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Flesherton Advance, 8 Apr 1897, p. 7

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CLOVER WITH QKXIS CROPS. It iM possible to grow clover or grass without any so-called nurse crop. The name "nurse crop" i.n mislleading. Thp tiPue reason for sewing Clover and grass needs on wheat, rye, and l»rley land, says Mr. Boaham, are not that the grain crop nurses »n<i protects the jroung growth of clover and grass, lmt« that the soil is usually in condiiioa to receive the clover and grass r^eeds without any apeciuil preparation. This IB a savinig of ilal)or. There is, too. am a ru)le, sufficient moistul-e in the •pringr time for Imtb the grain crop and for germinating and fostering th« young clover grass until the grain crop matures. The grooving grain, how- ever, instead of nur.siiig or strengthen- iner the young clover and grass in fact eafeeUes it by shading and taxing the supply of plant! food, so 1 hat >vhen the grain ia coil aAd the ^ade is removed the enfeebled young clover and grass easily succumb to the intense beat and rapid «v»poration that fallow grain harvest. In fact the nttrse crop haa been of no Jn-aotical benefit to the uloveir and graas, but \re have saved time and labor by taking advantage uf the conditiuns of soil and season that eonbiee us to start the second- ary crap in the hope that the season may be favored with the young plants may get sufficient rout and vigor to carry them safely over the dry per- iod that fudlowB harvest. The growth of grain is Ijeneficiail. however, bo- oause it prevenlts the growth of weeds tha/t might pirove mure damaging to the younjg diover and grass than will the gro\ving grain. The condition of the soil is the important factor fav- oring the sorwing of clover and grass seeds on grain. Land which haa been well prepared for the wheat sowing has been deeply and finely pulverized and thia done in the faJl allows time for the rains ajid freezes of fall and winter to settle the soil, fill it with moLstaire and unlock fertility, so thab the aupply of moisture and fertility is ample and plant food easily avail- able and the texture and compactness of fall-worked soil is such a.^ cannot be secured by spring plowing and prepara* tion. These conditiooa are not obtained when sewing cilov«r and grass .seeds with oata unleas the laud has been plowed in the fall. If oat land ia fall plowed and left rough so the surface driea early and can be harrowed long b*(fore the ground is dry enough to plow we can sow clover and gra.ss .seeds with conditiona favoring germination and a suffirieni amount of moiitiurc to nuppurt the crops of uats and clover. The luu-ruwiu8 and fining the surface checks evaporation. Uut if the land ia left dxy enough to plow and pul- verize before seeding to oats it dries rapidly in the spring winds, and the olover and grass going in late and hav- ing an uni;«rtain supply of moisture will not make as even a stand or so uniform growth. Uais are heavy con- suimejs ot soil moisture and they have heavy leaf growth and. weaken the clover more than wheat, barley, or rye, and they rip«n laler, so that the tax on young cilover and grass wllb oats Is far greater than with tall grains. It is a miisDooier to call oats a nurse crop for spring-sown clover and grass. On fall-plowed oatj land the conditions of a weill-fined sxutace are very fav- orable for getting un ev«u eaten. Ws can have nearly an good conditions on wheat, bairiley, or rye if we are for- tunate in finding the ^ound dry enough to pulverize readily un<ler the hajTow. If the spring is abnormally dry the nrocetis of thoroughly harrow- ing the tall grain is very beneficial to the grain and gives an excellent seed- bed for olover and grass. If we were always sure of finding the ground dry euough to harrow properly before the middJe of April we wo<ald prefer to harrow wheat, t>arley or rye ground before so'wing islover. But this is so uncertaia that we sdw any time in February or March when we find the •uxface of the ground nicely honey- oombed by freezing. The seed doe.s not roll MO much, hence i.s more> evenly dis- tributed, and as soon as the ground thaws it is so soft that the seed covers Itself completely, and well-covered seed Ls not as easily injured at the time of germinating nm when iit germinates partly covered. The time to .sow clover seed is when we have the ground in good condition from freezing or har- rowing. RAISIVG GKKSE. This has been tabooed upou many fairius, bht if there i.s abundant pas- tluraga there will lie but little of otber feed required, as a goose depends large- ly upon grass for sUHtt'nance during the summer months; during the winler there sbouild l>ei some enclosure or pro- tection provided, an<l they shomld lie (ed twice a day ; shredded hay or sil- age is good, giving corn or meal also. Do noit feed too mltcb grain as it will Induce laying too early in the .sea.son, and in that case the eggs will not be fertile. Geese begin to seek mates in FnTiniary. There are severafl varieties of goose, blilt by adtuflJ experiments with sev- eral kinds iti is decided that the Eml>- den. African, and Toulouse are the nuoAi; profitable breeds. A good cross is obtained by mating an Afri(Min gan- d»r with £mbdeu geese. The cross makes bette.r layers and the color of the flesh is impuoved. The "green goose," as the goose is styled when about fouT monlths old. is in! demand in tbe mairket, if fattcined nicely. Some- times the green goose is marketable •it 2 moniha old, if they are of good •Ize and well fattened. To fatten they •hould be placed out of sighti and hear- ing o^ theif mates or they/ will be rest- less and not take on fat so easily. Plen- ty of grass an-d water must l)e given daily in addition to grain, or scalded meal, and cooked twrnips may be fed, :is they reiish this vegetable. in ofjiT graudtutMhers' days "raising geese" was a veay important and pro- fitable part of the farm products. The women and children were expected to look after this department. The re- gular picking days were exciting times, and laborioioB, too, but as there were fewer openings for women by which "pin money ' ftould l)o earned, tJie lalior and trouble were lx>rne patiently. I'he chief profit: in those days was not in raising them for the market, but for I he featners, of Which they were de- nuded periodically during the season. Kvery thorough house-keeper saw to it that hef girls had as an important part of their "trousseau" or "settin' out," a plump feather-bed of their own raising or making. Young goslings should not be allow- ed to get chilled, but must be cared for mUch the same as ducklings until sU-oug enough to follow the mother goose. ^hile the goose must have plenty of drinking water, and a l>ath now and then is beneficial, it is not essential that ponds should be prepar- ed for them, nor that they should dabble in water at all times. If run- ning water is a natural feature of the farm and the geese have access to iti at any time, them! it willl be necessary to pen the IgosUngs and the goose mothers for a few .weeks, until the down is well oiujt upon the goslings, riutre is no |;retiier sight, at least among the feathered tribe, than a fam- ily ot goslings, which aire seemingly golden kialls of fliuffy down, .sailing serenely by the side of their mother. Corn meal slightly salted should be fed the goellings ; also scraps from the table are liked. A potund of feathers is aboUt the average amount obtain- ed from six geese when picked fur their feaihers. \Vhen killed, three geese will furnish one pound of feathers. The African or Toulouse will lay from HO to 25 eggs. The first laying should l« set Cioder hems, and the goose can lie allo^ved to ait on the last laying. As a ruie each goose should average aborut 20 goslings in one year, and as the average weight uf these should be lU lbs. whem well fatted for market, it will be seen that with a good breed to start with, and plenty of range or pasturage, raising gee.su for market will prove alMJfil: as paying as other branches of poiiltry raising. The rul- ing price now in the coanmon market is from 10 to 11 cenils per lb. One intending to t^ise (or shipping to market, should send to dealers in poul- try for modes of preparing for mar- ket, as modes diff«r for ditfereot sec- tions. FAftM NOTES. •A man's abililty as a farmer is not measured by the amount of talking he does. Don't let another year pass without keeping a atxiot book aucoiuint ot your ImsinesH. Uon't leave the stove wood out in t he rain, and then aeoUd your wife it breakfaiit is not ready. Don't claim to be an advocate of good roads and "than go andi buy s nar- row-tired farm wagon. The harvest season is the time when the lazy man wishes he had hustled more during apring and ^nlanmer. We would dissuade anyone from leaving, for any ;time. manure In sma.ll piles. It distributes the fertil- ity unequally. Corn is the beelt an<i must produc- tive uf all silage cmps. Sorghlum cornea next, and in droughty regions is the safest orop to growi for this pur- pose. Blacklrarriea are wiually propsgateil by suckers, but they will grow readily from pieces ot roots. Wo prefer tak- ing up the roots in the fall â€" cutting< th«m about two inches long. Sowtbem; quite thickly in tows ami they will come up in the spring, and by the next fall will make plants suitable for set- ing out. The >)est fertilizers for fruiting trees are those rich in phosphoric acid and potash. No highily concentrated ma- nures should be allow e<l to come in contact with the roots of young trees. Plenty of cloveor will go a lun^ way toward making a farm profitablej Tbink how maji^ ways it can lie uti- lizedâ€"for pastnire, for hay. for feeding the stock or feeding the land, some- times serving the dtmble purpose uf feeding the stock and then going buok to the soil in the manurial pto- duot. Small trees will root lietter than those that are larger and the young trees will »l.art off in growth sooner and make better trees than the Jarger ones. There is really no time saved in attempting to use large trees. Tbey are liable to meei with some draw- Iwick, which lequiree a year or more for recovery, while some oi' them may noil thrive at all. How much an acre will prodlace de- dends ujK)n ctlimate, fertility of .soil and other circuumlanc«s. In vSwitzerland an acre keeiw fiv"e cow.s. which are on the soiling system. In Japan a five- acre farm is considered a large one. In this Country in the growing of "truck" as much as $Mt ha» been made in a yeai- from an acre where' the land was m>ax a large market. Warreils are generally used to store and ship apples in; l».il an authority now claims I hat sqiiar* Iwxea. with oleats nailed across the corntrs of the open tops, aje miuch better. The cleats streiiigthen the boxes, and give ven- tilation w hen these are .stacked up. The l>oxes load into wagons, cars andi ware- hou.sBS more snugly than barrels and are more easily handled. When fruit or vegetables are .sent to a commission merchant' and are not. in perfect con<Lition ha is compelled to seill as sooni a.s possible to avoid de- terioration iln value, but 'when the fruit arrives in good condition he can hold for lietler ktricos. The proper shipping ()f perishable farm produce to market is not thordighly understood it 'the manlner in whi'.'h m,uch of the produce reaches the mfirket is an in- dication. 'Apples can be kepK d^ing the win- ter oy bjiirying theui in the ground at a depth Below the penetration of frost. The object Is to keep the appies at an even temperatJuire. Cover Ihem with straw or hay before puttiju^ on the earth and leave the surface hilled or â-¡luuned shaped to allow the water to flow away.â€" Exchange. Very often ;i|>ples buried in this manner have a disagreeable earthy flavor when tak- en from the pit in the spring' UlER&fiODND SHiCRETS ARE REVEALED TO THIS REMARK- ABLE ENGLISHMAN. Streanu or KaunlnK Waler 8«raug«lT Ar- fcct Hiiuâ€" He Feria a PerHllur Seumtlon tu HlH AnuH and VluRent Allhr. There are plenty of people who claim to know nature's secrets and will talk to you by the hour about the wonderful fbinga that you don't know, and they do. Tliere is a man in' Englandâ€" a West oountrymonâ€" Who shows you how he knows the secreU nature has hidden bemeatli the earth's surface. This young man's name is Leicester Gataker. Peopde know him aa the "water finder." The first thing that an experience with Mr. Gataker demonstrates is that he is no charlatan. Were he that he would claim tibat he could locat«> gold ajnd silver and other things that the eartih cootains which are valuable to man. He lays claim to notlhing of the sort, iu>WBV«r. fie says that be can find water, and be always proves his asaertion. I bad the pleasure not long ago of witmeaaing a sample of what Mr. Gataker can accomplish, writes a corres- pondent. (His first aotlon when beginning bis aeardh is to out a small, forikied branch. The fork onoe im his bands, the finder atajids absoilutely still for a momeat, aiod tlhen seta out at an exceedimg- ly rapid pace im wihatevvr direction the mysterious "something" oiay impel him bo take. Soon he stops, and the forks whirl around in bia fingers after the fashion in wbiob the Irishman whirls his blaok- t.'horn. On this oorasion he looked ai me as the fork turned and said: "Tou see, I have been following up a stream which is beneath us. Now I have found th« spring." Pointing downward he continued: "It ia exactly beneath ua, froim IQt to 100 fleet below Uie surface. If our friend will dig down be will find that the spring will rise about 120 gallons an hour. The streoim which I followed to this point ia not the only one which this spring mipplies. See f There ia another which goes off this way." A PAST WORKER. Baying tliia. Blr. Gataker left me' at so rapid a gait Ubat I was unable to keep up Willi bini without running. One ot the workanen who accompanied us was told to rum after bilm and carry some woudea pegs, wibich were driven into the grounfl at iioints indicated, by the finder as heingmiilable place* to dig for water. On the occasion of which I have spoken be located five such spots on tiie farm at varioua points, and oft- en at miiat unexpected places. At the particular point at wibaeh .my boat and the findt^'s ennployer most wished to fiind water Mir. Uaialker said that; ex- cavation would result in water being found, but tJiat it would provo to l>e only surface water, and tihat the sup- ply, therefore, would be so limited as mm MADE YOUNG. EALTH AND HAPPINESS MAY STILI BE TH- PORTION OF SUFFERERS ADVANCED IN YICARS. THE NEW INGREDIENT IS WORKING WON- DERS. I'eopie who get past middle life are a) ' thiiilv that thoii days of usefulness ar most gone when they are veiled wit; iieuinalism, Dyspepsia, Sciatica or sum her dread diaeasc, they consider thci lys are numbered and pain and sufferin ill be their lot for the fetv remaining yea • r their Hojourn on earth. With the advent of Ryckman's Kootena iro, which contains the new Ingredicni Tiew hope has been openrd up for agC' iITereis Its action in drivini; away th lies and pains which Rlieuiiiati.sm an iatica, two of the commonest diseases t liich the old are subject, has made man 1 aged one rejoice. Q As an example of what great thlii^. :iotenBy is doing for old people we migl L'ntion the ca.^e of Mrs. Catherine Bu: 49, 165 Jack.son St. I^., Hamilton, wh> ites under oath that she Is scvciity-thrc' "'^rs of age, that lor two years she w« .'licted with Rhaumatistn and Sciatica >d severe pains in her back and kidney- id broke out with Erysipelas. Sine king " Kootcnay " she has been frc< .<in pain, has no eniplion, a splendii â- petite, sleeps well and Is a hearty woma' <!very renpecl. Then wo might mention the cases of Mi . I lick Ryder, «. retired farmer, 69 years o: ;â- <•, living at 940 Lome .\vc., London 'it., who swear«i that he suffered 36yeai> 'Mil Klieumatisni, tried hundreds of local V'plicalions, but got no relief till he took \ckniun's Kootcnay Cure which banished ; I heiiiiialism and restored his health. Mr. John Hyde, of 141^^ McNab St., .iinilton, Out., under oath testifies that he â-  yi years of age, suffered from Dyspepsia â- id Constipation for ,55 years and was ired by Kootenay Cure. No need to multiply instances of how lis wonderfnl remedy has befriended the ,ed and given them a new lease of life ' you arc anxious to know more of this nrvcllous'Kooteimy Cure, address the ;ycknmn Medicine Co., Hamilton, Out., id full Inrorinatioii will b< sent you free. ' >no bottle la.sts over a month. it to praotically make the search for uinprofitab.e. 1 it was interesting to observe that whein Ibe tw^ig wbioh Mr. Gataker was usiing broke off abort, apparentJy worn nut by the viole'nt usage to which it bad been suhjeoted, he entirely dlsjpens- eU with the use of any twig af all. He assured us that, as before stat-ed, the twig was wholly unneoeasary, inas- much as he did not reiy upon it in the least, but upou thie sensations in liis arm and fingers. There can be no question whateverr about Mr. Gataker's ahiility to locate water undjerneali the earth's surface. In fact, so firm a hoJd lias be ehiain- ed upon ttie confidence of the people of lihe west country who be«t know him that his time is taken uip ah«ad, just as a tJheatrical oompany's engagement-s are booked. A NEWLY FOUND POWER. Mr. Gatalcer first discovered the pow- er which ia bis a little over three years ago, but has been following up ihs use uf the strange gift only since early in 1895. Hie bits received applications for his services from North and East Afri- ca, Western Aufltralia, Jamaica and the United Slates. He deo.ines. however, to ieave England, in spite of tJbe very ad- vantageous financial offers he has had, liecause he says he is making all the money be wishes to, and thinks there is no place like borne. He has during bis period of labor as a water finder !Dcate<l sotixces of flow wbichi have sup- plied many villages. A courinus fact in connection with this matter is that while would-be water finders for many years have usedi the twig nod declared that it ia the twig t.bat acts and not the person, provided it be of hazel wood. Slrw Gataker de- monstrates every day tlhat really the twig has nothing to do with it. \Viiat is it that gives him the power? Is it psyohio inr.uenfieif Is it bis "oth- er self?" Is he the reim^arnatiun of some famous magician? Or has Prov- idence simply given hJm a power rare- ly bestowe<i upon man? These are the questions that people in England are asking to-day. Tie theorists reply, for tJiey always do to everything. DON'TS OF WELL-DRESSED WOMEN. Don't pin your black hat on with a white pin, and don't use a heavy, flai^ ing ornate one. It may be the one jar- ring note in an otherwise pretty toilet. Don't buy cheap gloves, or if you buy them, don't wear them on the street. They always look their quality and price, and they are dear at the cheap- est. Don't carry the handkerchief in evi- dence on the street in front of the bodioe or stuck under the belt. For- merly a handkerchief was for show. It is now more generally for use ; liesides you might lose it. Don't go on the street with the tail or hem of your gown frayed and soil- ed. It is not an attractive sight to masculine eyes, and yoi^ are lessening thereby the days of usefulness uf 1 be gown. K«e{> your skirt well brushed and the binding neatly in plaim. Don't pat up your hair so that the end of every pin shows. Use as few pins as possible, and cover the head well with the hair. A head bristling or glit- tering with pins is not attractive. Don't wear rubbed or unkempt shoes on the street, fancying they do not show. They do. and a few moments do- voted to Be\ving on of buttons and pol- ishing adds very much to your general appearance of neatness. Don't, if you use a little touch of make-up. use it carelessly. A careful touch .sometimes improves, but a care- less one invites ridicule. Don't carry the ffloves in the bands. .i. ,, _ jj, ^iii in;jprovB your ap- SAVED H£E LIFE. THE NARROW ESCAPE OF A FBRGU' MERCHANT'S DAUGHTER. Uad Beea Weak aud iilnblx Prom lafaaer -.^either Doctor Nor Frleads Thonsfet She Would .turvlve-Dr. Wllllauu' null Pill* Havnd Her Lifeâ€" Advice (o Pareuu- From tJie Fergui News-Beoord. Mr. O. M. Poflt. fruit and oonfeotlunc ery dealer, St. .Andrew street, Fergujk last week related to a represeultstive ot the News lUicord the sad story of tha terrible sufferloig and siokness of hU little daughter hUla. bis oixly child, nowl a stroDg and Ibt^lthy little maiden o| Umi years ol age. At tlbe time of the child's illiuess Mr. Post was a reaidettU of Uainiltoni. His story is substantially as follows: â€" "iVIy daugh't»r bad beeni very delicate from childhood untu about three yean <igo, antJ. the money it oont me for doctor bills made me pooQ as it was seldom she was without * doctor's care, and at times we have bad as maniy as t-hree dootora in atten- dance and hope of saving her despaired of. The doctors succeeded in keeping her alive, l*ut she was gradually grow-, ini^ worse, and we all thought she waa going to die. Our regular physiciaa bad given, up hope of saving bar lita and remarked that if It were oaljt warm weather, (it was theni winter^ there might be a chance. But sevea summers had passed aiooe her birth and sb<i had gradually lieoome feebler, and my wife and I thought it was just • matter of time unitu the child would lie oailled to her home. Albout thia time Dr. Williams' Pink PilU wer* promioentily bruughc to our notioa through a cure they wrought in m neigblmr's child. I thought 1 would give theon a trial and so informed the doctor, but he onfy laughed attheide* of them helping her. However I bough* a box oi the Piink Pills, and begcuit giving them to ber, half a pill at a time. After a sibiort treatment thera was such an improvement that neithen her mother nor I could doubt that Dp. Williams' Pink Pills wei^ helping hor, and I decided to abandon tho do<-*'>r'^ services altogether. rho Pink Pill treatmieat was ooutiivued and although the progress towards health aadi strength was necessarily slow, it waa none the leas certain, and it wa* oon* tinned until she ia -.ta wall and strou;0 OS you see her io-<lay, and I am thanki- ivi to say she has bad no occasion foa medical txeatmeot since. IamaHtron|| believer in the efficacy of Dr. Williama Pink Pills, for weak and delicate chiW dren, and I firmly believe it was thi« medicine that luvod my child.'* Dr. WilliamB' Pink Pills are aa all- round year me<licine aud are nuite aa efficacious in the case of obildren aa In adults. They restore to the blood Ita lacking oonatituanta aud makes it ricb^ red and iwre. In this- way they strengthen the system and drive out disease. Tlhere are mungr cases like the above in which this wonderful med^ ioino has restored health and streogtii after tb« best medical advice had failed. The gMiuino fink Pilhi ar« sold in boxes, the wrapiier round whioli bears the full tra<le mark, 'Dr. Wil- liama Pink Pills for Palle People." There are other piUs colored pink. but they acre base imitations offered only because they give the ilealer ai greater profit. They should always be refused. Don't Put them on. pnarance and lie le.s8 trouble wear them unbuttoned. Don't trust to pins to hold things in place. They often come out at unex- ppeted and inconvenient times. Hooks and buttons, sewed firmly, are more desirable. FOE TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'SBEST FRIEND LARacsT Sale in Canada. NEW BRmsiH B.vrrLP: ship. Under forced draught the new Brit- ish battle .ship .Jupiter made an' aver- age of 18.4 ksiots to her four-hour trial, nearly a knot more than the contract speed. EASY VICTI3IS. A Large Percentage of Members in the Commons Suffer From Catarrh â€" The Hope of Fifty Found in Dr. Ag- new's Catarrhal Powder â€" They Tell Their Own Story of Successful Ho- oovery Through This Remedy. Mr. W. H. Bennett, Member for East Simcoe, and forty-nine others ot the Uuiise of Commons, bavo, over their own signatures, told ot the good effects of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. What the remedy has done for these Parliamentarians it is doing for thou- sands of others in public and private life t"he Dominion over. With cold in the bead it gives immediate relief in- side uf half an hour, and a little per- severeiice quickly rids the head of all trouble. It is easy and pleasant to use and produces no hurtful after ef- fects. Sold by W. E. Richardson. De Garry â€" "Why is it (hat when a fellow ia alone with a girl be loves they seldom play cards?" Merrittâ€" "Ue- cause if thie.v did she would have to hold her own hand." ' TKimORS OF RHEUMATISM. A Remedy Which is Instantaneous and Permanent in Effect â€" A Calgary Re- sident, Crippled for Throe Years, Be- comes Strong as an Athlete. No subtle or mysterious force could be more miraculous in its effects than is South American Cure in all cases of Rheumatism. James A. Anderson, of Calgary, N.W.T., says I hat .seven or eight years ago he became affliclod with rheumatism, and for three years it made him a, cripple, so that bo had to use a stick to get al)out. In his own words: "I suffered untold mis- ery, and though treated by (bo best physicians in the country, and I. spent a lerm iu the hospital, recovery seeined as hopeless as ever. A friend recom- mended South American Rheuinatio Cure. It gave help iminedialely and after the second bottle I threw away my stiok. To-day I tim as stroutr as an athlete." Price 75 cents. Sold by W. E. Richardaoa. P-VRDONAHLE IGNORANCB. .\ strange story is reiUited oC a jury- man who outwitted a Judge, and tliat, without lying. He ran into oourt in a desperate hurry mud quite out of hreatik, aud exclaimed : ' Ob, Judge, if you caan, pray excuse me I I don't know w'hioh wUl die first, my wife or my dauglhi<^r. il.)«ar me, tbal's .sad, said Uhn innoo- ent Juilge, Cerlaiuiiy you are excused. The next day the juryiuaii was met by a friend, who in a syrnnthetia voice, atiked : J?<nv's jrour wife? She's a.,1 right, thank you. And your daughter? She's all right, too. Why do you ask I Why. yesterday you said .ou did not know which would die first. N'or do I. That is the problem which tiime alone can solve. > A GOOD BE(1 INNING. Ministerâ€" I hope you began the ne^*| year well. Sable, an undertaker â€" Fairly well. I bad two funerals. AWFUB. HEART DISEASE. (Death Charmed Away Under the Spell of Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart â€"More AVonderful Than a Fairy Tale is the Story of Mrs. Roadhouse, of Willscroft, Ont. Where disease has effected the heart t he remedy to be applied must !>• speedy in its effeuts, or all may be losl. Mrs. Roadhouse, ot Willscroft, Onl., sa.vs : "Cold sweat would stand nut in great beads upon my face, be- cause of the intense suffering from heart disease. I often felt that the death struggle was at hand. No modi- cine gave me help until I used Dr. Ag- new's Cure for the Heart. In thirty minutes the severe pain was removed, iuid after taking little more than one bottle the trouble had vanished. I know nothing ot it to-day." Sold by W. E. Richardson. OPPOSITION. First Newsboyâ€" There goes a geat< Chase him. Second Newsboy - No use. Just sawi him ('(inio out of a barber shop. He'a heard all the news there is. NEVEE~WORRY. Take Tlipjn and (Jo About' Your Busif- neeaâ€" Thoy do Their AVork While You Are Doing yours. Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills Ar» Purely. Vegetable and Act Upon the the Syslenii. Diet: or Ocoupa. tion. !!0 Cents a Vial. Liver AVilhout Distitrbano to ' They are system renovators, blood purifiers, .i-nd builders; every gland and tissue in the avIiioIb anatomy is benefited and stimulated in the usei of theia. Sold b7 W. E. Ricburdaon.

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