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Flesherton Advance, 24 Sep 1896, p. 7

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J,' -n About the House. THE BELLS OF OUR DAY. liiflt to the merry Imker's bell! What toothsome stories it doth tell, Of pct/fs and pies, doughnuts and cake, That the kind village iKikers hake. Come rain or shine, come heat or cold, Bakers' viands are quickly sold. Tin^-a-ling-a-ling goes the t»ll. Which all the children love so well. Hark to the jolly butcher's t)elll How loudly its tones rise and swelll Hinging long at the area door. Reminding us of sad tales galora; Of bird and lieaat for ua to eat Under the common name of meat. Health, flesh and strength are what they spU When the stout butchers ring their Jwll. Soon the old yeast man'.s l)ell we hear; A scuffle arises as he draws near; Who shall seize the bowl that waits And scamper to the roadside gate To see him pocket the two-cent fare. Pipping up yeast frothing with air? Then driving on he. merrily sings. While the old yeast l)ell rings and rings. GOOD BREAKFAST DISHES. It ia your home woman with a prac- tical knowledge of the advantages of genuinely good living that knows the first meal of the day should !» a nu- tritious one. The breakfasts should be well cooked, the dishes appetizing and good to look at. For bU well-appointed breakfasts fruit, either raw or cooked in some wayi generally liegins this repast. Cooked Applea. â€" Apples cooked in this manner as a breakfast dish are a wel- come variation: For a family of six taJce eight or ten fine soft tart applea, peel, core, slice and set to soak for at least three hours in sugar moistened with brandy and lemon juice. Drain from this and fry to a clear brown in butter, sprinkle well with powdered «ugar and cinnamon; then serve. Breads.â€" It is to the southern house- keeper that we owe the cooking of hot breads in all their perfection. To make what Li called pone, upon one quart of white corn meal pour just enough toil- ing water to scald it through. After stirring it thoroughly, let it stand un- til cold; rub Into it a piece of butter alx>ut the size of a small egg and add a little «alt. Beat two egga until light, without separating, add them to the meal, mix well, add one pint of sour milk or buttermilk, beat until smooth. Dissolve one teaspoonful of soda in a tablespoonful of boiling water, stir in the mixture, turn into a greased bak- ing pan and I>ake in a quLck oven for thuty-five minutes. This is a fine corn bread for either breakfast or tea. Eggs.â€" Baked eggs as a delicacy for the early meal is unsurpassed. In a good hot oven on a stoneware platter melt a large lump of butter. When thoroughly softened shake it all over the di&D In order to grease it well. On this hot butter drop six fresh egga as if for poaching. When the whiles are set they are done. This should !» served with long and narrow pieces of toast without crust, which will act as a garnish for the edge of the dish. Brown Hash.â€" Boston can boast o£ fine brown bread, and equally so I ho Boston brown hash, which is an excel- lent breakfast dish. Cht^ up the re- mains of any cold meat, either lieef or mutton. At the bottom of the dish put a layer of mashed potatoes (cold ones will answer). Then a layer of meat, then a strata of stale bread crumlis, season with salt and pepper, here and there a few bits of butter, and moist- en with a half cup of Ijeef gravy; then another layer of potatoes. Drop a knife uito milk and smooth over the top. BbJce in a moder.ite oven until a nice brown. Serve hot. Cheese Omelette. â€" For a cheese ome- lette break twelve eggs into a bowl, beat lightly with a fork for a minute only; add one cupful of milk and two ounces of American or Parmesan cheese grated, season with salt and pepper. Put in a frying poji two ounces of but- ter, when melted pour in the eggs. When they thicken sufficiently, fold in two and serve immediately. The best mads omelette will spoil if kept wait- ing. Relishes. â€" For a breakfast relish cut a veal cutlet into pieces about two inches square and season with salt and pepper. Dip first into beaten eggs and then into chopped mushrooms. Put two tablespoontuls of butter into a fry- ing pan, and when hot fry the cutlets until brown. Make a brown sauce, pour over the squares and serve. To serve potatoes for breakfast boil six good-sized potatoes and when cold cut them in roun. slices of medium thickness. Cut two onions in slices and put them with four ounces of Ijutter m a frying pan. When the onions ire colored very slightly add your po- tatoes, toss them in the pan uiitil they ire a good color, drain them, and serve with cnopped parsley sprinkled over â- ihem. Another good potato dish can lie made in form of a croquette. Boil four pota- toes, drain them, press through a sieve and then put them in a saucepan with an ounce of butter, and a pinch of silt, nutmeg and sugar. Heat well, and add an egg. Let your mixture lieoome very cohl to form into croquettes. Beat up three eggs, into which dip each cro- iiuette, and when covered entirely with jgg then roll them into bread cruiul>s, wid fry in oil. When colored a light brown, drain anil serve very hot. Chickens and Kidneys.â€" B'or a lireak- fast a la fourchette, deviled chicken is Bxcellent. Chop a cold cooked chick- en very fine. To every pint of this meat allow half a pint of cream, one tableoKionful of chopped parsley, three hard lx>iled eggs, two tablespoontuls of bread crumbs, and one quarter nutmeg, grated. Salt and cayenne to taste. Put the butter in a frying pan to melt, then all bread crumbs, chicken and season- ing; stir over the tire until it lx)ils, then add the hard boiled e^gs chopped very fine. Fill in paper cases or individual dishes; sprinkle with bread orumbs, bake in a hot oven. well mixed, and applied in small quan- titii^s with a soft piece of cotton. Re- peat several times it necessary, Uien \\ipe the mixture entirely off. The addition of a little salt to sweet foods help to bring out the flavor, and acid livings are improved by the addi- tion of a little sugar. Do not allow fresh meat to remain ^oUed in paper, for the pai)er will ab- sorb tbje juices. Remove the paper and lay the meat on an earthen plate. To clean straw matting, wipe it off ivi.th a cloth damiieued in warm salt uater. Crackers served with soups and broths are mm.'h more appetizing if they are lightly buttered and then placed in the i>ven and bro^vned. Vinegar should not be kept in a stone jug. ti lass is much belter for the purpose. The acid of vinegar affects the glazing of stone ware. A' small hammock to be swung just over a baby's bath-tub is the idea of a mother whose infant was afraid of the water. In this way it can be spong- ed as thoroughly whUe lying down as if its little life were frightened out of it by the sudden plunge. If you have butter that is not en- tirely sweet, put it in a porcelain dish with a little salt and a tiny piece of .soda, place over a fire, and bring to a l)oil. Turn it into a stone jar and set in a cool place. The butter will lie found perfectly sweet and not too salt for cooking. I'be impurities will settle to the lx)ttom of the jar. Cretim otr milk that has turned, but is not soured, may lie made sweet by stirring into it one teaspoonful of car- l>onate of magnesia to each quart of milk. A plaster composed of the jioke of an egg and salt wUl often relieve pleu- risy, kidney, and neuralgic pains. The really l>eat method of cleaning mirrors and windows ia to rub them with a piiate of whiting and water. When this dries, polish with dry cham- ois and remove the powder. A little al- cohol in cold water also gives a bril- liant poliiih. Soapsuds should never be used. A heavy tlatiron, weighing seven (jr eight pounds, will do better work if it ia passed over the clothes once with a firm, steady pressure than a lighter iron hurriedly passed over the clothes two or three times. Pounded glass mixed with dry corn meal and placed within the reach of rats, it is said, will banish them from the premises. If every pot and pan, or any utensil used In the cooking of food, t)e washed .IS soon as emptied, and while still hot. half the labor and a great deal of time will be saved. After the juice has been squeezed from lemons the peel may be utilized foir cleaning brass. Dip it in common salt and scour with powdered brick dust. A CHARMING WINDOW. My plants on a sunny window seat were such a source of interest and pleasure to me last winter the others among us who love flowers may like to hear alwut it< The first in my row of pots was one of morning glories, in six inch ix)t of rich earth. In Sep- tember last I sowed it with seeds soak- ed with tepid water over nights In about two weeks, up they came, with twenty little grain plants. Two weeks more and they were ready to climb up the string provided for them. When aliout a foot and a half, they began to i)ud and blossom, and every morning I had new flowers, lovely and graceful; and the faded ones were cut oft lest they go to seed, and take strength from the flowers^ Then the vines ran up two feet and stopped growLiig< Think how easy to make such a window garden as that. Behind the morning glories was a sul- tana. A friend sent a cutting; it was rooted in a vial of water in the sun; in ten days a dozen white roots put out from the stem; then the plant was put ill a ix)t of sifted earth. In two weeks it began to bud and to give me lovely cherry-colored flowers, three or four at a time. I w.os rarely a day without them.â€" L. S. BOYS' CLOTHING. When buying clothes for boys, get the strongest material. It never pays to make up chc;ip cloth for Ixjys. Al- ways make their clothes yourself. It you don't know how rip up ;m old suit and learn. Knowledge never comes amiss. Jeans for punts and the l)est grade of dark blue calico for waists ma.ke the best kind of every day suits for " barefoot boys." Rather buy one forty-cent straw hat than threi* twenty-cent ones. Line the knees of the Iwys' stockings with pieces of dress lining. It will sjive lots of darning if done when they lue new. Fasten them to the Ijest band el.istics. Stockings â- will get torn if the support- ejB do not stretch. Buy calfskin shoes and keep them oiled. FOR TEA TABLES. Yellow linen, heavily embroidered in white, is very fetching as fancy work. It makes strikingly beautiful covers, for instance, for the 5 o'clock tea table, and is especially attractive if on it are blue china CUJJ8 alone and no other color used. SELLING THEIR DAUGHTERS. Jupsnene AcU of Purllameut That Are a ' t'rrlUR Htanme Upon 4'IvII1ihIIbo. The Japanese Government ia issu- ing wholesale legal permits to desti- tute parents to sell their daughters. It ia the sorriest thing of the century, a thing which civilization well may blush for, a shadow which Japan can never live down. Japan is in the grim clutch of famine â€" a famine so bitter that (he Jaiianese Government has encouraged this general vending of maidens to provide means of susten- ance for the heads of suffering families. A correspondent writes from Tokio, in vindication of the strange system: â€" " This is the first .serious famine ever known in Japan, and the horrors of it cannot be toid in language lurid en- ough to furnish an adequate portrayal. Entire households are living on eight cents a day, and thousands of families are without even that. " The bodies of those who have died of hunger strew the roads and fields in outlaying districts. Particularly in the Kwang Si province has the famine been fierce. " The fields, where starving [>eople have grubbed in the ground for roots, look like stretches of ploughed ground. All domestic animals, as well as cats, dog:s and xats, have l>een eaten. Canni- balism even has been restored to in distant provinces. " This is the state of things which has led to the sale of girls. And such 5 iris I From her earliest childhood the apanese girl is trained in courteous ceremonials. To be amiable and gracious to those about her she learns before she learns to sfieak, and, naturally, if this regard for the stranger is instill- ed in the infant mind, bow miu'h greater must be the regard she is taught to show tor her parents I Filial affection and devotion U9 a tradition of the coun- try. The absence of iti is the most heinous of crimes. " This (condition breeds in the minds of the poorer classes a feeling of pro- perly in the girl, in which she ac- quiesces, that tempts the parents at times like these, without any evil thought, but solely under the stress of circumstances, to offer the daughter in open market. This open market em- braces two avenues of disiKisal for the girl. She may lie sold as a supplements ary wife to some Jai>anese who is al- ready wedded, but wishes to add to his menage, or she may be sold for some- thing infinitely worse. " It is a case of siarvation, suicide, or selling their daughters. The minimum age at which a girl may Iw sold la twelve years. The prices now have fallen as low as $3. The price, under ordinary c«militions,is about 9;iOO. Those figures show the awful need that exists. "The chief condition ia that the girl shall remain the purchaser's pro|M!rty for the space of ihrie years. When the agreement is completed the deeds are signed Ijcfore a iM)lice magistrate < It everything is satisfactory the girl's nume and a minute description of her are entered in a Ixwk, and the book is solely devoted to t he record of her life theseafter. In it is kept an ac- count of all the money the purchaser expends on her account, also a full ac- count of the obligations she takes u|X>n herself the rights she has in the mat- ter, and th'? rules that prevail in the hoiis<!hold into which »be enters, all of whiih ia signed l)y the parties inter- l-8tl'<l. "At I he end of the three years the pur- ch.iKer is Ijound to release the girl it the money he has exix^ndeil uikjii hfr during t hat I uiie is r«i>aired to liiui. The law declares the girl free at the end of six years, whether the money is repaid or not. And by that time the pun-nas- er is generally tireil of his purchase anyhow. Ordinarily such sales of hum- an beings are made only among the lower classes, but since the famine be- ?an it is not rare tor girls of good amily to take this means of relieving their parents. "When a girl is .sold to fill the post of su|jplementary wife she is taken by the purchaser to his own home, where she remains until for one reason or an- other he paj-s her to go back to her people. The amount he first pays to her family is looked U|>on as a .sort of retaining fee, and when he gives her u]) he gives her a sum that is fixed by the magistrate and based u|M)n a charge tor services rendered, "This sum is generally a comfortable amount according to Japanese ideas, and suf- ficient to provide tor the girl until she can get married." STAINED HANDS. If the hands are stained after cutting up vegetables, take a raw potato, cut it in half, and with it rub them before washing them. HELPFUL HINTS. To reatore defaced varnish, use lin- iteed oil and turpentine in equal parts. EARLY TO RISE. Early rising is said to be popular among the women of the royal families of Europe. uVmong some notable ex- amples are cited, the queen regent of Spain, who begins her day's work at 7 o'clock sharp, and the Empress Eliza- beth of Austria, who rises at 4 o'clock every morning, winter and summer, and usually takes a lung walk immedi- ately afterwards. A FAMOUS HYMN WRITER, Miss Fanny Crosby, the hymn writ- er, is now more than 70 yeivrs of age. Though she has been blind almost from bbth, she ia always h.ippy and cheerfuJ. iVmong the hymns which she has writ- ten one " Safie in tlie Arnw of Jesus " find " Rescue this Peirislufig." WOULD BE A GREAT BOON. Ire NnchlncK for l*oni«»llc Vie an Vrgrnl Houiicbold Weroiwlty. It is pointed out as a singular phase of the manuiacture of ice-making ina- chinery, that while abundant provision has Ixjen made for large consumers, requiring Wi output of say, 50 or 100 tons, no attempt has been seriously made to turn out small outfits, ranging upward from a one-ton cai)acity. There are many relatively small consumers who would gladly avail thenuwlves of the advantages which a small plant would offer, and who, in the aggregate, would probably iuiiount to considerably more than the limited niuulHir of estab- lishments that need and can afford to p.ay for machines of ponderous size. Few ice machine companitis have ap- parently given this a.specl of thy mat ter any particular att<}ntioii. It is nol<!d that the large manufacturers haVe l)een obliged in ui.xny cases to cost about for other kinds of business to help them keep their shops at work, and has thus drifted into lines quite foreign to their equipment. The 'turning of these sur- plus resources into a, branch devoted to a ininLiturc class of the product tor which they were designed 'should com- mend itself to the trade. Small ioe ma- chines are clearly destined to Ijeoome more and more important .accessories to mo<lern conveniences, j-nd the firm that will lie first p epar.ed to offer them will reap a good business reward. A striking proof of this was recently af- forded when a New Y'ork paper gave a description of an ice machine intend- ed tor doine.stic use that would supply a whole family with ice tor a year for the iiisignificitnt sum of 31-40. Tliou- sands of inquiries rained in from .all parts of the country, and there was wide.spr«xid disappointment when it transpired that the machine was not yet ou tlie matrket. STEAHGEE THAN FICTION, IS THE TRUTH CONCERNING JOHN GIBBONS. OF EAST LONDON. HeWa»Tarlur«>d Wllta tlie Paliu ufMrtulle KbruuiaiiKni-'I'rled Uorlom, .til SiirlH uf Wftlit-lup uiiil Went III lli« HuHiiiliil lu Valu-Ur. Wniiuuu' Pluk i'lllii «^ur«<l llhn When All KIkp Uad fulled. From the London Advertiser. There ore two things in this world which itr.John Gibbuna, a resident of Queens Avenue Kaal, wUl henceforth pJace implicit conl'ideaice in. One is the judgiuenL of his wife ajid the other the curative qualities olDr. Williams' Pink Pills. In his case the two weul hand in hand, Mrs. Gibbous thought of the remedy , t he pills did the rest, and Lo-day Mr. Giblxins is a well man where last Call he was virtoiilly a cripi)le. An Advertiser rejiorter iviiled at the bouse the otheJ evening and wasmet at the door by Mr.Giblxjna, to whom be told the object uf his visit, and wiis cordially invited in. The rei>ortur had no sooner got comfortably seated when Mr. Gib- bous went into an adjoining room. The sound of clinking bottles floated through tlie half ouen door and when Mr. Gib- bons r«'api)«ar«d he had in bis arms a whole batokiit of lx»ttles â€" all he has to show for many and many a hard earned dollar spent m ustdess drugs. As Mr. tiibbons was busy shu/wiug the bottles and dttscaniing m>ou the impotency of the mediciiiMi they had contained, the reii>ort«;r had abundant opportunity of marking the |)ersonal app<»aj;anoe of i,lie man. Uis sijaech betrays his English birth and his face still bears the marks ot sufferiiiig, but his trame is erect, bis step is light and elastic, and when he tells you tliathecan work, run, or jump with any man, you cannot help but Ije- I ieve turn. He is JU y eajs of age and was Ijoru in Bow lload, Stralloril, England, lie came to C;inada in IH&^, and located at Gait. wh»re he is well and favorably known. Ue worked for the Hon. Mr. Young, member of peirliameut for a long tmiie and seven years ago he mar- ried Mifis Alice Mann, also ot Gait. Af- ter Mr .Gibbons removed to London lie settled down near tbie oar shufxi and did very well, always having plenty of work and always haviug the strength to doit. He oared nothing about a wetting until one day a year ago he t ook au acute at- tack ol sciatic rh^uiniitism following wet feet. "I lay down on this floor, " said Mr. Gibbon,^, in tflliug bis story, 'night and day suffering terrible :igony. 1 could not get up a step and uij' wife had to help me up u'um the floor. 1 felt the pain in my iwck lirst. It then appar- ently left myljackand got into my lui». Doctors came hare to see me. 'I'hoy gave me prescriptions L>ui none of them seemed to do me any good. 1 he neigU- Ijors could heiu me all over Queen's Avenue whuu l would get an attack of the pains. Last fall 1 was taken out of this pUux) m a hack and taken to the buspiial. 1 reuiaUied there alxjut three weeks iuid the doctors did what ihey could for me and could not give me any relief. At the end of three weeks 1 came home again sutferiug as much au ever. My wile got hold of a pamphlet which told en a uumlwr of remarkable cures by the use ot Dr. WiUiams' Pink Pills, and we determin- ed to try them. I took about thrfo l>oxea anil tell my.self getting a little easier. 1 iiMjk thirteen bo.xes alto- gethor, and it la over two mouths since 1 felt the Icuoi suggestion of [Kiiu." "Do you fi«l that >ou are entirely cuiod f" ;iakod the rotiorter. "les, sir. I can go out and do a day's work just as well as ever 1 could. 1 teei purlect- ly strong Mill have a good appetite." No, I don't want another attack of sickness like thai," .said Mr. Gibbous, :u, hi! lighted the reporter to the door. Mrs. Gibbons was not at home on tho occasion of the reporter's first visit. Subsequently he called on her and received au entire conlirmatiou ot Mr. Gibooua' story. "Ho was home all last summer," .said Mr.s. Giblioiis. 'and last August the pains wore so severe :us to l>ring him down on his kn»«s, iuid to save huiisell he could not got up. 1 had to btt him oft the floor many a lime. Ue seemed powerless. The ijoltles* he showed you had almost all of them iM'Aiii repeatedly filled so that the number of oottleo is uo criterion Ol the amount uf medicmu taken, llefore he took the pills," concluded Mrs. Gil>- lions, "I thought my husband would never be aide to stand upright again. But now." she added in ixining. 'he is as well as ever he was. " Dr. Williams' I'iiik Pills create new blood, build up the iierveo, and thus drive disease trom the system. In hun- dredu of Ciises llwy have cured alter all other medicin(» had failed, thus estai>- lishing the claim that they are a mar- vel among the Iriumplis of modern medical science. The genuine Pink Pills are sold only iii Ooies, iwaring the full trade iu.i.rk, 'Ur. Wil- liams' Pink Pills for Pale People." Pro- tect yourself from imposition liy refus- ing any pill that does not bear the registerea trade mark around t he >>ox. w A DEMOCH.\riC DUCHESS. Of all memliers of the royal family the Duchess of Fife is the one who dis- likes publicity the most, and yet prob- ably no other Princess goes into piililic so often without being recognized. The Duchess is extremely fond of walking, and does most of her shopping on foot, and as she generally wears a thick veil her identity is seldom revealed. Her Royal Higlmess <loes not care alwut great festivitiesi, and particularly dis- likes the officuil ceremony of the court, such as drawing-room and state con- certs. A LATER SELECTION. Hojackâ€" You didn't build ou the lot you first selected. Tomdik â€" No, it w;is a case of second site. NOT TO BE TIUFLED WITH. That whisky's fifteen years old, whis- pered tne barlemlBr. Lookey here, answered his rural cus- tomer, don't try fur to git funny with me. You kin just ixmr that th,ar stuff buck inter th' liottle an' I'll go whar 1 kin git suthin' fresh. THE STING OF RICHES. 1 hear Jinisoii has married a rich wife and stejipcd into a snug little nest of his own. Yes; a hornets' nest. Oman's ork la never dune, and it Is ospecialiy wearing and wearisome to tliu.se wliu..<e blood is iiii|iuie and unlit properly to tune, sustain and renew Ito. wasting of nerve, luusclo and tissue. The oiuy remerfy fur tlr»d, weak, nervous women is Iq building up by talcin; a goud nerve tonic, blood piiriner and vitall/.er like Huod's Sar.saparilU. For troi.bles /'fctiliar to Women at change of season, climate or life, ip'eat cures are loade by ood's Sarsapariila Tbu One True Blood I'unncr. All dnigKlstii. 4L Prepared only by C. I. Huod& Co., Lowell, Mass, u â- Â« rt>ti ^° "°t cause pain or nOOCl S Pills cijpe. AUdruMtlaU. »). FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST Sale in CANADA. ART IN AGRICULTURE. Art in agriculture is coming to b» more and more noticeable every day. With the advent ot new melhodfr, im- proved implements, and a wider know- ledge ot the field, the agriculturist is rising higher and higher in the field ot useful and ornamental art as this years go by. We may say that sharp competition is no small factor in this progressive movement. Take, for ex- ample, the manner In which certain products are prepared for the open mar- ket. The improvement in the cxiudition of certain dairy produutu and fruits on market in the last tew years is truly wonderful. The rea«un, of course, is that people always buy that article which is put up in the must tasty and attractive style, and are willing to pay a littl»,more for it. With this change comeaa wholesome effect upon the ar- ticle itself, and disease is much less dis- seminated through food Ut the present time than formerly. Greater precau- tions .'ire taken now than ever before in preventing the spread of contagious disease in this manner, and with the increase in the size of the cities and the greater liability to ill-health, Ibess precauliona cannot l>e preserved too carefully. Thus the agriculturist, to l« successful, must keep right up to date in bis reading and methods. Relief in Six Hours.â€" Distressing Kidney and Bladder Diseases relieved in six hours by the "South American Kidney Cure." This new remedy is 4 great surprise and delight on account of its exceeding pnmiptneas in reliev- ing pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinai^ passages in male or female. It relieves reten- tion of water and pain in passing it almost Immediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy Sold by W. E. Richardson. It is said that hornets never use tlw same neat a second season. Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved In 10 to 00 Minutes.â€" One short puff o( the breath through the lilower, sup- plied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, aiffuses this powder over the surfai^e of the nasal passages. Painless and delightful to use. It re- lieves instantly and iienuaiiently cures Catarrh. Hay Fever, CoUls, Headache, Sore 'I'hroat. Ton.silitis. .ind Deafness. Sold by W. E. Richardson. The kingdoms ot Sweden and Nor- way were united in the reign of Charles XIIT., 1814. Piles Cured in 3 to Nights.â€" Dr. .ignew's Ointment will cure all cases of Itching Piles, in from 3 to (j nights. Uno application brings comfort. For Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless. Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, E^czema, Barlier's Itch, and all eruptions of the skin. 35 ct». Sold by W. B. Richardson, The common housefly lays four times in each summer; each time about eighty «!ggs. 10 els. Cures Constipation and Liver Ills.â€" Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills are the most perfect made, and cure like magic. Sick U<>adacbe, Constipation, Bilious- ness, Indigestion, aud all Liver Ills. 10 cents a vialâ€" 40 doses. Sold by W. E. Richardson. TOO NOISY Edith, why do you always put cotton in your ears when that young Feath- erly calls? Because of that deafening suit he wears. Rheumatism Cured in a Day. â€" South American Itheuuiatic Cure for Rheu- matism .and Neur.iigia, radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious, it removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. XJke tirst dose greatly benefits. 75 ce iSi Sold by W. E. Richardson. \ OUT OF REACQ. i Y'ou ought to have a stepUiddeil a<th your piano, MLss Warble. For what put pose? - m Some of your music is so high. '...1 Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Min- utes. â€" Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all coses of Or- ganic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 3U minutes, and speedily effects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Palpitation, Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells, Pain in Lett Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose oonvinoev &)ld by,W. E. Rishordaoo, 1 â- J â- ^ _ Sk

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