Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 4 Oct 1883, p. 7

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 ::^r^ â-  -.T^^f^S-Tv "'5 • ' 'T'^S^^S^ ^g^'^f^^Z ^WW^WW^W^P^^^^^W 'TTS?^ ne essary to con^ at, the former 1 [at ;r sometimes I appear more i in conversation hers take notic^ it yourself.â€" Sir fABMER'S CORNER. jj,e siudew of the Grape. related to the potato rot fonsros, I L"**'L of which was recently given, is a **^jew opon the grape vine. These two '^-^100? to the same genua, the former ' known to science as Peronoeoora in- •'and the latter as PeroMo«porai«icofo[. ^*"^ldew of the grape is much slower in He "r though the general behavior and f*'^°J~e of the two pests are much alike, lrZe mildew makes its first appearance [jsPTf^nnder surface of the grape leaves 1^^ form of Email frost-like patches. The ijt'" ]ga,ved varieties of grapes exhibit do*' ite to much better advioitage than '^orts the leaves of which are covered 'f^ dense coat of hairs. These patches rystalline appearance consist of the ' *Jbranching threads which come out of f- jjjjng pores of the leaves and bear r'mmer spores on their many termina- r,'° These spores are formed very rapidly, Li*«av irom their attachments, and are *J by the wind, and otherwise, to new r^nd there germinate, thus propagating ildew. Tne substance of the grape t'helowthe "frosty" patch is interlaced K the threads of the fungus, which branch n end short suckers into the walls ot the â-  Us and rob them of their nourishment. h' mildew lives upon the stolen juices of L »«pevine and thus does its injury. The Lf«d leaves soon turn brown and die un- wme measures aie taken to destroy the fne canditiona most favorable for the L«th of the grape mldew are a moist at- r nhere with bright sunshine. A succes- L of showers in late June is very apt to r°i{ in an abundance of mildew. This r j). has been unusually destructive, In" to excessive moisture in early summer. heluDi^us does not aonfine itself to the 'yes but spreads to the stems and the ' Ti-e writer has examined many u'^ers this season, the berries of which tr» discolored within whea only partly C'sB â-  whils on the outside they had the ttractive color of half ripened fruit. When f "tioB' of tliese prsmaturely ripened grapes t pliced under the compound microscope, Lr\vo-e found infested with the filaments Wm ?raps mildew. The skin of the grape In-' tough and without breathing pores, J-eveQt3 the fungus from coming to the sur- i- aiid forming;; the summer spores. The iJaied prapes cease to grow, become shriv- "and^ iinaliy drcp as -worthless masses • ai the stems. â- , 50ffie varieties se£m to be more mjured l:a others by the mildew. The fungus lives best on the thin leaved sorts, but t-e ot the varieties, so far as we know, are iKf against the pest. Some varieties are Tre vigorous and perhaps are better able f withstand the attacks of the mildew. The 2tdy for the mildew on the grape is twers of sulphur. It should be dusted on ttlowa on, with a bellows, so soon as tbe btsigus of the trouble may be seen. The tl-.huT is more lasting in its effects if ap- Ted when the foliage is wet, either with W, in early morning, or with rain. It is Ttirtant to get the yellow powder upon fce under side of the leaves and in contact V.hthe "frosty" patches. It is too late I anply the remedy this season, but all bpe growers should make the necessary â- ifiriiuoDS to meet this enemy upon its :-5t appearance early next summer, A second form of spore is formed by the iiew acd within the substance of the in- 2:ed part. It results from the union of the -.teats ct two cells, and is of slow growth. hc-e spores are provided with thisk cover- l:"s n: a brown color and do not germinate L::i the following spring. The sexual 1 :ores, as they are called, arc most abundant â- ithe'foiiage in late autumn, and remain in 1::« subitaix e of ths foliage until set free by J:;; processes of decay, etc. It is evident liit the^e spores are designed to carry the l:;dew over the winter season, and may be liled vinfn- spores in distmction from those t::cd early in the season, which might be lesipated summer spores. Very many J::tgi have these two f urms of spores, and in fc:r.e the number is increased to five or more. 1 Ine leaves of the vineyard after they have lilen should be gathered in piles and burn- Is, aad ia this way a vast number of the Irses v.ithic the leaves would be destroyed. j::i3 part of the work of checking the spread lit'ae-rape mildew may still be done this laijn.^ Ic is a prevention, an ounce of ':ica is worth a pound of cure. The remedy I- applied in early summer in the form of l-^ei8 cf sulphur. Many vineyardists are l«;are;ul about "sulphuring" their vmes li the are in manuring the ground or ImheriEg the crop. Others are careless of 'â- ^is, ana bse by it. Inere is another mildew of the grape vme, :ose!y related to if not the same as the fatal â- Aiurn of European vineyards. Improved Elackbenlcs. I Ail of the popular cultivated Blackberries j'ere ori£;inally found in a wild state, If â- "ly really excellent variety has been raised |iiy cultivation from seeds, we are not aware I" it. Almost every one who has in his liath gone "a blackberrying," can recollect l^in patches, or single bunches, which li"e fruit far superior to others, and which, P memory, seem vastly better than any of Pe cultivated sorts. Those who know of â- "sa special wild bushes can easily bring |*em iato cultivation and enjoy their fruit l*ithout hunting for it. Taks up the roots I' such bushes this fall and cut all that are l« large as a goose quill, or larger, into Itee from one to three inches long, lake I Ox of any kind, and, if the bottom is W?'---, bore several holes in it. Lay some Wti,- over the holes, and over this an mch '80 of soil, more roots, and so on until the f^ is full. Bury the box in a place where r«et will not stand, and cover it with Psgh er.rth to prevent freezing. Next l^g the roots may be planted in nursery IK Cows Darinx the Grazing beason. I Grazing dairy cows is the almost universal iMCtice of our farmers, without any regard r *ae condition of the grass, or the ciar- â- *^of the season. This practice la well ^gii where there ia fuU feed, nnd the 7 set all the feed they can digest. It u economy on the spreat majority of our "" especially in the older States. As a the land devoted to paatnre has been ' for generations, baa for many years recdrad no viaanre except the droppinsa of ^v**?â„¢l?*" t*^* shape of milk. veaL •r^ ' The cow ia a machine for ma^ mdk and batter, and can no mote yieldiheae commoditiea without soitriile and abundant hmjge than a griat miU can turn oat meal without o»n in the hopper. -^ A certain por- towi of her food goes to keep ha in TOod 5l: T^" hw the firat clim, and iUe putnrea do little more than meet thia want. Xhe milk growa amaU by degrees and beauti- rally leas, until the cowa dry up early in the tau. In other and better paaturea, there ia matenal for a good anpply of milk for aix months m the year, and the average yield of butter on our farms probably doee not M*ch two hundred pounds per cow annually With auitable addition to the rations gather- ed from the pasture, there is bttle doubt that the yield could be brought up to an average of three hundred pounda of butter a year per cow, with more profit in the last hundred pounda than in the first two hundred poundg. The capital invested in the cow, the milking and care of the milk Me about the same whether the yield of butter be two or three hundred pounds. There is additional expense for the food, and tt e labor of feeding. To offset this you have, beside butter, the better condition of the cow, a better calf, the additional quality of manure dropped upon the pasture and in the stable, and its better quality, to say no- thing of the satisfaction of having a sleek, profitable and well-fed animal under daily observation. Esthetics are worth something above pecuniary value. We are trying this season, upon a thorough-bred Jersey cow, the experiment of daily rations of cotton seed meal one quart in the morning, wheat middlings one quart, com meal one quart, at evening, in addition to pasture, and are surprised at the increase and excellence of the batter, and the growth of the manure heap. Tbe Modem CoQiuotte. A recently- published story contains the fol- lowing striking paragraph :â€" The mere suf- fering which a man undergoes at the hands of a coquette is not in its first effects so greatly to be depreciated. It is in the con- sequences that lies the deepest wrong which the insincere woman does to the man who loves her. For the distrust of her whole sex which grows upon him, and the convic- tion that neither she nor her kind are worthy of the best that is in his nature. She is re- sponsible. The disdain which he may feel toward her can not greatly injure him. But the spirit in which he regards the tend- ency in his nature which looks to woman for the truest support of his life, and the systematic hardening of those qualities in him which reach out instinctively to the feminine side of humanity, are soul hurts, which are not healed when the pain of the deceived love fa as passed. His judgement of the whole sex can net fail to be biased by his experience of the woman who has most deeply interested him. Thus it is that the coquette, by lowering the whole standard of Womanhood in the eyes of man, injures her own sex as well as the other. The forms of coquetry are infinitely varied and some of them are much more reprehen- sible than others. The woman who under- takes conquests simply for the glory of dis- playing at the wheels of her chariot the cap- tive she holds by the rosy bonds of love, is the commonest type. As her coquetry is of the most patient kind, its wounds are rarely severe or lasting, and yet there is a certain vulgarity about this spirit ot conquest which makes this type of woman dangerous to both men and women, A more subtile and disastrou9 influence is wielded by the woman who is bent on the scientific analysis of the various effects pro- duced by the tender passion of men of dif- ferent character and nature. She has little pigeon-holes marked with different char- acteristic names, and into these she classifies every new specimen. She is apt soon to dis- cover that the pigeon-holes may be very few, and that nearly all the men she meets will tit exactly into one or another of them. When she has arrived at this conclusion she is satisfied two or three good specimens of every sort having been coolly analyzed and properly pigeon-holed. It is variety and not quahty she desires, and having al- ready become quite familiar with the man- ner in which a certain species of the genus homo is affected by the greatest of passions, ahe allows many possible victims to pass by without an effort or desire to add them to her connection but if a specimen hitherto unclassified crosses her path, she is ready with her little dissecting knife to peer into the labyrinths of a new phase of human nature! Another class, perhaps the most dangerous one, into which we are dividing coquettes, include those women who fancy them- selves in love with each fresh lover. These are emotional and sympathetic women, who, being incapable of strong feeling themselves, are borne along by the force of a passion which fascinates them, and which they would gladly reciprocate. In their often-renewed disappointment at finding that the new lover can not make them forget themselves they feel a senseof injustice, and never dream that they are not the injured ones. "Wkat He was In. "Mr. White," said a Harriskarg lawyer to a witness in the box, "at the time these papers were executed you were speculating, wereyou not?' "Yes, sir." '• You were in oil ' " I was." • ' And what are you m now ^^ " Bankruptcy and the poor-house 1 was the solemn reply.â€" Wall Street News. :^i^^"' 33' â- â€¢^l -rTTT-^TTT-r Ti|M^'li,[,fMti j^rs S remarked to a friend that she intended going to Niagara for a few days during the summer, and had decided to take her littie son with her. " I was there for three weeks, witn au my children, last summer," said the lady addresasd. ^.u »«• jjrs. S expressed surprise that Mrs. should take her children to so daiigerous a place. " Weren't you afraid they would •ret into the faUs f she questioned. "Oh, no," said Mra. â€" -, with evident Batiafaotion. "My chUdren are aU waU tnuned." The Pope propoeea to op«i the Vatican ISbnry freely to hiatorical atodenta. Mr. Joe Jeffaraon'a aiater Comdia t» a^ieara the coming aeaaon on the atage. Thomaa Hughea ia viaiting the Bngby College, in which he atill haa confidence. Inatead of having imeata led up and pre- aented to her. Queen Margherita goea about the room and greeta each one in torn. The Ducheaa of Connaught and Princess Christian sang at a concert lately given for the completion of St Anne's Cbt» ch, Bag- shot. Miss King, one of the nursing Sisters at Fort Pitt Military Hospital, has received the Royal Ked Cross in recognition of her aer- vicea in Egypt. Florence Nightingale has been invited to Osborne by the Queen in order to be invest- ed with the new Order of the Bed Cross, but was compelled to decline on account of ill health. The two children of the Dakeand Duchess of Connaught are to be left at Windsor Castle and Osborne during the absence of their parents in India, which looks nice and grandmotherly. The Comte de Paris, at present heir to the French monarchy (or what is left of it) is rich, tall, slender, in delicate health, and forty-six years old. His wife ia ambitious, and an interpid horse-woman. Canon Farrar, of Westminster Abbey, hia become a total abstainer from alocohol. His friends say that his capacity for work is in- increased thereby. He can now push along without any intermission, except for meals, from morning to night. Prince Alexander, the youn^ Crown Prince of Servia, only seven year old, per- forms the most wonderful arithmetical operations in his head with great quickness, which, altogether with ids extreme sensibil- ity, occasions his parents anxiety. An entertainment given recently by Mrs. Gladstone, in London, was enlivened by the presence of Miss Jenny Young, of New York, who read before a fashionable audi- ence her interesting lecture on Longfellow, and sang several ot his poems, instead of re- citing themj to illustrate her points. M. Kenan and his family narrowly escap- ed destruction at Casamiccioli, having en- gaged rooms at a hotel where nearly all the inmates were destroyed, but having been prevented from taking them by his readi- ness to oblige the Minister of Public In- struction, who wished him to delay long enough to distribute the school prizes. Mr. Andrew Carnegie of New York, having presented a free library to the town of Dun- fermline, Scotland, a speech in honor of the event was delivered by Lord lioseberry, who saia among other things ' We all of us, in whatever position we may be placed, have occasion to find life irksome and almost in- tolerable. I have always founfl two aids or assistances to overcome that sense of irk- someness, which are within the reach of the poorest of us, and which are the most effi- cient for the purpose. The first is sense of humor, and the second the love of books." At which Mra. S 'a W. who waa nre- sent, cried out, bitterly, " WeU, I gar- ' been trained if anybody ever has. .1' re vr oman as a Guide, There has always been a dim conscious- ness in man that his relations to the divine, that is, to the ideal side of life, were most fitly represented by the purity and single- heartedness of woman, and that she is in a manner a mediator and interpreter between him and heaven, reversing the puritan, and, so to speak, political idea expressed in Mil- ton's line, "He for God only, she for God in him." Of this dim consciousness the Pythia and Delphi and the vestal virgins at Rome were testimony. But woman as a representative of the ideal can hardly be said to have been consciously recognized until Christianity had,consecrated the adora- tion of the Virgin Mother. Since then, al- though the influence of women as wives and mothers must always be immeasurably the most important and precious, it is impossible to deny that their influence has existed in other forms which have affected the history of mankind. It is enough to name Jeanne d'Arc and St. Catharine of Siena, as types of a class that has proved f wrens (guii /emini possit when her frenzy is of that rare celes- tial kind which can work itself out in ordered action, and leave its mark in the weighty affairs of men, as the lightning on the river rock. Nor yet is it as wife or mother that Beatrice is the mystic guide of Dante's spiritual life. The middle ages, with their sense of the nearness of the super- natural, were of course a period far more apt for such manifestations. The puritan and reforming reUgious enthusiasms of the seventeenth century were associated with mysticisms of a different kind, and as to the eighteenth, a Jeanne or a St. Catharine could hardly, under any modification, have co-existed with Frederick II. and Voltaire. Yet the paths of perfection in which good women have walked unsupported by man's arm have not been less thronged since then because they have been more hidden from the light. Not from deserts, and hermit- ages or mystic oak forests have they j(one forth to sway battles on the fields or coun- cils in the palace, but from inconsj^icuous homes into hospitals and prisons and haunts of squalid misery and vice. Undo Sam's Navy In a cotrmunication published in the Army and Navy Journal, Commander J. B. Coghlan, U. S. N., states that the consulta- tions of eminent naval and other surgeonn. respecting his rheumatic attack, faciei to afford him the slightest relief. By advice of Dr. Hoyle he used St. Jacobs OU, which wroaght a complete and, as he says, a won- derful cure. John Cirr Moody, Esq., law- yer at Vallejo, Cd., was likewise cured of a severe joint trouble. I he rivers are generally very low. Tipple* ton asks, " What could you expect Thia comes of taking nothmg but water," The daughter of liawrehce Barrett, who has just married a Qerman Baron, is gentie mannera, with a aweet serious face. Her huaband ia a man of family and fortune. He fell in love with her while ahe waa atndy* ing in Stnttgarti TBSrAI Off! VSMArCQUTtXWiM. I m J If SetfcOrea»'*Ma» «BMn OMnaayTnbaa and soaae off fUa Tarlad {Twrf, lidd and Farm.) " How did yon ever come to devise thia aoheme?" "I have been working at it ever aince I waa large enough to bend a pin." The above remark was addressed to Mr. Seth Qreeiy the veteran fish culturist, who ia known to the entire world, and Ida reply indicatea the extent of his labors. " When I was quite youne," he con- tinnsd^ " I would lie on the limba of trees that reached out over the water entire after- noons watching the movements of the fish and studying their habits. In thia way I discovered many ohacaoteristica which were before unknown. I aaw, as every observer mast see, the destructive elements that are warring against fish, and I realized that un- leea aometbing woe done, the life in the streamsof thia country would become extinct. To counteract this disastrous end became my life work, and I am happy to say I have seen its accomplishment." " Were you successful on the start " " No, indeed. Up to that time all arti ficial attempts to batch and raise fish from tbe spawn had failed, and I was compelled to experiment in an entirely new manner The work was a careful and tedious one, but I finally succeeded, and to-day I am able to hatch and raise fully seventy-five per cent of all spawn." " Enormous I Why, that is a larger per- centage than either tbe vegetable or animal kingdoms produce in a natur.il condit'on." "I know it, but we exercise the f l^â- â- ^. care in the start, and guard tbiiiu.o il- lows until they become able to Ci.re for them- selves." The foregoing conversation occurred at Caledonia where the representative of this paper was paying a visit to the state fish hatcheries. It has been his privilege to re- port veiy many interesting sights within the past twenty-five years, but the view pre- sented here exceeds iu interest anything ever before attempted. " How many fish are there in those pouds, Mr. Green?" "As we have never attempted to count them it would ba impossible to say. They extend away up into the millions though. We shipped over three millions out of the ponds this year and there seemed to be as manj afterward as before. We have nearly every variety of the trout family and many hybrids." " You speak of hybrids, Mr. Green. What do you mean by that " "I have experimented for years iu cross- ing the breed ot the various fish and am still working upon it. We cross the female sal- mon trout with the male brook trout, and thus produce a hybrid. And then we cross the hybrid with the brook trout, which gives us three-quarter trout and one-quarter salmon trout. This makes one of the finest fishes in the world. He has all the habits of the brook trout, lives in both streams and 1 ikes, develops vermillion spots on his sides, rises readily to a fly, is far more vigorous and fully one-third larger than ordinary brook trout of the same age. The possibili- ties of development in the fish world are great and we are rapidly ascertaining what ihey are. " As the man of news watched the counten- ance of Mr. Green while he was giving the above account, he could not but feel that he was in the presence of one of the few Inves- tigators who, from a rich and life-long ex- perience, bring great benefit to the world. Let the reader imagine a strong and stal- wart frame, surmounted by a head strongly resembling that of Socrates, and covered with a white silky beard of luxuriant gray hair. Seth Green, the father of fish culture, is a picture of health, and the reporter could not help remarking so. " If you had seen me the last winter and spring, young man, you might have thought differently," said the veteran. "How is that One would think, to look at you, that sickness was something of which you knew nothing." "And so it was until last winter. I went d}wn into Florida in tbe fall to see what kind of fish they had in that state and study their habits, and was attacked with malaria in its severest from, and when I c ime home I realized for the first time iu j;i y lie, that I was sick. My symptoms wtiu terrible. I had dull, aching pains in my head, limbs and around my back. My ap- petite was wholly gone, and I felt lack of e ler^y such as I had often heard described bit had never expeiienced. Any one who has ever had a severe attack of malaria can appreciate my condition, I went to bed and remained there all the spring, and if there ever was a sick man I was the one." "It seems hardly possible. How did you come to recover so completely " "My brother, who had been afflicted by a severe kidney trouble and threatened with Bright's disease waa completely cured by a remedy in which I had great confidence. I therefore tried the same remedy for my ma- laria and am happy to say I am a well man to day and through the instrumentality of Warner's Safe Cure, which I believe to be one of the most valuable of medicmes. In- deed I see it is indor^sed by tbe United States medical college of New York, and that Dr. Gunn, dean of that institu- tion, has written a long article concerning its value." " And are you now as well as former- ly?" " Apparent ly so. I keep the remedy on hand all the while though and do not hesi- tate to recommend it to others." " One question more. How many ponds of fish have you here and how are they divided?" "Well, we have 42 ponds which are divid- ei up as follows 22 ponds of brook trout, 2 ponds of salmon trout, 3 of McCloud river or rainbow trout, 2 ponds of German trout, 3 of Cilitomia mountain trout, 2 ponds of hybrids, 4 of one-quarter salmon and three- quarter brook trout, 2 ponds of gold fish,and one pond of Carp. Then we have what we oill the centennial pond ' happy family,' oonsiatiDg of croBsea of different ^h, includ- ing Kennebec salmon. Land Locked salmon, C^omia aalmon, brook ti-out, aalmcm trout and hybrida. Theae fish range in size from minnowa to 18-peunden, and in age froai one-and-fuie-li%If montfaa to eleven yeara. I f orgOt to aay, alao, that we have a 'hospital' Pb*d,~ which k vMniy empty, which apeaka preitty well for a oommnnity of many millions. Lideed the whoU secret of f^ oaiiifti csb' be sommed u]^ four thinga. Iinpregnation â€" oaing no water. Plenty of fbod. Fteaty rf pure water and oleanlineaa." The nomwous fish exhibitions which are taking plaoe in all {Mtrta of Europe and the nnnaiulintareat which is being manifeated in thia aubjeot throughout the world all owe their origin to the process above described as originated and conducted by Seth Oreen. It is certainly cause for congratulation to every American that this country produces so many men whose genius brings value to the world, and it is proof poaitive of the greatest merit that a remedy even with saoh high standing as Warner's Safe Cureis known to have should be so strongly endorsed and recommended by one so reputable and reli« able as Seth Green. Query â€" ^la the srondola the car naval of Venice C. S. Judson, Wallaceburg, says Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawbenry, for Summer Complaints is a splendid prepara- tion, and I do not know of a single caae in which it has not given satisfaction, but on the contrary have had many testimonials to its efficacy. (32) "Try not the pass," the old conductor said to the dead beat. It is a fact that Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry has more well-earned tea* timonials of praise for its virtues in curing Cholera, Colic, Cholera Infantum, Dysen- tery, etc., than all other remedies of that class combined. It will stand investiga- tion. (36; About the only troubles that come single are fussy old maids. Age should always command respect, n the ca?e of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry it certainly does, for 25 years that has been the standard remedy with the people, for Cholera Morbus, Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Colic and all Bowel ComplaintSi (33) Is the Irish language a real language, or is it merely a Pat-ois There is no remedy known to medical science that Is more positive in its effect, to cure Cholera Morbus, Colic, Diarrhoea, Dy- sentery, Cholera Infantum, and all Bowel Complaints than Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. (35) Our babies â€" With all their faults we love them still, not noif y, True merit brings its own reward, in the case of Burdock Blood Bitters it is rapidly hrin^ring its reward iu its increasing sales; as a prominent druggist recently said, "it now sells on its merits." It is the grand specific for diseases of Blood, Liver and Kid- neys. 25,000 bottles have been sold, during the last three months. (34) Jack Frost doesn't say anything, but he indulges in freeze pea:h, J. E. Kennedy, dispensing nemist, Co- bourg, says that no blood purifier that he has ever handled has had such a large sale as Burdock Blood Bitters, and adds, " in no case have I heard a customer say ought but worda of highest praise for its remedial qual- ities. (31) The most prominent man in the city is the street sweeper. He fills the public eye. Catarrh â€" A New IVeatment whereby Permanent Cure is effected in from one to t'lree applicatioms. Particulars and treatise free on receipt of stamp. A, H. Dixon Son, 305 King-tt, West, Toronto, Canada. The Rjv, Mr. Henn is a minister in Georgia. Probably a lay preacher. From MR. WILLIAM MAGBTH- Erindale, Credit P. O., Jan. 8 th, 1883. My Dkar Suthekland Some two months since I became so afflicted with Rheumatism of the neck and right shoulder as to render my right arm nearly powerless. I deter* mined to try your " Rheumatine " and the result is that I am now Jree/rom pain, and enjoy the fall use of my arm. My general health is also muca improved by the use of the medicine. The first two bottles relieved me â€" the third )n,tt\ejreed me from all paint Wm. Magrath, J. N, Sutherland, iSt. Catharines, A tenor singer can always secure a hall easier than a basso, because he can go higher* Don't Yotr Do It.â€" Don't wait an hour before buving a bottle of Putnam's Painless Com Kx- traccor. It is safe, painless, prompt in action, never leaves sore spots behind, and therefore perfection itself. Substitutes are being offered for the genuine Putnam's Extractor. See that the name of Poison Co. is on each wrapper. Sold by druggists and country dealers, only 25 cents. Tooters )rass instruments are the band ditti of American villages. A.P 145 ==* IHhUKtAlutnivmN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Believes aod cures EHEUMATISM, Neuralfflau Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACBE. HEADlCnE, TOOTHACHE SORE THROAT. QUINSY, SWELLINGS, SPBAIjrS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBiriCS, BlTBirS, SCAI.1M, And all other bodily atdiei and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOHLE Bold by all Druegists and Dealers. Directions In 11 languages. Ths Chariet A. Vogeler Co. 'tamuan to A. TOOIUB Oa) IMtlMin. Md.. CB.A. FOR SALE CHEAPâ€" SPLENDID STOCK or Dairy Farm. 100 acres adjoining Court- land, 5 miles from Tilsonburg, about 100 acres cleared, free from stumps and stones, a quanti- ty ready for cleaning up standing timber worth half-price asked; frame bam and stables: new two frame houses, good water, would sell half or exchange for a small property. Apply to ROBERT wHALEf. Box XCou'-tlaiid. OnO ACRES MISERAL AND TOIBEit SI USf lands in the township of Darling, coun- ty of Lfuiaric at one dollar and a half per acre t lies near Klngstaa and Pembroke railway: joins township of lAvant, where the Caldwell gold mines and other mineral deposits have te oently been dtocdrered must be sold in ono lot miidng oompanlw or dealers in wood can have a bargaint Anp^ immediately to L 8L SPARLINGr*CO..Bciia btate aad Commif. aion MerohamtB, Pembroke, Ont. '4m \?£ .-â€" iiFw.. » â- :^l. • jj-f fca.t^i.

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