Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 3 Sep 1891, p. 7

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CANAUlJN FfiClT CANNING. What rrlar. vjwjrd Cesmlr Aleae l *!(. Kruit canning is becoming each year a more extensive and important business in Canada, and it is destined to grow to much greater value in the near future. It is but a few years sinw the first cannery in this Province was established ; now twenty or more are in successful operation and nearly every one is increasing its output from year to \ ear, while the demand for that class of goods increases even faster than the supply. also can splendidly and are put up in large <|uaiiuues, but they require too much iugar in proportion to the fruit to be a favorite class with the manufacturers. That fact makes the price comparatively large with other fruits, but yet all are used that are brought in. The came remarks apply to currants. P'o come very soon after strawberries, and often before the last of that fruit is in. Great pains are taken with this grain so as to secure satisfactory results. The farmers are supplied with the seed, so at to get the proper kinds and to secure uniformity about i put up. As soon as the peas are tit The demand is sure to increase rapidly for i < caking the vines are cut, the pods pick many years to come, for wherever properly ! 1 off and brought ji. The farmers are canned fruits are introduced more are sue i P"<1 i~' P ">> 'r the green pods and lour to be wanted. In no other way can most of ">ns is a good average per acre. The crop our healthy fruits be so cheaply and easily ' ' off in time to leave the ground ready obtained at all seasons of the year and in no 'r buck wheat, or corn for fodder, or wheat other way in a more healthy aud palatable j Mow afterwards. The canneries have an form. The demand exists, and grows, in ingenious machine, driven by steam power, every part of our broad Dominion, from the ' f' shelling the grain from the pods. No Atlanticto the Pacific, while there are ouly haml work is required except the comparatively few and small sections of regular feediug of the pods m a hopper, Ontario alone where the necessary fruits and ""1 the peas come bolted < ut well grains grow in sufficient abundance and cleaned, as Hour u bolted t ie bran var.ety to warrant the establishment of large "> a Hourmg mill Such a machine is cap- canueries. It is ouly by having a large able of shelling a ton per hour More tnan variety that suchan industry can he carried > hundred ''ies of peas were raised and supplied this year. They keep well and the demand increases. "vi is also popular and in demand. The farmers are also supplied with the seed in this case, and the green ears are bought by the ton in the husks. The price given is I. per ton. Between 400 and 500 acres ot sula into Lake Ontario nearly at iu broad- >rn are couli acted for that season will soon est width and seems, in cinsequence, to have begin and it, too, will bevery Urge this year the right kind of climate, while the soila Here machinery comes in very conveniently light, sandy loam-is just what is re.|uir.-.l again. A machine, with fast revolving on through an entire season, or can fully supply the class of orders usually sent by dealers. THE P1CTON i \NVER1S>. Very few counties in Canada, if any, are so well adapted for all kinds of fruit grow- ing as Prince Kdward. It juts out a peuiu- lor thehea'lthy growth of fruit trees and i knives cleans off the raw grains clean from . .u_ i_ .. .;... ' the ear and does it as fast as the ears CM planls. Some of the drives among the farms in that country at this time of year handled. Immense quantities of be canned are through grand maple shade trees by the ffreen corn are used in every province in the road side, for miles at a stretch, and thrifty Dominion and in nearly every part of each apple orchards, such as one does not see province. surpassed either for abundance or thriftinesa Tomato- . ai e in greater demand than any anywhere else in the Province, while large ihmg else. >ome years ago one gentl-man fields of strawberries snJ raspberries are engaged in the business told me that the yearly increasing m *i/e and number, aud demand was practically unlimited for toma- so, too, with tomatoes, peas and sweetcorn. toes -that all could he exported we do not such as are in constant demand for canning use at home. This year the Picton canners purposes. Mine yjars ago Wellington Boulter, Ks>|. , the now President of the Canadian Kruit Cani.ers' Association, begun rind the disu cannot undertake to rill all ('ana* they canno orders, an LEW ntCKrt IN B %mt. J a ir\ OF r 1 1 < i .. London 1st the Middle **. Ten ffclMren And Tfcree traaeVnllsirea j YOS have now to learu, what I believe no sillied i" I IT rrug rniiar. i one (,as yet rwintmi out, '*"? if London The village of Lomoi de Zamora, near could be culled a city of churches i Bautield Station, in the United States of ] was imuch more a city of palaces. Columbia, is the scene of as startling sation as the annals of crime contain. It consists in the discovery of series of murders, beginning in 1859 or 18oJ aud con- tinning to 1890 ana resulting in the death of ten sons and daughters and the three grandchildren of the murderer. The author of these crimes is Marciauo Medina, and his wife, Paulina Benavedea and his daughter, Kemigia, have been the accessories if not the accomplice* in several of the murders. Miice 1*71 Marciuno Medina has lived at a ranch near Lomas de Xamora. He has a a city ol palaces. There London itself more than in Verona and and injuoaall together. There was not, it in more were, m fact in true, a lineof marble paia-.i along the (tanks of a i Itaiid Canal ; there was no Piaz/a slella Stgnoria. no Piausa dell' Krbe, to show these building:*. They vn-re scattered about -til over the city : they were built without re- gard to general effect, and with no idea of decoration or picturesqueness : they lay hid- den m the labyrinthine streets : the ware- houses stood beside and between them ; the commo'i people dwelt in narrow courts family consisting of a wife, six sons.aiid one ; around them ; they faced each other on op- daughter, Kenugia. He is 55 years old, and posit* sides of I his wife is 43. Medina is employed among These palaces belonged to the great nobles the corrals of Lomos, and is considered a "d were there town houses : they were use'ul worker unong the men of his class at capacious enough to accommodate the whole election times. The discovery of thin man's of a. Baron s retinue, .ousisung sometimes crimes was doe indirectly to the actiou of of four, six or, even eight hundred men. Remigia, in leaving her father's home to ' { Let us remark that the continual presence elope with her lover. of these lord* and those following did much On July It, Medina called upon tin* police I more for the city than merely to add to it* commissary of Lotuo* de Xamora, Orualdo splendor by the erecting of great houses. <luen, and requested that his runaway By their presence they kept the pUee frojn daughter be apprehended. At the very becoming merely a trading centre or an ag- momeiit of this conference, a police agent, Pedro M iranda, called the commiisary aside. and said that he had just come from a ranch uear Lomus of t h. 1 gregate of merchants : they kept the citi- m touch with the rest of the kingdom , they made the people of London understand w de /amora. where in the course that they belonged to the realm of England, menu whicii had been made upon When Warwick, the Kingmaker, rode the elopement of Kemigia, it hail tieen through the streets to his town house, fol- charged that Medina auH his wife bad killed lowed by tive hundred retainers in his livery: a number of their children, snd buried them when King Ivlward IV. brought wife and on tlwir ranch. ciuiilren to the city and rode out to fight for After hearing this, the commissary turned Hw crown : when a royal tournament was to Medina, and without arousing his suspi- held in Chepe the (,>ueen and her ladies cion, dismissed him with the promise that looking on even the boys understood that everything possible would be done to secure there was more in the world than mere buy- the arreet ofRemigia. The commissary next ing and selling, importing and exporting : It the aunt aiicirut and most general of all disuanes. .Scarcely a temily u entirely den Inini it. t.jtle thousands everywhere arete suflrrtmr slaves. Hood's SarsapmrUla baa remark;U)Ie success m curtnu every form of screlula. The uost were and uainlul run- ning i4ir>->. swellings ui the neck, or (ottre, humor in the e\ei. causes/ iiwttal or total l.limtafw. and every ether toiui of blood disease have yielded to the pow.-rful "Heels of this meilirtne Try It Hood's Sarsaparilla gold hy ail druiupsu. (1 . MI for . fraean* osUy by >' I IIUOD A CO . Apothecaries. LaweU. SOMS. !OO Doses One Dollar Two of 'Em in Circulation. ^ervant <iirl ito me master of the house) "< .<> away and >|Uii hogging me. I heard ywu tell your wife last night that she was all the orld to you." Master of the House" So ssVeis, Katiuj but you know diere are two worlds th* old world and the new worM. " d this, too, m of the , fs*'. that they have in prospect the supplies a cannery at Picton, the county town, an.l of ISO acres, and the yield will be very large his business has ben on the increase ever pr acre. It is said that millions of cns since until now the labels of his cans are can be shipped to Kngland each year if we familiar to the eye of almost everv leading lut had them to ship. The price given at grocer from Ca'j-,- Breton to Vancouver the factories is .':> cents per bushel This Island, It wan then difficult to get any looks small, but an experienced raiser has large supply of small fruits and peas and just remarked to me that when be can take corn such as was needed, and even more load and sell it and away at once it pays difficult to get a good market for what wan him very well. More are needed each manufactured. Since that time another year. large establishment of Miller & Co. has Pumpkin' are also put in cans when the sprung up alongside, iu the same thriving seavm forotherthingBispast. The price is too town, ana it, too, has flourished and ex- j low to warrant much attention, hut the de- tended. To-day these are the most impor- ' mand increase*. <!ood <|iialities are used taut industries to the town and the sur and they are put up nicely. The thrifty rouudiug farmers for miles around, and out housewife, who IK always anxious tor visited the ranch, where the story of tiiat everything must not be measured by Medina's crime* wtre repeated to him. On ptotit : that they were traders, indeed, and thefollowingday, Remigia was found hiding y*< "ubjects of an ancient crown : that their on a ranch near the village of Vuilnion, and i wu prosperity stood or fell with the well- was brought before the police authorities of doing of the country This it was which Lomos de /amors. She declared that she >ade the Londoners ardent politicians from had left her home ou account . f the cruel very early times ; they knew the party leader* : they felt bound to take a side ; and they quickly perceived that their own side ted that her father had murdered" several of always won, which gratified their pride. In bis children. She said that some of the a word, the presence in their midst of King treatment at the hands of her parents. I'nder close questioning, Remigia. admit- from them have sprung localities, which bid fair yet equally large and successful. In a late visit to these establishments I be turned out with little trouble' or expense obtained the following information which ' when other things are not handy. The may be of interest to all who are patriotic- color and quality ire much lietter than the ally watching the successful development old hand|prepared method, of our Canadian industries. It is powible, (/ ,^., pllt ,, ,,, ^M^ em, are coming bodies of her brothers and sisters, who had been killed shortly after birth, were buried in her parents house, while others had been buried under an old barn which formed an outlying post of the ranch. KILLKU \VIIKN- Ul'T H.4BIE*. I 'pou this evidence Medina aud his wife were arrested. They at first denied the cliarges, then made a partial confession, en- tangliug themselves in a ma/.e "! falsehoods, and at length weie induced to fully confess then crimes. According to the confession, Medina and Ina wife lived formerly in Les Klores, where they were married in lv">. They lived in an iun of the village, the bus- nd nobles made them look beyond their walls. London was never a Ghent ; nor was it a Venice. It was never London for itself against the world, but always London for Kngland first, and for its own interests next. \\ ALTKK BKSANT, in fl<trptr' M i < up others m other variety of good things, rinds these cans al- ' band beini{ .1 man of all work, aud his wife too, they may tend to encourage the estab- lishment of others in other localities. The become j ways ready for any emergency and at any attending the kitchen of the establishment, time: and many a tine pumpkin pie can thus j The first murder occurred after they had I'een married a year and a half. A son had been born to them, who, when a few months old, was afflicted with a touch of fever. One night Medina took the child away from home on horseback, under the pretext of I IMMII wll/rrland. Al a time when the little republic of SwiUerluud ucelebrating the six-hunilredth anniversary of bet independence it seems fitting to emiuire concerning the present strength of that principle upon which her government is founded That the <irmo- crane sentiment has not weakened during these centuries is evidenced by the fact that only a few weeks ago, almost on the eve of her great national celebration, a plebiscite favored a new law introducing popular initiative in legislation. I'uder this law a fc^jy of go.OOO citi/ens may submit u the Federal Assembly the text of such a bill as , t desires, and that body must thereupon lt up j or action. This is the more re i i; ti.i'u '.sfcii^ aiv ' I'liiui^ i iiiil. 1 IT in great demand. They are cooked, as other | Consulting a doctor. ling along he , In arkar,le seeing that the Urger body, or fruit and then * , the openings the many opening North West f . * . - IIUIC. t IIUII9MIKI9 XI WIIUII 10 ll.-.'IU.' IIUW , in their line of business because ot hvj in NJ , 1)ltoba are , hank f u l l to 5 th , lr jr changes brought about by the tupplie . of thj , foliar f r ,,,t in this way, up of the great gram fields of the but tl|e ttr ,. ltMt , lemftlll i of al j comet from i-est and the closing up of much of KnglaDd Tnere the valm . a|ld , it o( at States grain markets by tariffs. k\TNTO-TUK WORK DONE I found at the time of my visit fully two frn.t aiming for this one market will hundred persons at work i'i the two factor- something enormous. Last fall Mr. Boulter ie. largely females and boys, but at IIIIH-M gut one order for the Kitglish navv for ill win n supplies conii- in more rapidly another the canned apples hi> cinild suiiplv and it I _ t 1 ._!!!._ __l I 1. _ . .1 I i pom- , _.. up and ready nl any ' P 1 "* 11 th chll<l s bre<ult *tj"st farmers of the Province greatly need more , ime Thousands of Ontario people now | mel f hl "^'t' <* '""> opeiiiiigs m their line of tusiness because of | iv m in M.mtnh. .H> th..LI..I t ,i tk. out of its little body. Iheu liecairied i to the shore of Lake Rlauca, and buried it on land belonging to 1'r. Montes Ue Oca. Kngland There the value and uiialitv of i vhe M , ed ""' .""I'' 11 h J" e> h " ^ *"* the great State,- gram markets by hostile our Canadian apples has been but recently Wlf<? " n l ll1 ' "^ donti - shu wl " he * rt found out and the order* came thick and fast. In years to come this one branch of National Council, yields a representative for each 'Jll.OOO or thereabouts, a unit ot population which is very much smaller than in customary in popular branches of the parliaments or legislatures of other count nes ot Europe. Vet so strong is the deuiociatic tendency in Switzerland, that with this broken and reproached him tor his crime, Jtgree of popular representation in the law- HO or more are needed. These were all hard at work m the car.ning alone. Kir.|ilovinent better than our ordinary rates. 1'rohably . . . in vears to come the ships of vtar ami ships is given for a still larger nuuilier in cultivat- of >-ommerce will ir<- well provided with a ing grounds and raising aud collecting the variety of canned fnnt> i..,ie with the dried raw materials, Ix-sidrs the large number and salted incuts and fish, uivini: :> gfxl permanently al work in making tin cans palatable variety and a good preventative and boxes, and shipping, liook-keeping. and against anything like scury. once so preval- the many other lines of work necessary ent and so dreaded by men in long voyages. throughout the year The tw> factories ex- pect to have ma Ie and tilled something like a million and a h,ilf of cans of various kinds before the close of the season. The amount o ______ _ _____ ..... _. w _____ __^ of work that is required, aud the amount of | would be for cooking at home, then put in tin. lumber and cash expenditure can scarce the cans and nealed with tin- exception of ly be well imagined by those who have not small vent holes, then carefully ami skillful- given the matter considerable study, just |y cooked by steam and the vent soldered up how many tens of thousands of dollars this leaving them perfectly air tight and fresh. sum represents to the farmers for their stuff! As to the markets I need only say that and how many thousands to the laborers, supplies now go from Halifax to Vancouver and how much to the manufacturers for the direct in car loads. At the one cannery finished product, I did not attempt to learn, twenty car loads have already been arrant; - There are few lines of business, however, I m] for'Winuipeg, and trains are sent almost leaving'snch an entire percentage of the value weekly until shipments are over, thir Kx- of finished product to go to the farmers and port trade is small vet, hut is destined to I need hardly say that the fruits and are as carefully prepared as they the laborers. Tlir MATBHIAI.S The first work of the season's cancing largely incre.isc. published trade According to the last id navigation returns we exported fromCanad^m KM* 9I4,<*:< worth generally with vrnM*erric. They are ready '. "fanned fruits, about half of which w-nt to and pretty well out of the way before other I ; " > t Britain, and a large part of the bal- fruits couie iu. In the two canneries some ] >** W th * States. \\ e Imported during thing like 1/W.OOO charts were put up dur- the same year Jivm wor'h from the same ing the season i though these and other fig- ures msy not be always entirely cot rly the entire amount These were the product of about ,10 acres of the cultivated fruit, and would represent an average of 3,000 quarte to the acre, good aud poor. In some instances the yield was considerably over 4,000 quarts to the acre, and at U cents the average rate, 1 think would Now that we have cheap per acre. Very few other 'also, ought t.> become great and profitable. The probabilities are that such will be the case in the near future. TAOMAX W. C.V<EY. XAI-ANKK, Aug 27th, '91. per<|uart represent fruits represent any such sum of money, ami. after all, the total amount of work re- quired is not large or heavy. The crop needs good soil and skilful cultivation. Kach year, as more special attention is given to them, the average grows better and the supply is larger. Strawberry raising is he- coming an immense and profitable business in this Province in those parts well adapt- ed to it. RtupbtrritJt do not come next in rotation but may as well he mentioned just here. Less labor and skill is required than in the cultivation of strawberries, and the yield is larger aud more sure, once the bushes get well bearing. One experienced fruit raiser informed me that from no one fruit can so much good cash results be safely calculated upon. This season the yield is tr ily won- derful, and th large quantities one sees growing in s few miles drive in some parts of the country is astonishing. Nome times there are acres seen at one time. hie farmer in .\sj>elir*r>nrgh claims to have hud iOO busheh this season, and he did not de- pend on the canneries for hmmassuteither. These were <<) t , IMIcville. Gooseberries countries, and from tlie States and free sugar and a yearly increasing amount of fruits the business is sure to grow from year to year. Central Ontario ought to grow fruits for millions of people outside of our own country, and no doubt it will d<> so before many years. The Canadian in- dustry in c tnnrd fruits, and in canned meats Hew vessels ge I s>t .. _i, Ike - u . , i . , i The average time of transit by day it -I hours ; by night with electric lights it is 19 hours, and has been done in !.' hours. In vessel must electric pro order to navigate by light the way by carrying an je. tor at her bow as close to the watet a* possible, and pay the closest attention to the orders from the passing stations or yar< ,. Three white lights shown vertically indicate "slow down ;" then the display of two while lights is the order, to stop aud haul into the yon . The steamer presently hauls in, makes fast, puts out all lights and lies snug while m her berth alongside the desert, the oncoming vessel, looking like a locomotive at night, panes by. Ont white light from the i/orr and lines are let go, and the journey continued until Suez is reaoh- ed. - [Lieut. Ridgely Hunt, in but took no steps to expose him. Medina making body she als.> permits the direct justified his act oil the ground that they origination of bills ani"iig the jieople. t er- were too poor to supjiort children. taiuly there hswe been changes during the A year later, a second son, Ouadalobpe, p^no,! that has elapsed since the three H weeks old, was takeu from home by the fa {<,, , ,,,,,munities of I'ri, .Schuyz and I'u ther. The baby was murdered, and its body ' t*rwalden entered into the primitive corn- was takeu home and buried in the presence p^.j o f confederation, lit th changes have ol the mother, ho again te-ame aoci-sitiry i) H . whole been in the direction of de- to the crime by her silence. The next victim. ve lopmg the deiifK-rati.- principle snle by a bliy boy, was killed liy strangulation when :; iiuiutlis old, and the body was buried m a neigliboring ranch. The next two uufoi'un ate babes were girU, Kelipa, who was smoth- ered in her cradle when 4 months old, and Tellja, whose brains were blown out by Me.lina when she wan *> months old. Ill KIKtl UIIIIK II VI. K \I1VK. The parents moved to Lomas de Xamora wheiv, ill 1>7*. Medina murdered his sixth child, a boy s daysold, who was not christ- ened. This crime was especially atrocious. According to the confession ol the mother, Medina crushed the Kil-c violently against his breast, and burie.l bini while yet half alive, nn the ranch where they lived. Throughout the following eight years, Medina seems to have abandoned his mur- derous actions, and five sons and a daughter were horn to him. all of whom are still liv- ing. Two other sous kirn after these, how- ever, were killed by Molina. Twins born to the couple tlu-.l under such suspicious circumstances, although Medina stoutly protests that they died natural deaths. He says be carried their bodies, three days after birth, to the public cemetery in a cart, not being able to go to '.he expense of a regular funeral, and that the sexton buried the children, The officials, however, have been unable to find any men 1 ion of such a transaction in the records of the municipality, and it is suspected that the twins were also foully dealt with. The list "f Medina s crimes was not re- stricted to his offspring, but included the murder of three sons of his own married daughter, Kemigia. The 6rstburu in IS89, and the second born IS90, were beaten to death by their grandfather. They were buried on the ranch. In December, 1S90, Kemigia gave birth to the third son. When the babe was '.V days old, Medina, one evening, ordered Reiuigisi down to the kitchen. XVhile she with the principle .'t fedeiatnm. I'util the recent passage of the hiw giving the people llie power of originating lulls under certain conditions, that lealurv ol the Swiss Constitution which espei-ially .l:*un- gmshed it was the referendum, a provision made foi the submission of act> of the Legislature to popular vote under certain circumstances. That this little group of Cajtons h.i maintained its independence, surrounded as it has been by mighty .md grasping nations, and that with commun- ities of different origin and language and of ule differences of religious faith, it has been so remarkably free from civil strife is not the least among the wonders of our times. t n Kx|>l.iu ili.'n "Why is it that the daily westward run shows to so much greater advautagr than the eastward, iu the case of those ocean greyhounds which have succeeded in placing, the continents less than a week asunder '' This is a question not infrequently heard when public attention has been drawn to some record-breaking trip like that of Majestic for instance. The question would never be asked if those who propose it would duly coissider the influence which the revolution of the earth on ilsavta has on the length of a day as the vessel proceeds east- ward or westward. Assuring six days at the length of ttt.-e required by a ship t.i cross from <Ju<*eiistii to Sandy Hook, and rem- embering that between these two points there isadifferenceof time of nearly tour hours and twenty-three minutes, it is plain that each of the six days ou the westward trip would have added to it one-sixth of four hours and twenty -three minutes: or about forty tour minutes that is, a day reckoning from noon to noon woufd be twenty-four hours aud forty-four minutes. Iu going to the eastward this would be re- versed : the average sea day would contain Sbe Was a Groat Help to film. *.orge Bashful "What do you tiuirfcsis the prettiest name that can be given to" a girl'" Muw Bessie i pally) "The name of the man she loves. '' George Bashful "But that can oniy be doue wiien she names the day." Miss Bessie " WeU.make it aext Tuesday. '* (.leorge Bashful "Miss Bess, you have bean a great help to me, and I will ask you to" Miss Bessie Be your helpmeet. Geoqge, 1 promise." And both heaved sighs of relief at leas*, one sue too large tor them. "August Flower" The Hon. J. W. Fennfenore i* th Sheriff of Kent Co., Del., and lives at Dover, the CotnUy Seat arid-Cap- ital of the State. The sheriff is a gentleman fifty-nine years of are, and this is woat he am "I have " used your Augvat nLa>wr for sv ' ' eral years in my fiinuly and for i ' ' own use, and foona - it does ' ' more good than any other reo " I have been troubled with wkai " call Sick Headacho.*A paint ' ' in the back part of my head ; ' ' and then soon a general fead ' ' until I become sick and vociiL " At< times, too, I have a fullness " after eating, a-pressore after eatinr " at the pit of the stomach, and "sourness, when food seemed to rise " up in my throat and mouth. When " I feel this coming on if I take* " little August Flower it reliereB " me, and is the best remedy I have " ever taken for it For this reason ' ' I take it and recommend it to " others as a great remedy for Dys- "pepsia, &c." 9 G. & GKEEN. Sole Manufacturer, * WutHlburv. New Jersev, U. S. A. I ri I ....... -> , i in .1 A fnvoriU' sweet in .lapan is . or Millet-honey, madv from rice or tuflJe which has I ecu soaked, steamed. loi-OKi with warm water m J barley -malt, ancOeft to stand a few hu\ir, when a clear yllow li<|uid m drawn olf. which can be Unhid down to a thick syrup or paste. This paste street venders blow into odd forum with * pipe, for the delectation of children, amtsik is also made into fanciful rlowee<shapee, which are used to decorate the dinner tswesj en in the Rmperoi ' palace. Gave Himself Away. Adams " Well. Jones, been getting drunk Again '' .I.MI.-S i angri Iv -" Thai's my businosn Adams (pleasantly)" 80 I underlain!. JACOBS O _ , was abeent he killed the baby. Keimgia on | v twenty three hours and sixteen minutes and her mother helped Medina to bury the child behind the kitchen. The discovery of these crimes has oc- fasiooed intense excitement in Lomai de Xamora and the adjacent towns. Kxcava lions made ou Mediua's ranch have resulted in the rinding of the skeletons of some of the murdered children. Medina seenis little moved, either bv the contemplation of his crime or the peril in which their dis- covery has placed him. He says that he killed his owu children because he had not the means Keinigisv's shame. to support them, sons to hide his and killed daughter's In Bulgaria only 7} per cent, of the popu- lation csui read and wnte. This gives in t he case supposed the dtheren between a westward am! an eastward day of eighty-eight minutes say an hour aud a half. Suppose now the vessel runs at the rate of twenty nautical miles an hour, it would make % little less than .xi" miles .t day when running westward, and a little more than 400 miles a day when running eastward. And this while keeping up an even rate of speed throughout. ! tm Texas. Mr. tiuktav Nanwald, Jr.. TivvdsUe, Frederiekatarg 1'. O., Tex., I'. 8. A., writes : " I was cut by a scythe and knnV in my hands and feet : 1 suffered three weeks. A half bottle oi St. Jacobs OU utfod SPRAINS. STRAINS. INJURIES. It Is an erroneous idea to sunpone that graft' force is required to pnnluce a strum or *|>ntu> There are so niauv delicate inuncssji and teu> doiiH which h>.l ti Aether theankluaad 'ixn, snil threcl the vehicle of locoiuudbc, that a very aliichl thiux olVucaasvsn"i onlpa or painful, but u very * nous sprain . wnicli ^'_ Jacob* Oil win cure SulllLT ADD PtHrCCTiV. Weak Spot*, v large uouiber or cases U reports* ill Kcci.l.uti M loe unkjc or i.'i. wore liiuu to ail UIP sst of the b.<d> 'I he kaee Is ab>o a very dvltcete centre 61 s ii. 'ii. and linurk's thereto wry nvquciilly mutt In M-ute pain*. enlarsjesMMt-. sUToeM, and sonwiltneii iHTnmiienc ,ssUhcv<. unicos 8k Jacvbs Chi prevent, au.1 iss CST Cuncs AHC CMSJOJMQ CASCS. Definition. BpnlsjeM hilsi \s--k- en. a a j.>uu t>r inuscis. sy BiKttleii n: M . .-\i rtn-n . TI, sirelcli niux > . r \- ^ i without dislocauou.aBdKl CASICT AND WITHOUT NCCUDMIMCC Treatment. Hub with si, Jae. y tho part ntfpcUxl. ITo- t*cl the bvJy fr..iu etilj and (trail. Mt CHARLIf 4. VOtfUR CO.. bantaofe. 4 VanadiaaUeput:

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