Flesherton Advance, 18 Jul 1895, p. 7

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FOUL JUTBlGiSBI TURKS AWFUL DETAILS OP ATROCITIES INFLICTED ON THE ARMENIANS. Jsrhrel U risen, ii.iri.nl .! live The Bfr* of Prints ...njr.l l-Wlld *P2leS la Churrlir. wllk lasprlseard Wensra-Thv Kalian Be- Or. All *r ( Itlli/r I .ir.i|.. 4 vrul *rr*r* uf Hlaughtrv n.l U*il.lx-,l. Ancient, medieval and modern history, should all their record* be rolled into one, have no tale more dramatic and horrible than that of the outrage* on th* helpless peasants of Armenia at the hand* of a fliociou* Turkish soldiery. These atroc. ties stand forth in the aanal* of Christendom as the very essence of arnelty, and as an instance of what the *till uncivilised Turk i* capable of accomplishing. In broad daylight the deeds wer* don*. At dawn th* little villsges of Semal, Shenik *nd Aval were attacked by Kurds aad by Turkish soldiers disgnised as mountaineer* There had ** ne provocation, no excuse evsn for retaliation. The day before a few Kurd* had stolen some of the villager* sheep, And th* shepherds, naturally, had engaged in a hand-to-band ceafliet with them to recover their property. Four to on* th* Haroidwhs, the Bakranlee*. the Rishkollees, ths Rhiaaleee and Zilsness. together with th* disguwed weop* of th* Sultan, outnumbered tne Armenians. In terror th* latter nail, leaving in their alarm ths old and wounded behind. It wa* then ih* alroeiUe* began. It needed little discernment on toe part ol ths Turkish troops te perceive that the Kurd* wer* not warrior* at all. Throwing off all disguise, ths soldier* of the Sultan entered the village*, ba>onet aad (word in hand. The bugle* *ojnd*d and th* osuinon boomed. Bl'RNKD AMD BfTCllIBEI) With cries that were piteous. understand- ing nothing savs that an awful calamity Was now upon tteoi, the old villagers who had been left behind came tumbling out of their nouses a* the soldiers witli calm 'erooity applied torch after torch to the building*. These o'd peasants flung them- selvee pitifully at th* feet of even the common soldiery, crying "We are loyal! See ! These ar* our tax receipt*. For Uod'i lake ipare as. Ws lovs the Turks Ob, do tiki pity eo as. liood Uod ! Don't burn u* alive '." On* white hsire-i old mn, who, trusting in th* Turks, bad determined not to dee, brought out all the dainties in hi* houae for th* invader* nulk and honey, muUsouo and chissr. ()r*edily were the** viandi *ten, but still thi dauiee continasd to rise. Ths loyal old man who had pnpared thi* reaasi fell a few moments later, hi* family by hi* lid*, batuh*red by Turkish kaive*. Th* fat* of th* other villagers was quit* as dreadful. Merrily roared ta* fiamsw and every peasant was driven within hi* hou**, the door* were barred aad bar r traded, an<l there he wa* burned alive. A tew manageii to escape tor tbs time, and to rush madly aoonl in* streets while the aoluier*) with tiled bayonet* drove them here and there and finally within, spitting thim before th*y reached th* name*. In the village of Semal hardly a peasant *oap*d ; that is to say, th* peasants who are old aad intira. By th* time t ne con flagratiou bad began, ths abla-bodied men, women and children were well oo their way in the surrounding country. It is a peculiar pathological fact that the Armen- ians are remarkably vusoepMble to fright. More than m<Ml people* they are able to undue phyiioal torture, !i I nervoua terror drive* tnm near to madness. It wa* half lasaue procession indeed that went flying through the country from the villages just commencing to burn up to Mount Andok, now oaads famous. The sound of th* bngl** and th* sight of the Turkish *oldi*ry with their charging bayonet* made all i heir courage vanish. "Now, my lambs," had said the com- manding officer of the Turk* to the chiefs ol th* Kurdish tribes) th* day before th* ii isssnri, "u yosr time. You can exter- minate the** dog* of infidel*." (It should be remembered that the Armenians are Chi istians and net Moslems.; "We, who ar* t.overnoienl soldiers, cannot conven- iently do the work. Therefore do you set about it without delay. W* will shisld yon from trouhls when it is over, aad put It down to on* of th* freqvent fights between you and your vassal* " LAUOUtD, THIN DIBD IN TORTURE. But the Kurdi had proved inefficient. It wa* the Turkish soldiery, theiefore, who went in hot chass. their village-burning being over, after the fugitive*. On th* road to Mount Andok th* bloodhound showed hi* fangs. A man named Huvieb had lagged behind. Ihe *oldi*r* *u>ppeii the runaway aad commenced to joae with him. Despite '.be pact* of hi* friend* tbore seemed no cause for fear for him. Th* Moslem trooper* laughed and ciiu-.l. and iheoa soldier took bold of each of his hands, stretching o*l hi* arms in the form of a oroas. He laughed with them. It wa* not until two word* slashed down, cutting off both hi* ear*, that lit realised the helpiee*. n**s of hi* position. A third bluw cut off bi* nose. A fourth, a fifth and more fol- lowed. Held there lightly, he wa* liter- ally hacked to piece* leisurely and with diabolical art, dying a slow, torturing death. Kven more terrible wa* the fate of Dunn. Ab*ul ibis peasant'* neck hung a tiny boy of two yenrs.hu father * hope an>l treasure. Handicapped with this burden and worn oat besides, Dona bad difficulty in keeping up with the osher fugitives, but he reached th* ilop* of Mount Andok. He breathed freer, for he felt that safety was almost at hand. Then a bullet s-ruek him in the leg, cutting an artery and, bleeding, he fell. He tried to ri*e, but oely dropped back with a groan. Not a hush, not a trse. not a rock was near to *m*ld him. Th* Turks cam* up on tb* run, and the foremost aimed a sharp out at th* curly headed boy. Quick as a flash the father's arm guarded and dropped back, cut to th* bone. la a circle aboat the** t,wo tb* fiendish ttoopers stand. One puihed ki* sharp bayonet g*etly into th* child's stomacn, swinging him aloft, spurred oa by the de- lighted jells of hi* comrade*. The boy shrieked in agony, aud the dying fet'.ier, though hardly ab'e to move, kis-rd and hugged the biood-stame I feet of in* Mo-- lemi, praying them to spate hi* child. He grov*ll*d for but a few moment*. Prompt- l> b* was transfixed with a bayonet, white on th* other bayonet, o**r his head and before his eye*, the soldier swung th* child, < he point unking in more and inoi a until at lait both wer* cold in death. " Th tini<*t poul of water i* an ocean to him who drown* therein," sayi an old Armenian proverb. To these peasant Armenians in the hitherto placid district of Sassonn this was the end of the world. With but one desire to put off the terrible fat* that cam* near them, men, women, and children rushed madly to the friendly rocks, caves and bushes tar upon Mount Andok. The awful terror of that frantic flight can hardly be depicted. But one touch of it is necessary, that women brought forth children on the road and lay down to wait until the soldiery should come upon them. Even then they were tortured. ATI BAW MtTTTON. Tat wilkal tney would not hav* retaliated and even had tney been fully armed and numerically superior to the Turks they ouli not have fought them. Defending their property agaiuBt the rapine of the Kurd* wa* all very well, but to ths Gov* rument and to the Sultan they were faith- ful. "Wecannoifightagainatths Padishah'* troop*, " they said and a* the musket, and bayonet were levelled against them there wa* but on* course, aad that (light. On Mount Andok, half-armed, half-clothed, hslt-fed, almost half-swept off Ik* earth, these wretched orsaturs* encamped for .eral days. Fortunately they had managed te drive a number of sheep before them. But constantly fearing attack, they dared not light a fire and *o killed their sneep, cut them ap with their dagger* and spread the piece* out in the inn to dry. They ate th* raw mutton without ealt, washing it down with tu* milk of ewts, and varying their diet with nut* that lay rotting on tb* ground. Th* most urrible act of the tragedy wa* yet to b* played. High np ou the mountain m a ravine of almost ma. ressibm rooks, a youthful priest prayed with his peopls aud implored them to nope and to trust in div- ine aid- He Der Ohannes became but a few 'lays later a martyr to his faith, and th* one great oonspicaous figure and chiaf ulferer in the remarkable massacr* af Ghellyegooxao. 'tinir hir and tselr rhmats l*l**j*ly *u*. the head toased on* way, the trunk aae*ber. Score* upon icnre* of me* and woraaa aot lulled, an 1 who might passible- have recevred, were flung into la* pit along with those that wore dead. On* *uch ley under a heap of dead with upward of thirty bayonet wounds in his body and head. He, itraogr to rtlate, was oa* of the few that neaped, contriving in tome miraculous manner to get himself ut from under the bodies and hide behind hunhri, finally making his way to Moush, where be appeared before th* Commission. Fiom the scene of the slaughter a woman wa* Seeing with her child. A soldier overtook them. With his dagger uplifted be matched the infant from the woman arm*, killed it with a single blow, u ssed it carelessly aside and then and t here ou trailed the mother. Sarktsu, a peasant farmer, was caught by the iclaiera while trying to See though incapacitated by a isvere wound. He wa* thrown on hi* hack and a hole as large as a saucer made m his stoir.tch with a dagger. This hole was filled with gunpowder and then, the crying wretch being allowed a little reepite, touched off with a f'ise. Utilities* seemed the cruelty, devilish and unbounded ths rapacity of the troop*. Previous to the oomnaenoement of the slaughter the women wer*> "rounded up," and th* prettiest of them, married or un- married, *et apart as prizes of war for the Turin and th* Kuril s. What became of some of the** is unknown, but their fate may b* guessed from the fact that few of them returned with the troops. The destiny nf thoee that remained was sven more frigntful. Marshaled m file they were sent into the church of Ghellyegonzan. Behind them followed the soldiers, as many THE FARM. Top Bor<*lnr a Sto*ve Wall. Many of the pasture* ID the aide* parts .if he oouaury are bounded by atone wall* which arc rarely buill o a* la turn shsep and Dot alwavs cattle. Driving itakes be- aide the wail and nailing a top board to theee do not bring the twar.l in lb right poeilion over the lop ot the wall. The cut shown how tlni nay be dene by mini; strip of ooar i for atakos. When thsae (trip* have been fitted at the top, after being driven into the ground, a bit hole i* bored aloe* to the ground through the strip tad a round pio driven through. Thi* being <lone upon both iidei, the board cannot be press ed atUiar way, wnere the ground i* soft. In tirm ground men a pin i> not needed. Home Dairy. One of the itronge*t argument* against the home dairy u that the time of home manufacturing n past : that too tendency of all manufacturer* ne been toward the faotury in a ituall way at tint, but gradu- ally combining and consolidating until a* the little villag* honae of prayer could i "rything u manufactured on a large hold, an<* then the door* were fastened and i Kale, by companion aad oorporauon* with guarded. Thereupon commenced and con- allno . t un | imaa a capital, says Mr. King. tinned for three day* a aeries of wild orate*. Again and again, times without number, th* women were violated an4 forced to dance around th* alter in a wild Bacchanalia purred ou by their drunken and impassion- ed captor*. Ne witnaas of the aetual scene* of those three days in the church No on can doubt this, but the question u, ha* it ben to the belt isteresl af Uie farmer* and consumer* that manufacturing has been turned over to theee uuge cor- poration*? I qu*turo it very much. The ha* yet appeared, hut none i* needed to> nu>r yt young man comparatively. testify in detail. Upon the conclusion of v< " " n P""* 1 * "" 'P re "J IV lo rot ; Deaked, nut chad aad Hackled it, and helped <> weave it into cloth for Unity the orgy the church wa* aet afire ami a* the women and girls poured out of it, their clothing hanging about therm in shred*, they ate. Aleo, h ha* a Inline', recollection were stabbed and (hot upn th* (acred | ' now a low tl>lrl *""* J alr of * w P* fell when first pnt on He ha* also snoro threshold without an exception. SHE IILLID HBR.SXLF Nor .luoa this brutality stand by itself and alone. There were at least two ottUr instances of raviihmg* by wholesale within Th* troop* had plundered and ravaged I churches, *aoh scens being sndsd by ths until there was nothing more in the > t killing of the victims. But on* maiden is soun district left. Disgusted with this, they attempted a devilish stratagem on the simple peasant folk, and they succeeded. They sent men up on the mountain, pro- mising imperial protection, and say ing that known t* havs saved herself. She was marched down a line of soldiers, having wjien first pnt ths wool from the cheap'* back, washed it, when dry helped lo pick it, then it was taken to the wool faotory, wnere it wss carded and made into rwlin from which it was spun into yarn, then wovon into cloth for use. The cloth in landed for men*' wear was taken to a fuller and fulled an>i horn, tb* clothing out and ma>ie at home, by hand, aad i sun uf clothes thus made fall to p nee* of Uteir own weight. been told that she =ould pick ths man she | b(U wor . ,, ke Ouck ,. m . disireil for her lever. She itopped before the nglieet brut*. leaned over with a henceforth it wa* the Sultan's will that ! coquettish irnile on her face, pretended to Kurd* and Armenian* shouU l.ury all \ whisper something to him, and then, snatch- ad hi* bayonet and killed narsell. Three Pita of Death remain in the Val- ley of Ghellyego tan. The l>mmiseton of ufficient indorsement to absolutely demn the aublime Porte. VISCOUNT HAMPDBCr. Ta Jew Kavrrasr *r >i-w iiiiih Wales Viscount Hampdeu, the new Governor of N*w South Wales, in succeiiion to the late Sir Robert W. Duff, i* the inn of the late Viaoount Hampden. who wa* Speaker ' rougn .nod. without fear o'Jw. m of the House of Commons from H72 to 1S84, The new Governor wa* born on May 2, 1141, and, after being educated at Rugby, He was promoted to be lisuleuaul and captain tn dirTereuee* and live in harmony. Thee* m****n*n furthermore declared thai if the villager* would eorne down from Mount Andok and lay aside their arm* the troop* i the Piwer* vinted them and found HI toe would guarantee their live* and property | fragment* of clothing and the exhalation* against the hostile tribe*. from the bodies that had been careleealy There was but little time to chooee. The | tosd in and barley covered with earth a road to Diarbekir, a coign of ufity, wa* cloeed, and if the fugitive* continued on the mountain they would peruL from star- vation and exposure. Der Ohannes, the parnh priest, of Semai, weighed the quea- tion carefully, nu finally decided, for hi* own part, to lead the villager* down back into their laud*. Many of the fugitive* refuaed to go. They <li*lru*ted the Turku, for treachery often lurk* behind open friendship* in the dominion* of the Hyzan- u.*. But very many the majority of thoee upon the mountain, in fact some hundred* followed Der Obaanes duwn to the village Obellyegoosan. There th" bulk of the troop* that had invaded the district wa* . - - - stationed, awl a* the fugitive* came into \ *nwred the CMaatnaw Guarls. camp ominons ngn* ware apparent. The buglee sounded and th* grim minion* of Sultan glared and looked menacing. It seemed that onty the word of command wa* needed to make them *tart again. Till PRIKSH ETKS UOtGKU. The road back wa* cloeed. There wa* no eecape. Soldier* surrounded the viliagn and camp on every aid* and a shudder ot terror and despair (truck deep into the heart* of the Armenians who had truitej when they saw th* detachment*, of the troupe were being told off to dig pit*, or, rather, eotoastl grave*. Slowly the sun let, and hour ftr hour the thought grew that something nminou* wa* about to happen. Unoe again th* bugle sounded, and oompaniet of marching men formed. The Armenian* had been asked to point out she mo*t influential man among them, and they naturally had named Der Ohanne*, the pries'. The *un was ju*t setting when Der Uhannea wa* seized by h o soldier* and marched out before the troop*. Hi* arms were held out in the form of a croee, and the officer in charge commenced the torture by catechising him Thi* was tu* days ot IIOBM manufactur- ing. They were also days when people were prosperous and oonten!d. There was plenty of work for all, and th* devil had hard work u> gel men ' u work far him. Striken were few and far apart. Tramp* were an unknown luxury ; bread riots wen- uncoown ; uiu anarchist with bu deadly bomb wa* yet unborn ; th* wilful ileMniciion of other men's property for wage*' *ak* wa* ntver heard of. All these latter evil* have ceoM to u* in the same ratie as the manufacturing passed out ot the hands of in* individual into the hands of corpui atoous, these funning again into oombiualiens and trust*. 1 know that it is net popular lo write thus, or give expression tu the theory lor turn >hat. wiieu the people let goof Hume manufacturing they paved me way on which combination* are to-day <lrivingover with brutal wit. A signal was given. Th* priest's eye* were gouged out, and while, writhing in agony, he implored for death, a copy of the Paitlms was held to his blood stame.i face and he was, with mock respectfulness, requested to read a few selections. Then the imperial commander ordered the sol- dier* to make a couple of hole! in tha throat, and the order was executed, with mtny gibe*. Water wa* fetuhe.1 and poured ato Der Ohannes's mouth. It flowed out I of th* holes, the soldiers ths while plucking I out his beard by the roots. Such oth*r tortures as h* wa* sub|*ct*d to I TTSCOtTKT HAMPD*.*. 1161, and two years afterward retired He entered Parliament a* member for Hert- fordshire in IrtoH, and represented that constituency iu the Lib*ral in'ereet uatil 1873 He wa* unseated the following year after having been elected member for Stroua, bu t wa* returned again for that plac* m Aptil, INSO, and represented u until 1 SX. r ). From ISS5 iu 18.16 h* was member for the Mid, or Stroud, division ef Gloucester- shire, and in the latter year unsuccessfully coutette.l Cardiff, He was appointed Purveyor-! Jencral of Ordnance in .January, IS.S3, aud held office until the ministry in June, tl \'~ cannot be set down here. Yet this waa only I uut Ha-npden on the death of hit f.ther ' - th* commencement of the massacre. Before the priest's (pint hail gone above, tne fugitive* gathered within thi* human corral of heathenish military were slaughtered with a passion that **emi incredible. A* mio* are played with by cat*, so were the wretched Armenian* flayed with by th* dog* of war. Wild fanaticism reigned. No pandemonium Wa* ever worm. WOl'NDCD IN A PIT FOR DIAD. Blood and headless bodms, mangled women strstohed upon th* ground, ohiluren with their skulls crushed to a pulp and even without head*, men and boy* with t heir stomach* and chest* blown away by gunpowder thoae were 'requent incidents f the massacre of that night. Another priest, Der .Arakel, had his eyes gouge.) out and wa* made to dance at th* point of the bayonet, reeling and howling in pain. Men were held by soldiers and hacked inu pi*uee bit by bit, children were lifted by in March I S92, and is co-heir to the B.r.my of r'n/.-Hiigh. He ha* be>en married twice, in fin:, wife, who died in 1165. being the daughter nf the late M. Jean Sylvaiu Van 1* Weyer, Belgian Minister to England. Hi* present wife, whom he married in 1868, i* the younge*t daughter of the laie Lori Ueorge Henry Cavendish. Viicount Hampdeu i* a J. P. for Hertfordshire and a D. L. and J. P. for Suessx. when th* people turned over t>hu manu faoiunng interest of this ciumry they lani ih* corner-voue forth* structure in which to-day they re prisoners. But p*rttp* 1 am getting too far from the question 10 got a.mrtanoe into ths dairy department, and our headlug would not lo"k well in the social, economic, and educational column. The dairy interest is the only one tl.at ha* not a* a business, pas*ed out ol '.ha hand* of th* people into the ban. is of corporations, and 1 am sure that it is not beet that it should, and from thuvery nature of i l.e business it will be a lung time before it will, it is yet largely in the hands ot the peopl* and, in * small way in the hand of mini I manufacturers, but it nalio true that the tendenoy ts toward combina- tions, and when it once paste* into their bands, we will see this great industry *<iunezed as never before. But there is one mere fact that 1 wuh lo note rigtit her* that hand-made or home- made good* o< all kind* command a pre- mium over factory or machine male goO'te. Hand mad* clothing eel!* lor JO per cent. more than factory good*. Wagons, buggies, harnesses, etc. sll bring from 30 to 5U psr ceou in. >i u when hand-made than when made in factories. The same is true of butter. It is the home dairym-m that gets the long price tor his goods. Peopl* will pay more money for Duller mule right, when tuey kaow how it is made and by whom, than they will pay far faotory goods. The Care o Milk. Milk from a healthy cow, fed on good fodder, i* unquestionably perfect, and it i* appalling to think of the amount of money wasted by the careloss handling ot this product of ths "mother of the earth." Leaving out of tha question thoa* filthy A New Park In London London is constantly adding lo its park :trea, and Lincoln'* Inn Kiel In ha* at last been secured a* pu to he transfor ned into a p>ibliir playground. The pnoe paid for this are* VIM ' ilown, and 1 a year rent for the remain trr of the time for which th* lease of th Field* ha* litll to ran a period of some tfOOy wooden buebet, atwava see that the raMjf ing of U* Mo btsehet is perfect asxi smooJ a*Mi that after oieaouig it ha* been ruisesl with (Milling water, or, better -Mil, been boiled n a large boiler or itusrinit The next danger is the baeteriaUaden dust and din whicn M apt to fall from the bag and nd* of the cow. To minimuw this linger we must not only brash th* udder a*d flanks of the cow before milking, b iiwisten with clean water (no* soough to ailow it to dip), so as t* hold the esM**> back while uulking. If tejeee precauMons are taken we have a bucket of milk which i* a* free from oontemituttion a* i* possible in practice, bat we are not out of the wood (or barn) you Th* custom of Mcauung v* milk from th* milking bucket* into othe/ vessels in the stable is not to be reeosn mend- ed. 'Tie true.as long a* the nulk is warmer than th* ah-, there i* not muck dangor of N absorbing odors, bnt even in the s*eM carefully ventilated bam Uteo* are dust particles BoaMng ttrowtd which ds*>p Miss the milk. For thi* reaeea we ought to ba*> the can* outside, or, at least m a room partitioned oeT from the ataok aad thsn strain the laiik oareinnw. For this purpose I like to IMS, fiveu, a common So* netai su-ataer, and taen a piece of light flannel. The latter is prefer- able to nuslin, a* it is far more eflecuva. It must be c*pt claan, of eMirte, and it must be renewed rather of lea, as it wtU felt together o as to Mrau ihs milk toe slowly. It i* my conviotiesj that in spits of the** objection* it pays wall to aee iu In straining milk from a large atMsber of cow* it is, however, neeeesary lo cte*n the strainers now and then, or else tbs oees may provs were* than the diseas*. Sop- poaiug, for niranue, that you nave as aceidsnt aooidenu will happen you know and aspiaaa of dung gets into Uu> milk. V.MI itrain tins aad the strainer shows it* effectiveness by displaying a large layer ef multi-colored " matter." Uood ; you hav* certainly improved that backet of milk, but if you i nen go on using that strainer without cleaning it you will virtually partly clean th* si-ramsr with every buck** of m.li you paur uirough it. Of course, you know this, but ths trouble u you do not always remember to think of it. HEALTH AND HAPPINESa How It Was Found By County Lady a Lanark Mar Mad Hn*>rr-4 rer Vrar* rr*as Weak ar sue: r. in. in ikr Bark ftelai lea Minpiir Hrrf ih. Truh:e aatf lflrd le or sjlsrrr Mrr Nralla alasesl *Jtr araleasly it -i <r. j Brockville Recorder. On a pro porous farm in the township of Mon'aiiae, l-aoark county, lives Mr. aad Mrs Joxph Wood. e*te*m*d fly all who know them. Mrs. Wood was born iu the Milage of Merriokvillr, aad spent her whole life mere until her marriage, and her many friends ar* o >ngratnlaling her on her recovery to health and strength after years of pain and sulfur in*!. When u>e coriepun.iun' of Ins Recorder called at iho Wood home- need, Mr*. Wood, although now net looking the least like an invalid, said that line* girlhood and until recently, no was troubled with a weak hack which gav* her great pain ti time- As sne grew older th weakness *nd pain increased, and for nearly twenty years she wa* never free from it. About a yer ago Her misery was increased by an attack of sciatioa, aad LUIS with her back troub.e forced her to lake to bed, where she remained a helpiesi nvaiid for over four trout ha. Different loclorn attended her an 1 sue tried nurunr* >us remsdies said to be a cure for her trouble, tut iiespit all she coiuinned to grow worse. Sh \as advued to try Dr. Williams' fine Pills, but shs had doaei lerself with so many medicine* that her Mth in the healing virtue* of anything was alwut gone, and hs had fully made up her nind that her trouble Ha* lucnratiie. At a*t a friend urged her so strongly that shs ;onssntad to give tin- Pink Puts a trial. Keiore the tint box wa* all used she elt a slight improvement, which determin- ed her to coatmue this treu ment. From bat out she steadily improved, and was noon able to b* up and alwul the house, A further use uf th* Pink Pills drovs away ivory v*nge of the paiiis whish had so long afflicted her, and she found b*rs*lf igain eujoying the blessing of perfect i. tilth. Kighl mont ' have pa*(d *MO* she oeased using the Pink Pill*, aad in that time she ha 1 been entirely free from pa.n or weakness, and says she is confident no other medicine ooiiid have performed the wonder Dr. William*' Pink Pills have .lone for her. She says, "1 lie. happy not only jecauss I am now fro* from pain or ache, but because if my old trouble thuul.t return at any lime I know le what remedy to ook for a release." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are oipcei&lly valuable to women. They build up Ihe nlood, re*' ore tho n*rve*. and eradioit* boa* troubles whioh make the live* of so many women, oid aud young, a bnr.Ua. Dizziness, paipilallun of Hie heart, nervous headache and nervnui prottrauon ipuedily yield to till* wonderful msdloine. Tlias/ are *old only m bo es, tn* trad* ma k *n J wrapper printed in red ink, al 50 cent* a box or six boxes for Si ."Hi, and may be Had of druggist* or direct y mall frem Dr. William*' Medicine Company, Brock" ilia, )nu milkers whositdown with unwashed hands and grab ths teat* of cows covnred, mayhe, with dung, and then squirt a lutle milk in the hantl* t > moisten the teat* Uavmgoul these and ll similar disgusting, but yet, 1 regret to say, not uncommon habit* I shall only take up the danger! which tne perfect milk meet* iu the avet ag* dairy (table. The jrst i* that of meeting a colony of baclrra which have found a congen al home in the few drops of milk always left from th* last milking. Let tb* liable u* kept ever 10 clean there i* a! way* dinger nf sume of these active little "critters" getting in al the opening of the teat. A* the first mi k is the poorest in fat, it would not be an un- leasoiiable precautioa.it perfect milk i* de- >ir>"l , to keep the flr*t three or four "M] dirt*" separata or even throw them >wv. The u*xt dang*r is that a* it goes ioam.ng into th* bucket th* milk may carry with it bac- tertb floAting in th* air. Tins danger miuimiced by l!ie careful airing ol the l*ble just before milk ing, after cleaoini; i und feeding the cows. Tiieu come* the danger of ujjien buckets. Never uae a Life In the Suburbs. I. ,iiia Sou Ma nm, there's a tramp Min nj in the gate. Mrs, Suburo Muroy me' You go np stair* and stamp around *o he'll think it* rour iatuer, an 1 II. put s.im' lobio.-o on For twenty-five years DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOQK'SBESTFRIFND LARtiKST ' Mn.

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