy whistling some tune, which uivaxiabiy has the effect of drawing great numbers toward them. Ajj many us four and six crops are secured in Argentina, the plant in the suudy soils sending roots to great depth; wiih splendid crops nearly al- ways assured. Last year tbe province of BuienoB Ayres had J72 acres in alf- alfa, compared with 232,000 in 1888. Vesuvius is an interesting sight just now. One stream of lava flowing down from the centre is a hundred feet wide and from seven to fourteen feet deep. A BRAVE MAN Kcnoaaces â- !• Ki(kl to â-  Thre>e •• Bo islam .WUsloaary Work. There (s something brave alMut a man who will give up his rights to a throne in order to don the robes of a clergyman and do missionuj-y work in the alums of a great city. There are those, of course, who will say that such acticm is only the result of an er- ratic mentality, but who shall say that he may not accomplish great good, not- withstanding i Prince Max of Saxony has begun his labors aa a Catholic priest in the Church of St. Boniface, Union street, Whitechapel, London. The prince is a nephew ojf the King, tjeing the third son of Prince George, the heir apparent to the throne. Born in 1870 he was trained for the army, and became a Lieutenant In the ducal regiment of Grenadiers. In 1893 he left hia regi- ment at Eisenach, renouncing all his rights of succession ere he took orders. Despite his youth the Pc^ie almost im- mediately appointed him Apostolic Vi- caar of Saxony. The Prince, who has gone to London to work, in the East End, speaks English fluently, and is likely to be popular in the district. BEEN THERE BEFORE. Guest (at Mrs. De Fashion's Musicale) â€" Mercy! What are all theee wash- boilers and Cl.-it irons, and things in the parlor for i | Mrs. Db Fashion (helplessly)â€" I had to get them. The leader of the orches- tra came here at the last minute, and refused to play unless I furnished those things for the Anvil chorus. He said he was Ixiund to have one selection heard above the conversation. Medical value in a bottle cf Hood's Sursap.-irlUA than tu any oiiier preparaUou. More iklU, mure care, mure exiwiise in icana* fai'ture. It costs propriftnr and dealer More but it costs the consumer less, as he ^ets more doses (or Ills money. More curative- power Is secured by its peciilja* ' coinbmutloii, prop jrtiou and prtjis'j^Si More w*'iiderful euros ."ff.'cled. more tesdmoi^ moiiial.i, more sales and nioru iucreaae. Many uoru reasons why you Mjior.ld tak4 Piles Cured in 3 to 6 Ni^jhts.- Dr. Agnew's Ointment will cure all cases of Itehing Piles in from 3 to 6 nights. One .application brings coinfort. For Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless. Also cures Tetter. -Salt Hheuni, Ecze- ma, Barlter's Itch, and all eruptions of the skin. 3S cts. Lucyâ€" "Clara's honeymoon was com- pletely spoiled." Alice â€" "Howf" Lucy â€" "The papers containing the account of the wedding did not reach her." SIR JOHN HACDONALO'S OLD CON- STITUENCY. Mr. J. H. Metcalfe, M.P. for King- ston, talks of the Splendid Curative Character of Dr. Agnew'a Catarr- hal Powder. There is no small amount uf talk in all parts of the country of the class of pe,ople who are proclaiming the re- ... u â-  . L â€" -"â-  markable results ac»:omplished by Dr. wnoie a hundred other smaller streams ! Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, for leading i!:^f'..f-"^°'i^* dow-n the cave, and a bi« citizens in all parts of the DomiU' column of black smoke rises into the sky. I'he British Crown plate Includes a peacock of precious stones, valued at i:3j,000 ttiiich caiue from India ion are Using it. Among others who tell of the effective nature of this me- dicine for c;itarrh, hay fever, or cold in the he;ul, is Mr. J. H. Metcalfe, the popular M.P., for Kingston, the con- iger's head with a solid ingot of gold stituency represented for so many for a tongue and crystal teeth ; and a magnificent gold shield, valued at £10,000, which was made from snuff boxes by uriler of George IV. _ A Dunedin, New Zealand, lady. Miss Gertrude Wise, who went to London om a tj-ip some six mouths since, lost her parse at the opera and thought her pocket had been picked. The mail brought, the missing purse from London to New Zeal;md, thi" linder having mail- e<l it to the address which it bore. A uiunber of ' bulla ' by members of Parliament and othtrs have been print- ed lately, but bLshops seem to pejpe- tiate them sometiuivs. His Lordsliip of Hipon, in a sermon the other day at Calverley, near Leeds, betrayed his Hiberni;in origin, not lor the first time in the same way. He said: " My bre- ihireai, I beg of you to take hold of your own heart and look it straight in the face." It is not generally known that the prej>ent Sultau of iiiorocco is of Irish desce-ut. Such, however, is undoubted- ly the caae. Early in this oenlary his grandfather. Sultan Sidi Mahuuiet, cboisc as his wife a hadn.some lTV*h girl, the widow of a sergeant of sappers, who had been detached from the Brit- ish garrison at Gibraltar and taken in- to the Sultan's service. Her sou is Mu- ley Yezid, nicknamed the 'Red Beard." Ou St. KUda's Island, which lies in the Atlantic eighty-two uiiies west of the main island of the Hebrides, a house belungiug to the stone age has been discovered, with a number of stone weai>ons, hiimmcrs and axes. There ai-o only 71 inhabitants ou the island,whic-h is 4,000 acres in extent. The minister is at the same tim.^ the doctor ajid the school teacher. He sails to the main- land once a year to shop for the whole island. Zola is not a rich man, in spite of the enormous success of his books and the large annual income he has receiv- ed from their sale, like many other au- thors, he has not possessed that busi- ness capacity which would enable him to take care of, or accumulate a for- tune. He has a large chateau at Medon and beaut itully furnished apartments in years by the late Sir John A. M.-icdon- ald. Beyond any doubt this remedy is a marvel, radical in its effects, it is at the same time simple and agreeable to take, whii'h (-annot be said of most car- tarrh medicines. Bubblesâ€" "My wife and I m^t by ac- cident. Thrown together by chance, as it were." Wheelwoman, eagerlyâ€" "Did you break the bicycles?" HEART FLUTTERING AND SMOTH- ERING SPELLS. Quickly and Permanently U.inished by Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart. One does not need to wait, if wise, until heart di.-«e!ise has developed to that degree that one hardly knows from hour to hour when he or she may drop dead. Those heart flutterings that a little excitement brings on. fol- lowe<l by smothering spells that seem as though they would prove fatal, are simply guide posts pointing to the grave, if ready and reliable measures to stem the dise.-ise are not taken. A safe remedy is always found in Dr. Ag- new's Cure for the Heart. It gives re- lief immediately, and even, without much of the medicine (>eing taken, it completely removes disease. It is a heart sp«»cific, really wonderful in it3 resulte, but it cures heart disease only. "Dreadful how the bicycle is running oats out of the market, isn't it ?" "Yes, it is; but the crop uf wil4»yats aeema to be oomlDg along alj>-iui Ml wusl." PAIN IN THE BACi. ' A Certain Indication of the Lodgement of Kidney Disease. Sarsapariila The One True Blood Purifier. All drugijista. $1. U J, rMii are the only pills to tak» nOOd S Pills witbHoo<l'sSan>aparUiik FOR TWENTY-.SIX YE.VRS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'SBEST FRIEND LARGCST SAUe IN CANADA. It is a mistake to suppose that pain in the back is the result only of a cold, and is more of a rheumatic trouble than anything else. It is evidence that di- sease has lodged itself in the kidneys, „„.. ,^»^....>.„, .„.....,^™»4^uui^„u, ... and the warning is plain, if further Paris, and, as he liv.»3 in the very Ix-st trouble is not to lie taken on. that the style, he has always managed to spend pa"» m"st bo quickly got rid of. There hi^ money as tiist as he niajtes it. Th<«e "s "o remedy we can so completely re- who know him best predict that he will commend .-is South American Kidney die a poor man. RainLlaiartvony, the late Mulagassy ex-Prime Minister, left 50,000 head of cattle, 2,000 slaves, 20,0011 ounces of gold dust, $1,000,000 in the Bank of Eng- Cure. Knowing wh;>t it will do, there is nothing extravagant in the state- ment of Count de Dory, who wrote from Neepawa, Man.: 'During my travels I was induced to try South American Kid- ney Cure, from which remedy I re- Und,$75,000_worth_of_^,H.ds_in hisown ^f^^,, i„^,,^„t ^^^y^i_ ^ ^^ „„t i^„jj house, a palace and oiner buildings at Amananorivo, tbe land on which the Fronrh Residence-General is built, for which France pays $2, -100 a year, three inland farms, real estate at Tamatave aaid halt the profits of a gold mine concession made to an English com- pany. He 18 believed to biive left lie- sides treasures con«»<iled at Ambohl- manga and other parts of Madn.gaacar. ELECTRIC POWER FOR FACTORIES. The New London Street Railway ptro- poses to introduce an innovation in the way of power for factories in that city. They are greatly increasing their pow- er to generate electricity, and will sell it to small concerns to operate their plains. Several contracts have al- ready been entered into, and it is e.\- pecied th.it, with the exception of the largiT industri^'s, all inanutacturing conct'ms will use electj-icity this win- ter. It is said to I* much cheajwr l ban steam, and cheiiper than the imliviiiual comi>aiues oan produce their own pow- er. it has an equal." SORROWS RECOMPENSE. life has l>een a very unhappy one I And yet, she added, with a gleam of grati- tude in her eye, 1 have always had something to l* thaaiktul for. No one has ever called me Mamiel JEALOUS RIVALS Cannot Turn Back the Tide. The De^ mand for Dr. Agnew's Little Pills is a Marvel. It's the Old Story. "The Survival of the Fittest" and "Jealousy Its Own Destroyer." ' Cheap to buy. but diamonds in qual- ityâ€" banish nausea, coated tongue, wa- ter brash, pain after eating, sick hea;!- ,ir he. . never gripe, operate ple.-i<santly. 10 doses tu a vial. 10 cents at all drug- gisU. A FATEEtS STOEY- HAPPINESS RESTORED WHEN HOPE HAD ALMOST GONE. His Dnuublcr Briiiin to 3r»i>p and Fade â€" WiiK Atuii-kfU Willi HrmurrUage aa4 Lire was Ur>pulrril ofâ€" lihe 1> AsaiB Enjoyinit Kubusl Healllt. From the Brantford Courier. A recent addiuraUta^he Orand Trunk staff Ih this city'is 3ir Thos. CUfi. who is Uving at 'To Chatham street. Mx. Clift, who was formerly a policeman in the great city of London, is a fine look- ing sfiecimen of an Euglishman uf tha type so often seen in the Grand XrunJc employ and who makes so dciiirable a class of citizens. Since his advent here bC has Lieen a w arm advocate of liutt, well known medicine. Dr. WiUiama' Pink Pills and through bis endorse- ment, dozens ol V-'xes have lieen sold to bis friends u-id acquaintances. A Courier representative, imxious, although not surprised, to know the reason Cor Mr. Chit's warm eulogy of the pills, Ciilled ou that giokt lemun re- cent^. Mr. Clift willingly consented to an interview, and in the loUowmg story told his rea-sou for being so sincere an advocate of a world renowned medicine. "Some five years ago," said Mr. Clift, "my daughter Lilly Ijegan to druopl and fade, and became disiucbned either for wijirk or pleasure. A doctor in London was called in and be prescribed exercise and a general "rousing up" as the best medicine to effect a cure. My daughter did her liesl 'o follow bis in- structions, but ihe forced exercise ex- hausted her completely, and she gxiv- duaJly grew worse. One night 1 and my wife were terrible alarmed by • cry from Lilly, ami h^isleiiing to her iVMin found her gu^ipiiig up large quan- tities of lilood. I ru»hed for a doctor and he did his best to stop h»^r heuioirrhage, but . admit- ted to me that hL>r case was veryi critical. She diojiped away to a ver- itable shadow, and for weeks wLen I went to bid her good-bye in the morn- ing as I went to my work I feared I might not see her alive a^ain. This went on for a long time until one day a friend recmiunended my daughter to try tbe effect of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. She consented to do so and in a comparatively brief period a decided benefit was perceptible. She persisted with the use of the pills and gradually rose from a bed of suffering anS sick- ness until she on(% again attained robust, young womanhood. For the last three years she has beem in excellent health, ft was Fink Pills that virtually brought her from the mouth of the grave ajnd preserved for me my only daughter. Now do you wonder why 1 sound their praises .ind recommend tbem at every oi)poriunity ? Dr. Williams' Pink PUls strike at tbe root of the disease, driving it from tbe system and restoring the patient to health and strength.' In cases of par- alysis, spinal trouble.s, locomotor at- axia, sciatica, jheumatism, erysipelas, scrofulous troubles, etc., these pills ars superior to all other treatment., They are also a specific for the troubles w hich makes t he Uvea of so many wom- en a burden, and speedily restore the rich glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. Men broken down by over- work, w^orry or e-xcesses, will fiiud in Pink Pills a certain euro. Sold I\v ;ill dealers or sent by mail, posti)aid, at 50c. a bo.x, or six boxes for S'J.oO, by addressing the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company. Brockville, Ont., or S<;heueo. tady, N.Y.J Beware of imitations and Subsl itutes aWeged to lie "just is good."' A JEWEL. Husband and I have never quaurralr ed, declared Mrs. Holly. What a perieclly angelic disposition he must have, purred her dearest friend. 'I took One-Half Bottle of South Ai». erican Rheumatic Cure and Olv tained Perfect Relief"â€" This Rem- edy Gives Relief in a Few Houra, and Usually Cures in One to Three Days. J. H.Garrett, a prominent politiciaa of Liverpool, N.S., makes for the lieueflt public, the following statement; "| was greatly troubled with rheumatin pains for a numl)er of years. On sev- eral occasions I could not walk, noB even put my feet to the floor. I tried everything, and all local pbysiciaDa^ but my suffering continued. At last I *asi pievailed upon to try South Am- erican Rheumatic Cure. I obtained per- fect relief before I had taken half • bottle of the remedy, and to-day regard it tb'> oaly radical cure tor rheuip»> tisou'*

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy