West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 7 May 1896, p. 4

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. Fiiaiifeilliei'i',5t.dt,tcrd Thrre ii nu thought in any mind. but it quickly tends in convert itself into A power and organizes a huge instru- mo-nmlity at means-Emerson. Wttataoever situation in life you ever wish or propose tor yourself. acquire a clear and lucid idea of the inconveni- ences attending it.-Sbrgtstotte. Terror itoetf, when (magma trans- o‘ndrnlal. been” it kind courage; as from sattieiettrly inn-nae, according to the port, Milton. will "uru.--tharlylr. Ono tolling Summer that such a one w.“ nothing improved by his travels. "t wry Well Mine it," said be, "for be tcod himsrlf along with bim.”-Mou- 'iriiititrllhittiq, I 4 "t wry WAT leiéw tcpe himsrlf along ungne. for tt-ttgtttq - (In. m ua. to MUNN . Sh."', mun!" You. own m m I“ In A“ 5"", tee Pt m. AeeeA.r.y1tfe PpeePAtgt ttum"; "iGraFruiUiiakttuiaiiik m "ll' th EAP1a1ry.terrtt. an depud in "thr Wallis: of sad" _ mic redo “inhuman-19' impou- - “up. wittLher “dun-”for CookaWindm,0nL, "rdDetroét,Mieh.,uttte et2,t'tT,'gtgegt My . ' 1t.on.nrhHthdJ" A German grim“ fills a 1ong-trit want hy wow-ting mirrors which will nul hnmk. He simply emplop cellu- lout where glen“ “an ti.7e'ir,rG, used. A perfeetly rrannrarent. wall-polish“ ceUuioid plan- receives a quiitivyilver lacking like tlub "t a glue! mirror. Thin lacking '11 in turn prolmud by mmrhvr celluloid tslate whiett also mil. run, no that prm'tirally a doulrlr mir- rnr u furnished, lighter. channel“ and AYE R'S PILLS lurr's tsursapuntht is the Belt. Began Taking Ayer's Pills m3.“ m.“ In”? Ayer's Pills Headache H Awaéaod Medal at world's Fair Tr CURED PEBMANENTLY AN I‘NIH 'l tra, troubled a long time with slok hrmlnvhr. It was "madly accompanwd mm Be'vt're pull!" in me tFmples.asens* m tulluess and ten-Ivmnw tn one ere, tb had rm!» In my mouth. tonne coated. tcuuls and (an "old. and nirkness at the stuumnh. I mm! a good many remedies rv-rumvm-mh-d for [his cumpwm; bum m furnish-d. lightr mating than glam Hr'n‘mxus Clark- Ir. "atrium LIKE A BOY NCONQI‘ERED um! I Julia-him BY TAKING " a “not no Lug-m lei-11:19: AKA "LF. MIRROR 1a9uotili1, k. ttte ieaEii iii ,nnihal warrior, l nature I ever ald un, n: like my M: of mm ts J I um new " , well tttatc"-- Auburn, Me _ your grandpa mm m him. .by _The {In sa like t ’12 learer the whith are humuem. vrtain ls that i! the wan just _-'" -_ - -.. - _ . w 1f'2'iit,',lf,hhr., Lt',ttl'dt ,ht 8'ltf t,ts,'ditte,'irli'i. 'r2gt','trf',t,T; . (he- _ m 1F2iaigiiii5i2e2lttgt.tf"lp.'f iff,',' !??.t'ilq'iflg no: 1ll,o't'!l'ii'r, !ii'.1Stk2i','i'ih't". 1'i,'i'lriiit. (iilF,'t,ttiiHi'iiric',ii.r9,",ii ,Ntt "aw tut qrttt-i. - In. . a. a" my a: __ t ntth‘ In than icait9jetftteiNet, rhyth- ”it“ h "It? _ $7.53,; up,” " .Ihich r'.,',',,'.,':'."'.",; the “my no. T aim ' 'vor: qu- 'agtetpatr,f)t,itfi4ilt',llle MILLIONS or .BIULLIANT SUNS. Within the tinny-four hours which elapse (ram our “in until women. tho mm d the world has not lu- than ”M stars within the ms. at M Ml tampon-thick: W point ought! direction toward. It will be will. of course, that i-wu this would be a gmat gain. in the ini- prvssiou it would produce "port us of the vastness of creation and our own relative inoignitieauce in it. And no doubt tbe vermin knowledge that oth- er planets were peopled with men wry like "uryelvrs would greatly affect the imagination. Bat whether it would affect it for the better is not YO clear. " is, we twlieve, conceded that the dis- cuvery that, the earth was only a small part of the planetary system. and not the venue of the universe, did not at- fect the moral principles of the higher l Faces q; that day tor good. but, rather for ill, in that it saw rise to a harm- ful sense ot inaiguificane. The ten- 'deney of such a. feeling is too often to diminish our feeling ot divine guidance and care, and so to weaken our sense of "eoporusihiliry. Contemplation of the nutmeg ot the universe is apt to cre- ate too profound an impreasion of the, “importance of we earth and of the) human being: on it. And so lead to din. regard ot duty and remnant. Dim- inution u human di ity and import- ance in since: invnrinhly amxtenpanied by a. lessening ot importance. Doubt- leee it ought not. to he no, but that it in to in about by the fact that the in- aigairteeuteses at man in cmtion in one of the that frequent Brgtuneatn ot skep- tic. It is I. urine question. them whether further evidence ot the rely the little” of an as compared with the mightir- at election would not do in more ham to increasing our im- plush: a! hint we atoms blown wont at the will a! superior power. than it would do as and by nebuking our pride. Until In at accustomed to the vastne- ol the universe we now -.itmuhttti_nttttobetoo - to - nae-v any further,' To create, any useful "ornmanieaviou, it would he mun-Mary to so associate our signals with errncrete things as to mlablisb a c'omprwheuimie code of aigna. But how muld we im, lpn-ss upon the Martials the idea that 's, many sun flashes mean: a canal. and so many a clothes line, and so sat- Lu, our curiosity as to which of the two the bright streaks on this planet really are? Without scientific discov- cries now undrenmed of. the probabil- ity is that we should never get beyond an exchange of flashes. ’ The doubt remains, however, “th- " the prople on Mars. assuming them to exist, an at a. stage of dew-lupumnt nearly approximating our awn. upwi- ally as mm!» sight and the nus thereto. l'niaas they are in nearly the aamn- slag“, the attempt In cotutnurti- ‘cate with them must prove futile. Ae- cepting the theory that civilization dif- ters with the amount. of solar heat re- ceived by different port'; ruq of " plan- rt, it see-ins prolmble, as Mars is remote from ttte am. that the Martinis are Car lip-hind us in knowledge. and wholly ignorant of telecopes. The dunner: in our own frigid zone are. we know, greatly the interiors of thaw in the trmperau- zones: and reasoning from that analogy, it is not unfair to as- 1utme that the Martial: are so my de- veloped as to render any attempt at communication useless Moreover, even if we could attracL their attention by sun “when or electric disturbance. and be quite certain that. we had done so. how is communicatiuu to he carried any further? To create any useful communication. it would be mwwmry surface which would produce sttttieient, effect upon Man to arouse the trttenr Hun of its intelligent inhabitants. A good deal of speculation has been indulged in as to the possibility of com- municating with Mhrs, the planet which nearly resembles bhtrearttr. Assuming that Mars is inhnbited by beings like ourselves, and under 'condilions m- umbling our own, various plans have been seriously proposed for attracting their attention. Among these schemes are illumination, of a large portion of the earth’s sartace, repeated with such regularity as to convey to the Mar- tials the idea of design; pyrotechnic dig. plays in an figures; sun (lashes, search- light signals. and, latest ot all. Mr. Nikola Tvsla's plan of artificial electric d'sturlreutees. The transmisaiun Lu the earth in the form at" thunder showers of electric disturlasnees in the Hun Mr. Twila ”gums m conclusiVe proof that waveN of electricity are prupugmml through all space. lt should not. tben, hr an impossible matter In errata an artificial disturlnnm- on the a-arlli’s '., n - unner- PPNl"r9 b mugs: h - 'ir,;','.,,")'? 'illCiTg's1', t N0 TES A .V D GOA/MEX re, " also involvv fur ohurui ion of unm- of good vlvan , by an rapid Tray mum that they have quality of spa a mare hullvrumu‘ certainly one uniformly 5' the Manuals should alt 1h oarsrlves i, Uetom. rel iGieT 'ii"aiairc - - “When" na Jiiiiiffii- .tgrl22, 2PtiutiT.n,ttrgii1l an m “can tity utt'd','ub',tatfd but)» Mlltlt at 'thseshyiuwhsysttt-attt9aettt iiGiariir fiiWaaia "' Ftiiia, 'Giihiniiout I mouth. ', Unwashed butter. from cyan china“! at ' low magnum“. gm- good When. if It tgf, up In pound punt- M W‘ Inn:- btumuitbnudn. This.de wor-rinmttti.yattwirttar.qtt.Orte . The quantity of water used for wash: mg the butter should be eqttal"to:ttpt, quantity ot cream churned. and tttlil be at a temperature of from tre do ad go 58 degrees in winter and " dam In summer. it the hatter in to he salted on the worker; and at " dogma. or lower, when it is to tr. unite In tt.te churn. It tho water which you have In summer in too warm, use about “(a quarts of salt in. the was: and let. It stand for ten. 111!an baton drawing Mt. Avoid tum; Mr at hit nod low temper-guns on the name ot but- tey, u it ha a tendency upon” white specks and an uneven ttt the" butter. When the butter ia to pack- otHor.fxgttrt.itr.tt.td.torrtenrter,timt M. it was. but myi.r 'Giir7aii7ii Separator crv-um should mntnin about thirty pol" will. of butler-fat and in- m-ulwl to fifty-two (legm-A in fifty-four tiegrees in winter and fifty degrees to fifty-two 1legrees in summer, about two hours (unit longer if the- cream is riir- o-nml at high temperattlrtei) before the Minn for churning. Cream containing a high perreurage of ’auttrr-fat gives less volume to cool and handle, and it ran he churned at n lower temperature which gives the button-i firmer loxturv. The churn should first. he cleaned with hot water. and then cooled with cotdl water, before straining the cream into it. The churn should not be filled half full; one-third full is better. Add hul- ter color to the cream before starting. it required to give the hutter the pro- per color to suit the market. It may he added at the raw of about. half an ounce. of coloring to 1.000 pounds of milk. A smaller quantity of t.'1T,i"ti,i", requir- ed in the spring; but, in t _ lulu, Cue amount may. be gradually increased to the above figure.' Cream containing a high perventage of butter-tat will thicken in churning," and the desired mucus-don may then cease. At this stage, add to the cream about one gal- lon of water to each two gallons of cn-um being churned (at the same tem- merature), nod continue 21gef until i the. butter is about half gathere ; then (add suttirient water at a lower tem- pnrnture to keen the butter in the gran- ular form unti the cream in properly ehurned--rill the granules are even in size and not larger than grains ot wheat. The churn would make from sixty to gammy Devolution: L" min- ute. and the tune required churn should be (mm forty-free to sixty min- utes. The lower temperature at which cream can be churned in this length ot time. the hotter will be the mum-e ot the butter. If mall spooky of but- tor ap tar on than]. buttermilk drawn off. ran the churning should he con- tinued a, little longer. andmote water should he added' there in danger of the butter gathering too much by the additional churning. Always my the churn at a. high-speed when finishing the churning. and when washing. . .. WASHING. I The starter should be put into the cream vat when the Ueparating he. gins, to fix the flavor of the cream lua, fore on) Ilosirnhlo hark-rim develop in it stand for twenty or thirty minutes. Afterwards place in cold water and stir till it cools to seventy-five or vi lily dtvgrtwss; then add about a quart of”)? old start»! (having the good flavor) lo much Ian gallons of Pastourir.ed milk, ssiih It gallon and a half of clean wa- ter at the MIME temperature. Mix and set in a clean warm place. Do not stir again until it is wanted; then use from one lo four quarts of the starter in each trn gallons of cream to he rips-nut. varying according to the condition of the 0W3"), the Neason of the year. and the time allowed for the cream to rip- ii is toivircrUle up propagate it by Pas- ieurizing the milk mad in making the starlvr from day to day. Do this by setting the milk in hoilmg water' and stirring constantly while " is beating to NH) tlvgrees; then remove and let, We think that. the Ila-4| results can In- attained by using a Ntarter to devel- up lnvlic acid in the crunm, sufficient In ruust- it to thicken. or magma”. about six or eight hours before the tiuse for ohuruiug. our experience is that a good clean flavored sinner used in lllis may llllpnwv.‘ lhe flavor and keeping quality of the hullvr and runhlws the lulllz-rmmko-r to vipen the n-reuu: more unifurully from day to day. Tlie rrvam should alwtty" Ue carefully examined before retiring at night and llu- per- son in marge may arrangr to have the temperature gradually lowering Myme- what, eNsecially ie warm wrath”. an long M the, ripening is not delayed too much. In creameriee where thn cream cannot be quickly cooled to sixty degrees, the huttvr-mukt-r should persist in cooling until a tt-tnpt-mture lower than sixty degrees is reached before night. espec- ially in warm weather when the luv- tit' acid is alrvady. developing in the milk before separating. If the cream is to be held tor two days before churning it should he cooled to fifty-tun (la-gram in winter and to fif- ty (leg-ma in tttttttmer. At these low vipeuing tvutperatures, the texture of lin- hunt-r is lx.tter. Cream should be stirred fretptenily for the first. mix hours after separation and 1xiasiomrlly utterwurtlts while ripening, to intprovu lite flavor and ripen it Inurn- uniform- ly. (By T. C. Rogers. Ontario Airrieuttur-laLrziic, if mil. al College.) Ito the cold Mom The cream being at a. high tempera-I it: Jt',"otpirt,, t tum as it comes from the m>pax'ntor.lof wilting butter it is very news-airy that, ample proV|-. more even color sion be made for cooling it to a proper: texttlttt Jtf, 2t l ripening temperature immediately at.. 2,t1pvu.'"'fi'u,',,'l, , ter separation. High ripening and, worker, use abou churning teauperatarts give the butter one pound ot Wt a soft, oily texture um diminishes its tagging: 0:: value. Plenty of ice should be securely suit tthe "my; i,' stored at the proper time for use when one-half lo thrve needed, and a cream cooler should be P"r pourttl suits made to hold ice and water, over which when tht, butler the cream may flow from the squirm-l “VORKING tor to the cream vat. This vat.' Work carefully should be deep and narrow with a Nev- f’rd‘hs mills“; Ili/ en or eight inch space around it for "v'e?vdlrl'l,'h't.r". water and ice. so that, for ripening, thc' salted '0" the n cream may be cooled to sixty degrees worker should h within one hour after wparulinn. and j',ie."u's?/,"'it.'t Lo in lower temperature in warm weath- 'el"r,2e", airout CARE AND CHURNING OF SEPAR- ATOR CREAM. AGRICULTURAL Ta ke one in." .mt-mpon'w“ i'ii"7uaittriituirttiitrir'ttmf.tt" "" r. ", T ”3‘ s,-'." -. , -v,ti.ii"iirJiit,iidS 1",'al m. an ")J,"iriiiii, 9 mm _' /i- ",, fFiii9tK,Aife,iiti1t EeAit'ytiter'i'iiiHiiiL' I waler for eaett ten gallon" of uwl in making the alarm-r and n a clean warm place fur vaul) Many-four hours. Then hn-ak up by pouring or stirring, and strain tlie vrn-um the amuum nm-swxry to I it properly irt the desired tune. n u gun. {u~u.' .‘ gut. in Ibis way, one gallon of >kim-milk nr frerh milk (having a good flavor) for rn gallons of "tX'tun lo In: rip- md warm it to ninety degrees' it arsyut a gallon and a lmll'Tnf CHURNLNG A STARTER Dr: J"). 'ts an :1", 1:14 " to - " - m" w-.- -_ -"N simm*~.. 'r""", fftliri, _ when» would 'l ' twott» , ssritWtt2tGlu'] 'y'l11l'k'tllky'll. Pl guaranty might dip. any from tier) itixiidugit,,eeri,e2trtpioirg2t,i,', than elm" minus-nod milriit atqthtn would "tff" It!!! .W;;!:E GiairiiiG?"h"Gi'ic" $113”? 3': "if. any, tft tjikLtii1.tEytttagrPtter 53519311 iaiistrTaiiiiGGariiiit" iii: '7' the 't9tt.h9.rttottd..ettld 2993.993 tt. "e asked what was his trade, and replied “at In was B upper. No om had ever head of such ‘1 thing baton; the " tttsuis were filled with curiosity; they bunnyht an explanation. It appeared that when x put] of that: were on- naed upon a mot they Would now and than he tahen with can: for. the publb hogan. New. amt”. tor AWCI loch-k WI. Mil I Ball!”- 0- the -. A man felt ttom I bomretop, in the City of Aberdeeq. and was brought into a hospital with bmken bones. He was The tiny skeleton is that. ot Caroline Crnchumi. the Siciliqn dwarf, who was exhibited in Europe In the early part at the century. The child did not lsnow Uter birth, and before she reache her teens she dieq. Her body. it in mid. was sold to a BritUh surgeon by her pur- can. Beside the giant's frame stands one ot the boots he ware when he died. The skeleton at the dwart.ean he slipped into it as manly as a mpe new. Huntarr, tbe [English surgeon, learned of this arrangement. and by paying the fishermen 8500 be prevailed u n them to carry oat their bargain to & letter. but to attach a tofu to the body and drag it up again a ter it had been im. mersed. The fishermen served two meters. and JI.tuster .Wrt. the peg): .. Byrne had a great dread of knowing a dirsstreting-room subject. He made a bargain with a fisherman before he died to take hi4 body out into the Channel and throw it overboard: _ Charles Byrne. the famous Irish giant, who was more generally known as O'Brien, died in 1783, when he was twenty-two year" old. His capacity for liquor WM in keeping with his huge physical proportions So keen was his anguish over losing all his property- to wit, a E800 note-tUt he drank a cask of ale in one day, The day follow- ing he mu dead. The Lanna. Tttttt " Inn". tur lrlvh Glam. In over F.taht Fert In "rtort-Ntrttta" liwnrf‘. " Tun Fret. The large" and smallest skeletons of humans ever prc-xerw-d are kept in In? musk-um of the Royal College of Summons, in Lincoln's Ina Fields, Lon- don. One N eight feet four inches in height. The other is less than two feet. (advantage In thy pntrnm. if the (‘Tt‘nlll- Ci'iiiii'jiiit," had " good knowledge of Freatu-raising. >0 as to stive instrur- llion “horo- nm-dml. Tbere isvnougls vrv-uui. or lbllllvT-fuL, lmt in the skim- milk through cureitrssmvvi and neglect. and ignorarie, to pa) tlie entire mm. of ,n.iuutaciuring the lulltrr in mm! at thes" creuuwries. The creatn-ir,ath- erer should be "t'cttraltt and just in metcsuring the t-rmui. taking suvnples ‘pmwrly, and doing all in his power to 'protuole harmony Irelween the patron" and 'uanagers of Ilu- (-rvanwry. Tlte “(gyms should be covered lo pram-m tlte tanks or runs from the sun, that tbe cream may he- delivered at the t‘rvtum-ry a" can] as possible. After the PD'JUH is strained into the cream vat, th" buttornmke-r should examine its condition regarding tentperature and lactie acid. A sate rule in warm weath- er is to cool the cretuu immediately to fifty-six or fifty-eight degrees, hold at this Cemperarpre over night. and churn ar nhuut. fifty-eight degrees in the morning. When the cream is deliver- ed cold and swu-ot. in the fall, the tem- pI-rattm- would be raised lo sixty de- grw-s to ripen. Sonn- fresh humor- milk may tte, trawl to hasten the rip- ening irroceay. The cream may be churned at sixty degrees in the tall. Perfect cleanliness and fresh air are extremely important factors in n. eth'atnery--No important that, without them, success is impossible. _ tmItEAMu;ATHEitiNG C', Only rump-(rm. hone: men should be employed creameries. lt would he, advantage In lbw patrons, gatherers, had " irood _ Frtuutt-raising. so as to lion where "eedtd. The! t‘rg-um, or trutter-fat milk through carele marked plainly on the outside ot each: about half lo tttree quarter"' of a pound o-xlm should be added to val-h. when filling, to hunk» the butler hold out in weight. When the hutlvr in shipped in one-pound prints, it should ln- secure- ly prom-nut from Ilse sun in warm weaihtrrt by the mi" of ice in the ship- ping box. A pium- of clean hrown p.1- per Laid over the top of the butter will pmtwt it. from the sun and heat. about half lo tttree o-xlm should be " filling, lo tttak" th weight. When the also huvo patrhttteni paper inside. Pack (he butter in tlsr. HIM-H or boxes clone around the sides and corners. Fill In within half an mm a? 'he top of the tub and finish off Ecru-l mtlmul giving the hulk-r u greasy nppeurunw. Cover the hunt-r with parchment. paper or Miller-cloth and put on a paste made of null and water, Then put into cold storage at fifty-six degrees, or " much lmver ttN the 'eusperature can he- kept uniform. (‘bunguu in Imulx-rulun- have an injurious n-n’c-r! on th" keeping of butter. Fresh brim would be added ocmviioually to keep the paste un tlse top of the tub in " umm mmddiun. SHIPPING. The tubs or boxes should be clean and the lids fastened on properly ; the weight of butter in all the [ulna or boxes should I,.. the Name, and i: tshould In- nmrkml plainly on Ihe olllSlllt"0f each: Ash nr sprum- lulm should le soak: all for twenty-four hours with a strong, hot brim, or for two (ix-3:4 tsith a mm Iarino-; then in- “min-d clean and lin- ed with purvhnu-nl paper. Tum or hon-s lined will: paraffin pun; nhould Work carefully and evenly all parts of the butut alike, turning in and out and "doubling alternately on the re- volving worker, When lhe lrutter is salted on the revolving worker. the worker should be turned tnventy-four times to finish the Itutter at one work- ing. When tho huILo-r is to be work- ed (wire, about eight. turns the first lime will he ,uttfieiertr, and my ten lurns. or just vnnugh to makl- the color even, the second titne. We potter work- ing lmllur lwim when put-kink for ox- porn. as in this way we rth't lows "mix- lure. a i'lucu-r hotly and u [non~ won I'll" or. It is also ptiferulrle trt lln- null"- working mulluul for Iliv inexperienced but ter-maker. Whoa tbe butter is salted in ihe churn, ton to fourteen revolutions of the worker will l.- sufficient, the Him Inn-in; lo remove tho PXCeNN of moisture and got, an even color. This should be tlonu tn every raw. The butler. when working, uhnuld in no mm- be tsolder in wilder or warmer in aununrr than fifty-five degrveri. TWO EXTREMES IN SKELETONS. THE TAPPEB. Hum thelxun and heat, ATHERLVG T'ItP.AMr.'ltHF. mgr-(rm, honest, courteous d be emrrlored in or about PACK AG ES sun In warm " in the ship- 'tttl hrown p.1- he butter will ‘lebne I'm. I. P.ror in“... on!” In Anabel- Who loco-mi. Br. Ant-H'- mourn-I Powder. _ The t'ttg,utg'u,t,t ere commencing to at. Who not egood word to any for Dr. Asr.mnrts9taFrt1t1, Powder' pertsinly the but e'.r_tiasos.Ate Domin- GriFir"amrtamrttitqptatyyq,ytdtot without” Me. Rabat Benn. mem- ber in the Comm for Durham, the gill mama! pe Hon. Edvard nuke. ' In anoturad tan to thump citizens who hue used up admins; and ftmn,tt?qir.ottr.t Wye-91.1 The peat uni future-m veiled; but tho put was" an wgdow'n veil; the future the virg'tn'a.--Wehte. _ that formant mum and. can?“ u: it. different pm. and by (out, than hmumdytpeqnsl this. “new bib to relieve In ten mums. C sown» unit's succusoz m nusau. The insurance of. buildings against [in [as was practiced in Rome m the mm ot Autumn. The 'reeds or the, In" June- l-rdult. or ll. 4.“. I. It. cantor-lug Milk .t-A ark-I - “an. This "lari'1ht, never spoke trtter words. He lad "uttered for a long time from kidney trouble. and commenced to .tlsink--am will variably become the CtMtt) it a remedy is trot 'iecured--tur he was [Mad to din of Kidney disease. He new! the claims ot the tistsnatacturerts of South American Kidney Curt, with scepticism. perhaps Hut hauled _tbe gnadicinedamd Isl ' much bilgehlted tifdr, In two ya. an using In own In;- rgge: "l hue taken in all fou.r 'tGTii7k amide:- Lhat I have moaned $100 worth qt gmd from one}; Bottle." The ,'ltt,'? " not many high enough. for w an kidney dit-y in not staged, dam quickly follows. RECEIVED $100 WORTH OF GOOD FROM EACH BOTTLE 'tbo In,” "run. w. Y. 'tto"Hr, M Dull-IE Allrr lining In. Agnow'u (‘nre [or the "an. How difficult it, is for ttore alllirled with heart druuua, to get relief, and lo gut. ir quickly. The pain hangs on. and In suggestive of the most, terrible. Te- sulm. for heart, disease vannoL be trifl- wl with. Here was Mrs. w. T. Randle, the wife of a, well-known cattle dealer in Dundalk. who suffered so severely from pain in the region of the heart that, to quota her own words "I was for wine time unable to aunnd to my househohl dulim. I was induced to try Dr. Agnew": Cure tor the Heart, and I must any the’mult wan wonderful, The pain immediately tut me alter the‘ first day, and lave had no trouble since." fhi','tt testimony. and yet Mm. Bundle 3 and» along with thouse ands of 01th who ran any the Mum, thing. The tongue of a fool is the key of his counsel. whirh in a wise man wisdom hath in keepiut--Swratesr _ THE PAIN IMMEDIATELY LEFT ME, 3hr. in down on her knees peering un- der the various ankles of furniture for the button when he says: "Oh, here it N. 1 forgot. and slipped it, into my pork”. Now if you'll wit, --great tcirott! Look at, that cllock Maria! We ought. to have been off five minutm ago! What, have you heen doing! How many hours does it take a Woman to dram! Here I'm all ready and you haven't even got your dress on! What have you been doing the hm. half hour? Pd like to know that! It's always the way when we try to go anywhere! I'm always ready hours hefote you begin!" ll take: nearer ten minutes for her to find needle, thread. may)“ and the missing button. and while 'she was New- ing on the human he says: "Won't you please put, the sleeve hut- tons in my ole-an cuffs I" "I can't find but one button. Henry." "Oh. well. things are always gelling lust in this house. Look around and I gun“ you'" fiml it." She in down on her knees peering un- der the various articles of furniture for the button when he says: ot tly before ule." [want lo finish Ibis murder trial. Put a mu. won't you. .'" When [hm is done put tL clean ltandlrereh of my coat. wou't you got, hut l twNted a "verhk" to-day. The I got on it at "Yes, after. "And will ' " me and l "Yes, dear," collar he says "Just Listen "on Mr. Buurr Wu Why'd In aaoltttr On ran-II" Ewell-x. Mr. and Mrs Baxter were going out logetho-r the other “Hung and he said an he sat with hm cigar m hm mouth wading the evening p.mer: "Now We mmln'l Le Lute. Maria, I'rn “hunt randy. Inul wrll yo" .iuwl brush hr sleep ll: ployee, "but I want to have " little talk "ith you." Sum" pratle forw- wmi required lo in- dum- tlre corpulent, one- ttt enter the office. but, "new there he was made to undress, when he mm found to be al, most a skeleton. He had between his waisuvat and his shirt a skin NW]- tank: which was capable- of turntaining fourteen or fifteen Hurts of liquid. Un this occasion it had 'ill:".,", filled “ith oil, and while it naved the heurer from in, jury it had betrayed him. and he WM removed to the Perrrcture of Police. amid the laughter of the people who Winn-Moll the incident. A quantity of rnm‘ptnvlt-s of the kind doscriued wan found in his dwelling. and anotuer in. dividual has burn arrested on uunpiv- jon that he "TAN an m‘voxnmim- tyt tannin tlie "hf-d of the scheme “an In rude lhu octpoi tiueva, m y ""_Vl a.Uusre you Iom not hurt," (x- claimed the old gentleman, whp dis piqnuhgn-nl anxiety to tabs himself i,tt crowd. Disrtuptrding the offers of at" sismnau he began to shuffle off :H fast as his legs could carry him. Eye- wittvvuwn went to an employee of the octroi (the tax levied upon commodities carried into the. city) and gave an my count of the ewsode, upon which that. ottirial, running after the victim. ex- tended lo him a polite invitation to that in his office. A In Slowl- - of Oil when I I‘ll. [all Own- I“... l Moralists will find it difficult to draw a satisfactory lemon from an ineident which all Paris is laughing over Io-day. A very carpulenl individual was knock-l ed down in the ntreet b)- n can near one of the gates of the city. The while passed over his holy to the constertct.. tion of the "pecrators A crowd 'rails-l' "red round the victim, who lay an Ilw. ground, not in a pool of blood, but in one of oil. He was only slightly stunn- od by the shock. and soon arose withl protume thanks for the. sympathy of the crowd. Dixrv‘ganling the offers of Abbi "istarwe, h" hymn to shuffle off {H} fast ttN his has could carry him. Eye- trad-tattest-ttttBM-mth' Shun- _ " All right so' much (In h, WHAT W A SHE DOING ? pockerk. Cary we got in “u LAUGHABLE INCIDENT. a lit” tear-; ch the hu-nur," replied the Pm-- hul [want to haw It little (ml ten it on in the Ira, finish this m‘mnu r dimwr." . I attend In baby." you lay out, a clean mllnr my evening necktie I" ' and whim slu- brings the And w lone he saw m my tie ll you ju" sponge vest ~mmm him: et in lr, _ And. button t'a"W'?,)'l, yttttt on 'u-w it .on nut it mln- is in : "Just n- pot-kn o. I {hr- off my please, f that or me, baby m-am'mdm.m;nnd nNhnoooolma’yeu-ynmrm A “tilled dame” bill has been pans- ed by tbs Upited States House of Re- pmentativa. and is likely to Income luv. It data, not .pmhaw the unnu- lncturp or. aaa, oi tilled choc-e. but undid-p that busine- h: heavy has. It with. that when mm my n 130nm (a 91‘0“!” add An ex-1 m%ttaxotiemttsptmgsdmttttetipgo_ duet; that 'rrok_ bum in tum-c] A matrimonial Itunco gums is being worked with great were!“ among Chinamm in various parts of hum. The hunoo team consists of two women and a man. Both the women am said to he of attractive omit-MAW. one being I Honda and the other abrunetu. The nun is ghoul. 50 yen-a oldmix feet tall, and palm himself as an old soldier. By lomqono ot halt: dozen clever whom ' Chinaman is induced y, marry one of the women. The wedding taken place an righubut tte bride promptly demons bar tastusodctaMrgr..whnt.eyer volunte- in.uttoea oLwadmnc 31mm had in. oexved m5 mall 'tCtttsr punk-ad'- poro- abte papacy u is and} curled oH. An immensi- log loom. claitned to la: the largz-sl single loom in the world was finished on the Mrnuininm itiver. Mich.. a few days ugu. lt in ten mile» long, and ia ntretched along the will: claimed of the river to prawn! logs (nun going adrift into My {Luv thrs Spring. when the hig annual atrive.whiets Will this ymr com Arise nit-vars] hund- ‘md million feet 'lf Inga, minim down the river. GHQ-ins in the cod regions are usual- ly grenade-d as dungarou-i and expetvdvo gamma. but thew was one mar ll'Wr Non. Pa., lust week which win a happy ucident. lt was found that. thts cave-4n opened a hole into an old mine. which was supposed to be filled with water, 1nd which had Iron tmasndoesed, and the shaft cloud on that account.j The water had evidently drained off to: 1 lower level. and the owners ot the mine helluva they will he able to re- move from it about sixty mm of will. Huliys ftlchwtslyp.ttttsb. a linker in Cin, cmnali. tuade a 1it'e,.stp. figure of :1 man in dough, and baked it. During his Irm- penny dstmenci-es vagrant mu- ule ott the new and chin o the dough man. which so iuturiated the bukor, than he swallowed a gill of liquor varnish with suicidal intent. This had lhe vuriou< “(not of changing bk voice from Mire]: gutlural to 1 ftuaetto. Me will mow-r. Senator Cannon. of Hub. in said lo he one of the tundra-most mm in the Upper House. He is the yuungml nun in that ham. and in the sun of U. C. Cannon. for many years one of 1lte "Twelve," as the -allrd swath-s of the Mormon church was called. Thu elder Cannon was a Damn-rut drh-galo in Congnmo. The son is u Rn-puhlumn and an editor. terxceuert Coal mining mimm in the , mining paid tlit coal was mam- mih- Cttwk Dim tue to 814 a n Arizona is losing ttustures Although the Irrruury has not ly. the number of a od during Lust yea] and the wrriwrial m tbe rum" period cated at Rughvillr. His appuinlmrnl u Itcsttrtaater of the village Iran. the 'iar ul Jurte. Mt, 1853. The 'xsvement in front of the Willian H. Vandrruilt remidvnce in Nrw You cMy ma! (“Tr SWAIN). The single slow lymg (“Nelly in front " Illa larger, known paving stone. and mat, lruu' portation and all, 821,003). fWHM MII (illl IS ll. Tw ins " P‘ILLED' camera. m -K......... .7... __. 7,, . iGaGuUkiuw'ovuttodotith. union. tttia FiiithRum1h.eretue. " Lfl'h' in I to head My while the world an. m ' tttttar out it. " turn into the M1 HF like I umtv-a1ou-. 'flt amp» asumsuiemortherriiathe an. otrtmsesthirpp. _ngookforun belt i'r'G"r"aiiiii"iw, -"a.;".r;"m’* _ The 1ili'ii,"iiii'it 'l'llfltu"i)'i'A','hl'Eli' "be" The world is tiny: Indy to receive alumna!» who an: Very often it doa- not My” to do with sanity. Ariadne: tteti-isttdmittasd a ram- tr u [nth-ct “may; but degree of it, more or leg angina. gm any“ “in: i"r"iiriGu7rariiiiGkiaie ot Firuio A man’s Lima what well huslnndml is like a runway-d field, of which a few non-a produces more of what is unr- ful to lite than exIansivo provincaueven at the ticks! soil. wheat own-nu with wood: 1nd teamuies.--mtme. or Sale by McFARLANE & co., cosuuaml In turs thoiand. or Hindu ulf and (he work “an dun. ', L' ", sr..' c uwr va 1vtuatty an. the popular and um" own magnum»: . T“ " s".t: ... . 'Y _ minimum 'supcitute..deat of th. Rog»! Arm-noun Nerviue n....,--.:;.: Js L' .\ 'rcuuHitrs ot 'A‘uapdnuc'. Among IU. my headaches and rm. 1." t ".' A 2U000 number; ot tl is crder m outurio win-m in I womb-rim r. .. a " 1. t tun counsel P' ”an on all non» of ve- not deprecate the Lam! v r I" r , .A main“. ou the publzc platform he II one and social qurunr- 2...: ' , ', ".' 1 ', or tbe Im-um; uses: uf the my. tt tt ing ' world. bat how Ill-rm": if": .x‘, A] "gums! the " h of hrs-mmmncc. fur their work Wtu"e u u t 1x. ' Ecrmlrr we“ in Wu i: Mr. B-ll in aux-r that South Amerie I'. Ars-r A» K" L h province: of the Dominion, haw“; born _ them when mound m- ' x r: .or n-nr- a member or the Manual»: them. and when the nyuwm " u l MethoCVt Come e w and mm of ttus vat ot Mud. arm-.2 an} .o.tx u- time was station“! in Winnipeg. Hi, _ work. breaks down. Sum..- tttpts t brother. Mr. Jam n A. Bell. is a ugh}: "rtrteen as the wise rnmnm-r nuns . .ryqreerrl re. id. m of Bun-non. 1mm.- l evils tae is hauling again at. tt runs». his imhwuw. though lerhaty' more cirb the root of the trauma Au d etuttrertbrd Gnu tbat or his i'ir,lii'iiilii'ic; count from Wsraqasriiratiott cf t blower. is rom- the 1m ettretWe sud nor"- can“. This in a wiwinxL- tw Mum-tire of road. or meat. yarn-.1- l Nervine at one works ctt there n.". "er.. the muting may ot Mr. Jam , ee3tterSt gives to them hen“- an! n a.iBeft hm been rm": mum by - fort and then there ooura . "1:011:24 t ate-ch of nun-uni macho. neon- l um strong. healthy. tiro-maurtaui ttnld by indigestion. Wino an do In I blood. nu nervous u-mbzm oi' cu: mm.m tTGue"triG"uirdilraGiirGTtiiiGkiiTGia. gas ERR ‘A GEM. 'sxcitm his mum]. and a (hair?- a a _ AND 1'le [rouge bimuetL-MFavelii. 315M UP TIE SWEFv-i Ill 5 mllililf:lllFlll,, . Ill,,!,',)),?,))],, " ., Iiiib, Rriipf'i/i “NU/19... ils;ijirfj)iiis. jtji aa'.)).' g. {If . fiij)?i,Siqi? I (rc-cast/ttii"':,'??"-'-"-"' a?) A f"racjFj,j'i"i,"i-t m3 ELL , 6.0 3‘ '.usttnicToe.,:..i.?.e,yc "““Ngg- faFaifiit'i' _ . pr $1,, ".Ts tQs "t't l 'tiE5% a; ggagty',0 ' '// t Bitte] . - sin _ y, _ , tl?By9' r“ " $3 ( ”69,7: 1%.; ' i,l:lliiisiiiiiiiiii'i'if:i iii'?, 7 ; -} [ 'me: tt 4/1/10; $111910“ Jul)” ,\.\.\b; w tg -- "tiiii?w;i. ifggigitim?' (l, mam-g; .t'nini incl/mess. (i! et, 5:01:07, Milli-G), banana-u uuuurgn, on} Jaw" ylx‘xinty and P,'.uddir blacks. ' . ' " YEARS IN DETRozT. 200.000 CURED. NO RISK I , A ' roar.slctim? Iruvoroa last h ? An on comm tine my READER l 'r'Ji'.,'C. “.5110: mm ' ;..n mama-m AT.",?,',', any 'ahtes Uu l firw 'nqtatwi'l'tmntrrsea" \nllKun; nu. 1ttssttt LEIIW for others " “all do tor You rconsuunnou “(EL murmur warm my»: yom‘wnho (arm none-tomxvn h ’..f('l.u¢o. ammummm... awn. Fan'L." "rm, uuuw max" "u'"'"'""""' immune!“ tucioe,ovorwsv.trocats. mm 1 - NAME“ USED WITHGUT WRITTEN CONSENT. pm TVATBPgo rnod'fliw yen: c. o. D No name- on bozo. or u'adt an“; Evert/nun; vaunaonuu. Quaatlur- “at and cost or Treat-s m734&‘>;?.5:{§i?fé§:t§fi V6 'F, "', by??? T" al "ike' 'fiPlri'iii,. :rt. /ti.r/ /t s'., x [iN E , 94.59: I. f; 5.! is! A " a -_ LifiiraAixitlrc,ri:, m MANHOOD _ MAKE pgLTF.VC2L'C, iDe.C-is'EiA,eatEtD MEN WCURES GUARANTEED OR MONEY REPUNDED Wholesale Agents for Durham an0 Vicinity i ear-mam E -K8.‘K has wr-.. c. Walk-rot!” sun: "sr-N have "gt-MS' .2.“ luv-mu for my "gturtit6.". 1 w-iodine-t 12:»:th :21me M “Ono! an Bow" 1 y:i.ih1tte,alfy.tr Pri-ii-st. Iuutuortea, l M4,: and Luna... Loan In”. my; 'eetueu.ee.tt l =98§ Nothing im comparable w the pleasure ot an active Lad tTJ,,e.it'tirgelc. a {naught pram over difficulty and Muzily‘ of math”. and p- :rneghgng thedml_wi!.h now di-ies ““3: “In!” aod W. I - hanging tend? at Imam an; We know much of a writer I.) hip style. An - and imperious dixpow ‘lion is shown in shun mnlem'sud-MI and eneraetie. A tswtetive. atid proud mud in cold and olmure in style. An .1“ch and iunginaliw nature pour- oAt luxuriously and lac-om: all ov_e_r ram: -stotucreeter. _ - -r-iiiii4i *d go (lt Ad

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