West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 20 Feb 1902, p. 2

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ifl H Applwsnuce croquettes requires tart apples. The receipt for them calls for six sour apples, peeked, cored. (manned and steamed in n. double boiler until soft: mash, add oms.tourth of n cnpfnl of sugar. juice and grated rind of half a lemon, a llttlo nutmeg grated, and " dash each of salt and ground cinnamon. Simmer untll very thick. thon add a teeuspoo.ntut vac]: ot hot butter and cornstarch that ham bean cooked to- gether until smooth. Cook all for ttro minutes, stir In the sllghtly beaten yolks of three eggs, cook until quite thick. and turn out on buttered dish to cool. When cold form Into mall balls. dip In crumbs, SU,', into egg and crumbs, :7 In d p tat, drain on but“: paper, pron in Take two full-grown chickens. or more it small; disjoint them, cut backbone, etc.. small nu convenient. Boil them with a few slices of salt pork in water enough to cover them; let them boil quite tender; then take out the breast hone. After they boil and the scum is taken off, put in a. little Onion cut very ntte-uot enough to taste distinctly, Just enough to flavor a little; rub Rome rugby very fine when dry, or cut inn when grrwrr-thU gives a plena- ant navor. Samson Well with pepper and salt, and a low ounces ot good fresh butter. When all is cooked well. have liquid enough to cover the chicken, then beat two eggs, and stir in some sweet cream. Line a live- quart pan with crust made like soda. biscuit, only more shortening; put in tho chicken :url liquid, cover with crust sum" as tho lining. Bake till crust is 'lon", and you will have a Rood chicken pie. spoon ot soda, one teaspoon ot salt. Butter a round baking Mahmud pour In tho batter. Steam three hours and put In the oven a few minutes to brown on the top. Never remove the topof tho steamer until ready to dish up tho bread or pudding. ii; A COLLECTION FOR THE SCRAP-BOOK :3 OF THE WISE HOUSEWIFE. Good Brown Bread. , :dlghtly I', the top of each, and In- . . ' sort a ‘cove to represent an apple One cup of sour $5t'NTttt, OUL' fee.. ut 1 stem. These are delicious as a. relish molasses, one cup of seeded rut-anus, to serve with meats one quayt of graham flour, one ttttt- I . E Science in the kitchen: Ina new Danton Alfalfa, published this year by one of the monsoon) In tho Kansas Attrieultural College, tho author states that one ton of Alfalfa hay is worth as much as tour tons ot timothy, and two tons of com- mon red clover. and a. ton of the leaves is worth more than a ton of wheat bran. and that it you feed Alfalln hay to your cows and pigs in the winter you do not require to One field that I needed down last year I cut on the sum of June thin year. when it was 80 inche- high, and it riclied seven tone of green feed to the acre. I cut a second crop on the 15th of July, but owing to the very dry time-no rain be.. tween first and second euttintr--it did not turn out so well, only " tons ot green feed to the acre. But since then we have had a good heavy rain and it is growing very rapidly. and in three weeks, or about the middle of August, I Will have another heavy crop, the third cutting, and a fourth cutting about the first of October. One lot of inst year's seeding I cut for hay about the 26th of June. which weighed 21-8 tons of dry hay to the were. and In two Weeks more we shall have " second crop equally as good. and about the middle of September is said to be a very rich feed. As a Sailing Crop. We cut some of the Alfalfa every other day and feed it green to our 300 logs and 65 mllch cows. and I believe it to be the finest green teed in the world for soiling purposes, either tor pigs or cows. It is the very cheapest and the best feed one can grow; hogs are particularly fond of it, as Well in the cows, and it is; enici to be a very rich feed. ( i have not very much to any that in new. but there in one thing I light any that lay be of intent to others and that ll nometliing about Lucerne or Amuu. I am greatly taken with this clover. It in a comparatively new thing In Canada; comparatively low turner- are grow- ing it. Some few haven-led " and have not been sumo-aim. I have been growing it in a mall way for right years and have only Just now learned how to grow it 'rutxteatrtu1ly. i have now about twelve acres grow- Ing, and last year and thin year’- ueediug has been very ounce-ml. more particularly this year‘s. I needed down eight acres, and all but two are doing splendidly, the finest I ever saw, just beautiful, as thick on the ground as it can stand, with no weeds. 1 sowed about the 10th of May and oat for the first time about the 5th ot July. when eight to ten inches high, and now (20th July), it Is from six to eight inches high again, and the prettiest field of ciuwr you ever saw. I notice In some of your circular letter. .6111 out, that you All lumen to write and tell how matters are going with them on the fur m. 'ts by no dung they might bene- tit some other farmers. So in com- pliance with your request, I give my my experience. 7 , (Be En. Tmuox, nl Fm Womar.t .0.0000000t0-to-ooooto-t.. NOON“ One ounce of Sunlight Soap is worth me than REDUC” Two ounces of impure soap. EXPENSE t omuoouuomm 'o""""""""'""""'"": st LUCERNE GROWING g t' ws-ire-, FOR STOCK FARMERS. a autumn-2.11m manna-uh with E'PyytrriiirCtiiiirsq"',u'ii"a, rsrGikT"dii"iiu' F'Wuibdhlmupunammgdut Etch. Delicious Relish. Chicken Pie. $32538”? TS? That an excrllenr. paste for all household purposes mar be madeof a teaspoontul ot "our gradually mixed wlth half a plat ot water, a. small pinch each of powdered alum and rosin and boiled the Inmates: the addltlon of a llttle hmwn - and a few grains of corroslve cub- nmnto will preserve it Indefinltely. That chalk of mmgnoaln rubbed on silk ribbons that are spoiled with grease spots and held near the fire will restore them to their freshness. That paste for hanging paper should bo made thin and smooth; the addition of a little glue will im, provo it, and a little powdered alum will help it to fry. For whitening 'Joortrttrps, use this compound: Dissolve halt a pound ot powdered glue in a pint and a half of water over a slow fire. When quite melted, add a pound of pow- dered whiting, stirring it in gradu- ally. Apply this to tho steps with a stiff brush. ft tho mixture he- comes too stiff, mid more. water, Only very heavy rain will remove this whiting: home the saving ot labor is great. That parsley 0mm with vinegar will remove tho unpleasant effects ot-ttlust onions. That -beeswax rubbed on rusty Ham-one will make them smooth and clean. A new way to serve eggs and olives as a. luncheon rellsh la worth trying. The eggs are first boiled hard. and tho shells taken off. From tho big ond slice ott a bit to let the mg stun-d upright, and in the small end out a little hole deep enough to hold a baby olive. When tho olives are inserted, stand the eggs on a bod ot lettuce leaves and pour over and around them a. good French dressing. made with lemon juice instead of sinogar. Alfalfa should never be allowed to co to seed, as that would run it out very quickly. It properly managed lt will grow tor eight or ten years, the roots golng down eight or ten feet. It will stand the drouth better than any other clover. For hay It should be cat very early, as soon or before It begins to blossom. otherwise the hay will be woody and not nearly so good. In curing Alfalfa. tor hay it should not My too long in the hot mm. only a tow hours to wilt, and then it should be raked and pat into cooks, and the cooks covered with cotton hay caps. It should be left In cock three or four days to cure and then handle as llttlo as possible. or tho leaves, the most valuable part of It. will drop off. I have always grown Alfalfa on dry, sandy. soil until this year. I have one acre on a heavy clay loam inclined to be a little damp, and the Alfalfa. ls doing better there than on the sand. I am experimenting with ditterent kinds of troll and different times of sowing. with and without a. nurse crop, and find it does much better sown alone without a. nurse crop. It sown with a. nurse crop bar. ley In the but 1tl that should he out boforo it gets rpe for green feed; bat Alfalfa ls better alone without any grain. as it will cause weed. to grow, but commercial fertilizers should be used. When to Bow. It is best to sow the need an early in tho spring as the land can! be trot into shape, but better to sow a little later than to now when the land is in bad condition or not prop- erly worked. Bow broadcast, thirty pounds ot seed to the acre. " is better to go over the land twice, once each way, trowing halt the amount of need each time. We use the wheel. barrow seeder. Alter sowing roll the land down firm, and then go over it with a, light harrow or a wecder, and when the Alfalfa is up six or eight inches high it should be cut with the mower, but not very close to the ground. This is to check the weeds, and also causes the Alfalfa. to grow stronger and healthier. feed any train. Now thls ls a bl: story, but as all the American Agri- cultural papers, and several new agri- ‘cultnral books are hat now telling great stories about Alfalfa, there must be some truth in It. Cease of Failure. The great trouble or the cones of lack of success with Alfalfa. ttt this country is In settles it to grow. that ls in gettlng it started the tirat year. Not one farmer in a. hundred knows how to grow it, and nine. tenths of those who have tried tt have made a failure. The great secret Is to have the land thoroughly prepared for it. The land must be thoroughly worked the year before sowing so as to kill all weeds. and early In the following spring cultlvat- ed, harrowed and rolled a. great many times so as to get a 'perrcct seed bed. Barn yard manure should not be put on Pr qt least a year before sowlng So the Houn‘keeper Says: To Whiter the Doorstepu. "e ho at: Eggs and Ullves. When to Cut. J.;K4<'m a QAP- BOOK g {312% ' _ _ ' I Je f r),li'iisi't We the nu?- Foiiiig --'e -.i_-' .._.v "u... again“ him, and he was convicted and untenoed on all ot then. But the ”so was a merciful man, and In pal-Inc sentence he threw at! on tyyei_ittl year-“In eonsideeatios of To be sentenced to Imprisonment for the term of one's natural lite in hard enough. bat to be oortMtrned to a dungeon can for a. couple of thou- and your. 1. indeed harrowing. Yet foreign Judge. not infrequently int.. poeo neutencel ot several centuries without " being considered anything remarkable. _ v --_"-- v. 9r..N' ul‘wlw Ill Vienna a. couple of year. ago who, upon his own showing. should have been nuanced to two thousand tive hundred year-0’ imprisonment'. A tom of tet. '12er charge. was brought "V h - --3 L- __ _ - fl "WiHi.tiiiriGiiiirirvno,sd Dough; for my one ot Barnes-Accused by mun-h) lint. can. 'gf, be our?! by 311's Catirrrh Cum. Bend tor ulna, no 3:14 b “at 01713:“ a co.. Toledo. o. El. Hull's funny Pill. m the beat. By local applications as, they cannot reach the dimmed portion of the car. There in only one way to cure deafness. and that in by constitu- tional “media. Deafness is caved by an in. thuued condition of the mucous ninf of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube in unlined you have o rumbling sound or tttgt heu- ing, and when it In entirely clos , Deafness is the result. and unless the inflammation can be taken out and the tube restored to ita non-Al condition. hen-inc will be destroyed forever; nine one: out of ten ore coined by Count which is nothing but an inflamed condition a thtUnm?ttuaym races. Kubeilk Will Ourgrow it. Jan Knibellk, who is in search of a. soul. acknowledges that there is only one way to find it. He pines tor a woman to love. “By her love the tenderest passions of my soul will be transmitted to the world through my music." That depends, Jan. Only umsuccessfui love pours itself out in a never-ending strain of music. The soul itrn't really born until a. man has had a. crushing disappointment. Jan is very ybu'ng. "What is your ideal T' he was asked. "h girl who would die for me," replied the soul- less youth. “She must love me sin- cerely. devotediy. intensely, above everything else on earth." Ah I Jan, Jan, you are very, very young. While she is dying for you: what will you be doing 'N-tgt. Louis Post-Dispatch. and tickling throat warn you that an all-winter cold threaten. Use the staunch old remedy, Perry Davis' Painkiller, and get rid ot the pest: in twenty-four hours. 25 and GO cents. To his surprise he unfolded a lot- ter, yellow and thae-stained, which was written in his own peculiar lmnd-writinir, or seemed to have been written by him, although the date was two generations before his birth. The signature of the surname, which was the same as his own, was so markedly characteristic that he could scarcely believe his own hand did not pen the letters. _ Another occult coincidence of psy- chological phenomenon happened a few years ago to a Southern states- man and financier, whose family had always been of rank ln'hls native State. This gentleman was over- lmullng old documents and letters which had been utorel in a musty cheat tar years and intended to publish any ot value. an attraction. To her astonishment she lound her own name opposite to its number and learned on inquiry that the original was one of her direct nncesturs. As most ot the pictures were tick- eted the visitors had purchased no catalogue, but, before going away. Miss B. bought one at the entrance and nude a last visit to the por- trait tar wluch she had felt sq strong "It is such a kind taee," said the girl, rather wUttally, "I imagine my father might have looked like that and he lived." ' As she passed through the gallery one particular portrait attracted her attention, and she went back to it mare than once. On entering the husband's home the Japanese bride does not become inle- tress of the litmusehold. She becomes the servant ot her husband's parents, and her husband oannot-doaq not-. shield her from the naggling tongue. of a. mother-iu-law. When the par- ents nre dead, the wife directs the household, but she is still only her husband's principal servant. In public she hardly ever appears in his com- pany; at homo she does not even sit at the same table with him. He taken his meals alone, While she waits. His wishes are commands which she dbeye willingly and nmlably. She helps him to dress, the washes and mends his clothes; she is even proud to do that for him which would otherwise be left to servants. The Empress her- self is not exempt from such service. but waits in various ways on her Emperor-husband. There was a loan collection ot old portraits exhibited in London lately and a young girl was among the visitors. She was an orphan and wealthy, but without near relatlves. Doctors disagree as to the In- naenee of heredity, says the New York Bun. Some hold that a. great deal hinges upon it; others believe uttLontriirr. A man can obtain divorce tor tho followlng' reasons: Disobedience, Jealousy, Incurnble illness. talkative- nese. etc. The wretched woman, divorced, must return to her parents and leave her children with her hun. band. On his marriage a man remains as tree as ever before. He has no fresh duties to consider. He can do exactly what he chooses. " he likes. he can spend every evening out of the house. The women among the poorer clams are still more to be pitied. A work- man marries a. women when It suits him, and changes her with at little has an we clung-e our clothes. These exchanges, or what we call divorcee. take place less frequently in the better clues. A urn-led woman’- lot In Jana In 9.11ng but a. plum: one. at least aeesoerthttt to Occidental was. Japanese women Inherit no tutu“. and In (amine. Inoludlnz- no can, one ia adopted by tho parent- " hair. The only am: a. girl is given for not man-Iago " her drama. a. little writing deck, a. work basket. I. box ot emetic: and other toilet arti- clec. two little dining tables. and a my lgpquer plates. Do the: lew" Thing when sore chest. TALES ABOUT HEREDITY. Deafness Cannot Be Cured JAPANESE WIVES. Idiet-r Sentence. (no "rotted in it'll E: ttt 131*. krxutu, ly'iiFyc M / 'rttsr,'fa'itAitdaa'i'ibh/ TORONTO FiirdGTiFiri, wa-. -- -6iiiiiiF Luu AltNtitnr.. ml“ 606. I Bad-oh d Sure Cure 'ish'i,?iii'i'lhilh?l tt2 Mae-3, In!!!” tent; or. ”was. 0m "pm" - GiGirat -iirfTrGrttiiG"irr." may. mll'%Mfeilg'd2't . DR. WHITE’S ELECTRIC COMB Not he had to tri? at hit. poor fellow. Did he dle - Literally In: the paper: laid that a m of the 331101" and. Inn trmil.-atiettumtttd Match. So. despite all rouritorty,rour client dign't' escape the death pen- 'ltr, th - - - _ _ - Editor-Oh, no; we shan‘t charge you anything this time. It is your first offense. you know. It, however. it In repeated, we cannot let you off again so eatrily.-Bot'tort Trams- cript. Poet-f was pleased to see my poem in your paper. In there any 1n9_nfW---r, - Bhe-Yetr, indeed. She was saying only this afternoon that she didn't believe you’d ever get up the cour- age to propotre.-Judge. He-Do you think your mother will be surprised? tho sendlnF ot a. harsh or hasty Gil, ot compla nt. It may be necessary to we” one’a rights 'im subsequent letters, but there Is no better rule ot correspondence than to make the first one troodmtstured. tghedOh, tr-but, surr-nyyou are/ft superstitious, are you? - Brooklyn Lite. He-Yee, I won Mu last night at poker, but you know the saying. "recitpt_eapim unlucky at love." A Massachusetts business firm prints this paragraph at the top of its letterheads: "Errors-we make them; so does everyone. We will cheerfully correct them it you write to us. Try to write grod-naturedly, it you can. but write to us anyway. Do not complain to someone else first or let the matter pass. We want the first opportunity to mull:n right any Injustice that we may do." The lit. tie sermon deserves a wlie audience. Few people have not had occasion at some li,Po or. th.eir _llves_tolregrei " t Grave Yard Cough" is the cry of tortured lungs for mercy. Give them mercy in the form of Allen'- Lung; Balsam, which is uspd with good er. feet pven In teonmtmption'tr early stages Never neglect u vouch. A city hall employee In so caller? because it is often unndvlsable tc use planner terms. f -aohn Smith in Buffalo Express An nmeident-is, so called becausé it seidom has anything to do with an axe. A statesman Is so called because he frequently can be heard stating his clnims to oftiee. ' A city hall employee In so called because it is often unndvisable to A message is so _culled trieauG the person who carries it generally makes, a. mess ot it. ' A counterfeit is so called because itr_cotmttCfor good unless discovered. Mtnard'e Lillian: Cure. Goldt. no. An open winter is so called be- cause sometimes it " open and sometimes It keeps the people busy openipg the paths. . ' MAdge-pm In an u'wful tix. "s FJthet.-.Wha,t tig it, dealt? Madge-Jack insists that I shall return his engagc-mont ring, and for the tito of me Ican't tell which one it ia.-Tie-Bittr. Monkey Brand Soap will clean a house from cellu to roof, but won't wash clothes. -A 81130 gets' its name from being usted to 81100 the dog ptt the porch. He had written a letter giving the facts of his case. and his announm» meat that he was able to work trom- tortably once more after such. a pro- (ongai period of sufferlxg has startod people Wondering it there is any man of Lame Buck. thumnti:m or other Kidney Trouble that Dndd's Kidney Pills Will not cure. . h rounder is so called because he [zap a. -rollintr gait. An admiral" ii, so called because he adds his impressiveness to the styength of , navy. Many remarkable cures by Dodd's Kidney Pills have been published, but certainly none as wonderful as unit pt Mr. Martin. The theory so often advanced that the Kidneys! are the moat important organs ot the body and that a large percentage ot the sickness and pain widen humanity suffers " due to im- perfect Kidney action seems to be amply proveu in this particular case, for as soon as Dodd's Kidney Pills regulated and restored the natural action of the Kidneys all Mr. Mur- tln:s troubles left him at once. Dodde Kidney Bills were recom- mended to hint, and he commenced a treatment, and improved very fast from the ttrtrt. As the treatment continued the improvement Increased until he was able to go about his wprir as well as ever. Depot. near here. Mr. J. H. Martin. suffered for over eighteen you: with Lame Back so that he actually couldn't walk or lie down without enduring the must dreadful pain. He tried many medi- cines without getting rellut, and was "Sr - muol_1_ Aimouttured. down witnout the (in-cute“ Pater- Curod by Dana’s Kidney Pills. Arum-tor. Ont. Feb. 10.4mm.» --A very remarkable cure ot Back- ache and Kidney Trouble has Just Been. brought tto notice at Basin Mlnard's Llnlment Cures Garget in ony' found Himsell'unuble to Lie An Amprlor run ls Thankful that Now He Is Able to Work. (MMM! WALK Itll YEARS. Drlfting Drollrry. PM There Were omen. A Good Idea. Reasons. An old gentleman, a stranger to Kilmarnoek, was luoking for a cer- taln street, and asked a boy if he could tell him whore to find it. "On. ar," says he. " Yo ken my granule]; , Wee]. It’s just twa doore nyont it." Grannles are rather taken the loan of sometimes. A troy ot the 'cute clan thought he wan“ puzzle his grand- mother. "Grnndmn," says he. "do you know how we now get the in- side out of an egg without breaking the Ehrll ? It's this way. you know. We first perforate an apertore in the apex of the egg. then we per- forate a 'ryrreapondintr aperture in the base ot the egg. and then by u wolent Inhalation ot our breath We drnlnLthe oz; of It, contents." "Lo'd, that butcsini'." said -kGiriiii"; "We: I Was young we juwt bored a hole at balth buds and sookit It p. " Father, lam tired with ambition since I came home from college. I want a. broad firld for action. where I can accomplish something." "Well, my boy, there is the forty acre lot, which is a rather broad field; you might try a little nctlm in that with a plough and a pair of horses, and if you stick to it you can accomplish something." “hurt you can't help thinkin' dating must of kep' mighty po' company at some time or tuiotiter."-Weuiti- lngtou star. T "De man dnt Is suspicious or ev'r- ppdy may be wisdf said Uncle linen. Hours. C. C. RICHARDS & Co.. Yarmouth, N. B. 1lentlernen-att January last, Emmi: Le. clnlre. one of the men employed by we work- inc In the lumber woods. Ind 3 tree full on him, crusbln him fearfully. He was. when found, plum! on a sled and taken home. where grave tears were eutertairted for his 'ir,,'T.'T .9 I? being badly bruised and bin tt y turn black from his rlba to bl: feet, We used MINARD'S LINAMICNT on him freely to dealer: the pain. and With the use of three bottles he wan e1tmtrtetely cured and able to return to bill work. “Still. cases occur of slaves whose miedeeds have been repeatedly pun- lubed, and whom their master wishes to get rid of; the muster assembles a court of the chiefs and the offender is sentenced to be deported to ‘long JuJu,' and he then proceeds on his Journey, under the care of a Juju man, who, the natives affirm. cou- ducte him, blindfolded and by a cir- cuitous route, to the fatal wot. What eventually taken place has never been divulged, and the popular accounts have probably been spread by the chiefs to overawe their slaves. The supreme Judge is said to be a priestess possessed of the power of knowing all things. When brought before her the offender is merely told that he can depart; if guilty he be- comes transfixed to the spot, unit water gradually rises around him un- til he is submerged. Another version is that the place is situated on an island, and that the victim, on being handed over by his conductor, goes through some form of mock trial. al- ways resulting In conviction, where- on he is cast aliva into a huge tank of boiling human Food. Juju men stand around armed with two-edged. swords, with which they hack the body to pieces and stir up the con- teiits of the tany."-" James Ga- ze to. '-ooottooooooooooooooi no Brit" expedition to Are. heck of the Guinea. one-t. report- tint it her discovered the "long Jun.” The "long gun" to u letlch or object ot rennin ot whlch little I. known be- yond the (not that it J. the tetlch no“ qtreaaqd by the - Atrium: tribal. The terrorism whtoh the Aron have long exercleed over the neigh- boring tribe: has been due in great measure to their guardianship ot the “long Jain.” Euler Mockler Ferry- mun. In an work on "Brltlrh West Africa," out" that the Supreme Jan Court we. said by some to be at the town of Bent“, but that the hand priest: alone were aware ot the exact locality. and the secret was guarded moot Jealouely. “The ac- counts given ot the place," he says, "very very considerably. though it appears certain that it is the Court of final ordeal to which 'ali cases that the local JuJu men, for one reu- sun or another, do not wish to de- olde, are referred, The threat of 'long juJu' is held over his trading boys by the chief, and, it being the general opinion that there is no re- turn tor the person sent, the [mid Lllxute established is tolerably com- [I e e. 'tone LONG mm i i mica mum. i Mlnard's Llnlment Cures Diphtheria Minard'a Linlment Cures Distemper. f'hlldi "ii,ii,E.s,,i, TUBS ---ie V___ - -.' Eltritt Road, L'Islel. Co., Que., Mary 2tith, 1&3. The Frost 10 Wire and 6 Stay Pence is the strongest and heaviest wire fence made-good openings for good agents; write us at once for terms. Ask for catalog. TH. "OCT Will Fm 00.. " " WILLAND. ONT. ' Kilmnruock Stories. Wile Conclualouu. "uVattttrst-ntee. o" the Farm. SAUVER DUYA L, " sh Vulu;1;; 5.3;: llli00lth'nio FllNtelllfllt? HAVE YOU BEEN In WHAT! E LEE'ti Prtoelcoe Heetres.-9,0tt0 more“: fur the home. tom. laboratory. work-hop and we? defame-IL of human ondmvor. with fol in ex to contem- ; an pages; bound in clot h l new: 25 cents for I oopymnd it you think the book in not worth the" money. send it back and your mono; will be rem-nod I thin in a good side line or convouoro. Wuhan Brian. Methodist Book Room. Toronto. Ont. Dried Me: 'tttN. ou, and (‘reuneY Butter. ottetr.etes [ll true outright or ttell on comma-ton. (Meme Invited. FRUIT FARM FOR SALE-ONE OF THE th"t.t in the Mm: Pain-uh. u Winona. IO Inna trom man on two mil. mn. Inna-eul- In.” of which is in In". mdypouhu. wtttumtldiaotae MOI 0r divided inwlouofuto an m tt mm pu qstt-tgu. This to . God“ but“. Add!” gum-n (brunt-t. P. o. box an. Wino-- Mu. Winslow's Soothing lilyrup would “ways he uned tor Children coming. .it. who: the ehUd. when» wefum‘, cures wind conic and " the best remedy or Din-Mun. NEW LAID EGGS CASH FOR REAL ESTATE on BUB!- neea. no miter when it in. Send dearriIr “on and on]: price and sr,t our plan for tind In: eaah buyers. Potent nob-nu! end In vest went. Company. Toronto. Canada. r em. Bangor (only: (uncured and u- itettl,; Booklet on menu rec. The Ptstrnt Ichnn‘c and have: cut Company, Pylhiun Building. Toronto. Ont. PATENTS. CAVEATB. TRADE MARKS . ..er.tc. -JLttttesor (only: procured and PI cage and the monkeys eagerly lapped it up from the floor. This suggested the idea that it might do them good. Since then the monkeys have received regular doses and the keepers report very few deaths from consumption. Of course it's cheaper to buy Scott's Emul- sion than new monkeys-and that suits the circus men. Consumption in monkeys and in man is the same disuse. If you have it or are threaten- f led with it can you 'liiliilllliIF take the hint? “All 'eil-all uppy--lou offun". That is the regular reportfrom the monkey cage of Batman's Circus ever since the keepers began dosing the monkeys with Scott's Emu]. sion. Consumption wascany. in; ok two thirds of them every year and the circus had to buy new ones. One day a keeper accident. ally broke a bottle of Scott's Emulsion near the monkey A 'to the .rdutary, l tarmac... "t'.Rth'KV FHANFFL'S. JOHN I. FEE. 62 Frmat “not out. Toronto. Ont. Monkeys PA I‘ENTS. WANTED This picture represent. the Trade Mark of Scon': Emulsion and is on the vapperof every bottle. Sealhhumh. SCOTT & BOVJNE. TORONTO (,ANADA so: and SI. in druapsts No. 8. 190e. N0 JOINTS. KO SEAN’. NO LEAKS. "sum mutant . hat 1' are. "But View ?" we (or the In: mm as did prom drtt brld tter unn- Q mutll ding» Mga. tram “I 'ttt “and. " Let mm ing crllivull original Absolult brown“: twin! 1" dluppvr t drclal that I! I pray: hushed 10ml 1 from th ly bride roma rk Inn ing and wan no is b: the "T v aaid the an to look at tl price le' l hon this [rem n over w “L to tly m doparl doubtful I inked so will; a . glass. br urban of Site mash use than. we“! Jus style!“ The llunc' Wht - M Wit no lo In: If 1 ner " ally s taaucr “Mia! Mat laid Mitre D mt poor ll “I: to m Ftrrart." This w " can ttr u, In the male Il that She cub book: and. pet of tl name on the hall In “Mind Mud dividual alumnda. loudly us [Ike you lu her bonuu cud pompa we lmuavu descending consult-rod novel I the sin In! 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