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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1901-03-29, Page 2LIKitAin - - r EltOLDEOOT k MATS. Barristers, Ills,Bei tots Notaries /Niche. Me. 011loas-eor Swains end North et,„ mar Registry anal trirb. Sir Private funds to loan at knead rete_ ii. w. Paegraroar. H. C. Hers. qa.B.ROW DARROW. Barrlatais ate& tom ikc. Ger Lissuilitoe SR. end Square, srich, Oat, J. T. Gioutow, Q. 0, ellalttra °miaow, L L ALI.. JOHNSTON, Harrbaer, • nary &O. Moo. tbaiutoa Mae. WO CAMPION. O. 0„ Ltarrbiter, Collette! 1.10 Notary. Etc. Office -Over Jordasi Drug 8tore Goderich, Monty to Loaa. _ INTIM E. °ANGEL Barrister. Solloitar, tklatto. renligewrt rstroder°1ch. ".* to. Proctor In liarltime CouVate.ifro, (311c0ilIVIE•NrolirrErearrr, eirrelrit ter. Mee- Mos street, sewed dew trans thelquers, Bodeen:I. g 11.1413. SEABER. Barrister. Soncltor. No tary, and Convoyaucer. Office- Haunt ton Street. Ooderich, opposite !borne Hotel. Private funds to lend at per cent interest oa mortgago. Farmers' notes cashed. EN. LEWIS, Barrister, Conveyancer, Proc- al low rates. Private tunes. OtTice tor in Martino° Court, etc. Money to Hamtltou Street. I )1OKINPON & HOLMES, BARRISTERd, Solicitors Notarlo. Public, &a Money aloan. Office Wcet Strout. E. 4 Dickinson. Dudley Roane*. 1717 r.111L1P DOLT, BAB.) 18TER.SOLIC1 I Lalt, Noiary Public, 6 c. Money to loan at ow rale el interest. Offices hastelde Court outs Square. 1717 hIEDICIAL. DRS. TURNBULL & TURNBULL, PH YelelANS, sUlt0 ONS, WTO Street. N ILL 0,tio LUIS wervd from °dice TELEPHONE 102 J. L.. Tt tits Ill LI- ifithNil TVillillIULL D RS. 811ANNO c ANL) OALLOW HINTS FOR THE FARMER. WTIAT A 110104M WOULD bAY LW LIE COULD. Don't hitch mo to an lama post or railing, when tiae mercury le below treezing, I need the skin on my tongUO. Don't leave me hitched in my &all al night with tit big cob right where E mutat lic down. 1 am tied and can't select a smooth place. Den't compel me to eat Metre salt Oleo L want by mixing it with my oats. I know better than any other animal how much 1 need. Don't think hi:valuate I go free un- der the whip that 1 don't get tired. You, too, would move up if under the whip. Dou't think ()costae I alit a horse iron weeds and briare won't hurt my bay. Don't wbip we when ioet fright- ened along the road. or 1 will ex- poat it next time and may uaake t rou- ble. Don't trot me up hill, for I have to carry you, and the buggy and myeelf, too. Try it yourself home time, run up hill with a big load. Don't keep my Stable very dark for when I go out into the light my eyea arre injured, eapeoially if nnow be on the ground. Don't say '' whoa" uniesa you mean it. Creech me to otop at the word, Lt unity check me if the linea break, and aave running away and smash- P 810. ..ss %NI( (SURGEON-. 011,10E 1 o Ban. 1 0 BUlla.1 g. 4h bide 1 iN .ure. got Call at easideeee. -11hINNt N. Ult. °ALLOW, itu.idon,o E,gin 1.1 Noon( Hi. P.DiN 1.g 44 PaloNfil fre . • - DENTAL. AN I • nst aitt ,md goal Lrown alto bridge r.0 s lt 1,114,110, Y • 1 ill: 4•11 v. year.' expel -- Ian u. - M. MA , AOC, D. IX H., L O. rt., Dente, Lit ("urge L. LIki I1101110111. .UI d0111.4.1 UpOrii LRAM, 1 r VALLI011 of osiers. teeth a . Unice -Our. West • atid Square. • i HONS. NO. 3U. gM. 'I URNBULL, D.D.8., L. D. S., Dente • burgeon, .orrnerly associated with Dr. son, or noon -oat All branches of 1,110 pro. festoon prantaied, tueluding gold and poroslatn crown an bridge work. elect:WO attenuo given to 110, preservation of the natural teeth. Oilloe lit MoLuisn's Now Block. MARRIAGE LICENSES IIT LANE, ISSUER Ole MARRIAGE V . Licence., Goderlett, Ont AUCTIONEER OliN KNOX. Novegatc street nioderlob ct, opposite Buxton's Hotel. Licensed .MI0 nonce'. and Agent tor he N °von Bros. Agri cultural implements, Paris; the celebrated Adams' Wagonai McLaughlin Carriage Com- pany. Oshawa ; t he COUktill Illt P.ow Company, Brantford, and nit other linos pertaining Loth° arming trews THOMAS (SUNDRY. Live Stook and tioneral Auctioneer, Hantilton Street, Oodorloh. Sides made everywhere and all otTorte mado to giro you satisfaction, Partners' sale notes discounted, VETERINARY Dn. W. P., CLARK, V. S., graduate of the Ontario Veterinary Oollsge. Toronto, I respectfully mill the attention of horse owners to my approved mei hod of operating on horses' tooth. A fritti.h supply of N.oierloury medicines always on hand, Otilee and stables -Newgate street., Ooderich. Tonsorial. MONTREAL ST, TONSORIAL ROOMS - O. SWANSON (successor to J. BroOlierJ proprietor. modern, easy, dean shaves, ha r - cutting and shampooing, Rotors sharpened and hom-d. M./CHLA.T McLean s CORNER fiAST•ST. AND SQUsati, FAMILY ORDERS A SPECIALTY. vorything In Season and prices always right. Geo. WO CONTRACTOR HOUoEBUILDER and GENERAL CARPENTER. Houses remodeled, and geoetal repairs attended to promptly Al moderate prices. Satisfaction Guaranteed. SHOP-Kingslon Street, Godecich. BENI D EN s: E - Huron Road. Funeral Notice. The pi oper furnishing and oindnoting ot I UNERALS at a cost Which dee. not make ha burden apart with Us. SROPHEY it SON. thole:tiling Undertakers and •.natialin. ere. GODIR1011, ONT 1 ''T' Seeker & Mye rs The Undertakers. 1 Graduate et Massachusetts Cottage of ameaifieng. Whits dearall and Modern Appilanosa. OUR PsIDE8 ARE VERY LOIS Try us. Batiefsetton Guaranteed. • BECKER & MYERS, Mtntrstre.t. -wAttrese anderioh Planing Mills BUCHANAN fte SON, Contractor& and Builder& ti all kinds of Building Ma. aintfacturers of and dealers terial, such as Lumber,Doors, Sash, Lath, Shingles, 8ce..Ete. IliF:latis and estimates furnished on apli: Gabon. (Xstablialted land Buchanan Son. MUST ADVERTISE FIRST. Yetir actontit of the concert hest nighty efikl the Muskier', omitted all Mention Of the Very thing I wantad to itee 4titatea. *tan I played, at / Weett teireful to tell lone reverter, Watt gettUfite Straditetritid, and one of *he beet tiler Medi. ,Thatwe *11 tight, *id the editee. When M.e4 Stetieleettritte. tete! tia, atifeetitteel I* thelPtiliee it Will *St lelik kelt A lieller Geed 14100Matior.ftfri , ° n't make me drink ice cold wa- ter, nor put a frosty bit in my mouth. Warm the bit by holding it a half - minute against my body. Don't forget to file my teeth when they get jogged, and I eanoot chew my food. M'hen I get lean, it in a sign my teeth want filing. Don't ask me to "buck" with blinds on. I am afraid to. "Don't run ILO IlOW13 a steep hill, tor if anything ahould give way I might break your neck. Don't put on my blind bridle aa that irritates my eye, or leave loY forelock so thet it will be in ony eyea. Don't be ao eareless of nary harness apt to find a great sore on mu before you attend to it. Don't forget the old Book that is a, friend to all the ioppressed and that nays :-"A tuereiful man ia tnerciful to his beast." mew Me assets Ms Baas ttioety1 CRONJE AT ST. WIMP. A correerDandeal;le; lao b4116 4tr." rived from a. tiviezes lettel All the 1.101X - don Daily Kali the follerwing interaate ayc;c_ount of General Oran"' in map- in2tIvit Ault twelve cosanthe ago how inen's hearta beat ris they read daily for nearly a fortnight the thrilling ae- countie of that terrible fight lathe bed of the rive,! Tooday we have scarcely more than miming thought for the captive of St. Helena. Oronje's long interment Ina neither affected hie health nor depressed hie opirita, Onoe or tWice a week he visits Broad Bottom Camp, ats, x atile,s from Jamestown, wherAin for- mer army is detained, and, remember- ing his permit:nut) diripootion as a ra- ther moody, ultra -religious man. hia efforts to ericourage fellowaBoers aro really remarkable. He is groat/Eng Stant os well us white, in consequence of hia forced in- activity, and, despite his moroae na- ture, it cannot be maid thar he is less cheerful in his demeanour to -day than hie was during tho fight at 'Morlder River, when he waa almoirt hilariously gay, or wheat be woe omnipotent sup- erintendent of nut -Ives in the 'frana- veal. Of course cheerfulness is gov- erned by degrees. KEEPS THOUGHTS. MILKING MACHINE.4, It is probable that among the num- erous machines that have been invent- ed to lighten the work In the dairy, no dingle one ban been more anxious- ly looked forward to than a sucouss- fud milking machine but in spite of the utmost endeavors of Inventors practical and theoretioal, we are NUB looking forwerd, but with lessening hope. The difficulty neems to come in the inahility to make a highly de- veloped systIPM of nerves and cells, the seat of the •ery active, life, co- operate with and respond to the de- mands of a machine, however, skil- fully that machine may be Made and operated. ft may be assumed that a healthy, hungry calf comes us near to being a successful type of milking machine ars can be invented, but as is well known, between the mother and calf there estate something more than the mere mechanical operation of draw- ing the milk. fWe may call this something by many different names, but it all comes to the fact that the cow is as willing to give the milk ns the calf is to re- ceitVe it, and it Is more than prob- able that the 'willingness of the cow, or, in other words, the control of the animal over the milk secretion, is re- sponsible for the failure, thus far„ of the milking machine in all ite forms. It would seem that In some cases at :met, a machine (you'd be of great advantage over typos of milkers, not- ably the rough, uncouth man who mlika aa to would squeeze a sponge, and tries to wring the milk from the udder by force, ,in place( of coaxing it. But even im torch oasea it is evident that there is some nubile relation or union between the two living beinga that does not and cannot exist be- tween the oow and machine, and in consequence she refuses to give down to the machine. However, it is evid- ent that, although reasons were as plenty as blackberries, the cow will leave none of them, and the milking machine, thus far, is a complete fail- ure. (Who twill be the first to sup- ply the missing link. SOME GOOD STOCK RATIONS. For 8 or 10 tremor I have ground my feed in my own midis, writes Mr. M. N. Clark. if it had not paid me, I would have aboodoned it long ago, In the fall and winter I eruah n mixture of oneahalf corn, one-fourth oats and one-fourth wheat. For horses I lase from two to' four quarts per day. I give cows two to six quarts. Bometimes I oruah the ear corn and feed three gquarts of this and ono gallon bran. Of bOurse the quantity of food must vary with the condition and %yenta of the animal. The majority of our farmers use the oorn and cob meal and bran. (Some- times Ifeed a little of the cob meal to roy home, early in the fall, but weirdly provide shelled corm The above svith atover and clover hny is my winter feed, Por atimeaer I al- WaYa shell my torn and trnia with oate 4.17 bran for horses+ and cows. To ,h0go I give corn and brown mid- dlings. In grinding I never use a smooth or dull mill. It enlist bel aliarp to cut the hard shell incasing the grain or town. Wheat the feed can be fed to any animal with Safety unloels it be young (Aga. Ey grinding ear corn on a amooth or dull Mill, the hard obeli a ground smooth and Sharp, and it it not advbsable to „feed Much of it to any aniknal. I have fed great deal of this feed. I find it pays much better to feed the torn then to -ship It away and supply other feeds in its place. This section being a dairy distrjet, we do not feed (young cattle. I am now feeding quite a bunoli of hoga and the morning feed la ear corn, while In the evening I feed entailed corn and cob mixed with Ofitti and wheat and all ground together fine. The evonieg feed is one-third emitter than the morning. It la made into alop. The hogs ere doing finely, CURED. No, saki the Man in the maekin- bash, m,r wife doesn't give away any of ray old blot/lee OT. sell them to the ragthat any more. buried that hab- it effectually once. Dow waa that I they asked him. IWhen I found ahe had diem:sect of a mitt I hadn't worn for several weeks told bar there was a letter In It she had given, me to detail the last time I had It on. 'And it was no lie, eith- er, he ati 4, *Rh deep satIafttetion, LY ERROR. Young tine, -Did you ever Mekb a mitstake in a dittnnala DiXdOr.-1/64 A ahabliy Old tel - low (Arne WO offite tiee Ail. and Ante bed told hitio he bad Mile a Metes,* tehe end charged hint 42 / foetid, Ott tbet lit AU rich 24 hail agigietAleitke W tures hie thought,' about the BrItlath may be, he contrivea to keep them pretty wed to himself. The fain t5 it is not en (story matter to talk to the general. He, of courAe, only speaks the taal. Re La characterlatioally quiet man, twbo never gives free vent to has °Malone and will not diaouss the war. With all his Dutch reserve °ionic irs sometimea excite.d when news from South Africa brought by a fresh batch of priaoners reaches him, and then Vrouw Cronje, quietest and moat obedient of wives and bravest of women, hi called to share the „re- lief of their monotonous existence. Getnerul Cronje would atrike an ob- server at the fired glanoe as an ineig- nificant little man. Rothea. belotw the aatddle Insight, he has broad shoulders and a sturdy figture that conveys the Impreasion greet muscular strongtla. He leas grown very white during the Mat twelve Months, and those who remember the strong black board and fierce, shaggy eye broavsof the past would be eurprieeci at the otra.nge that hex mato Over 'hliS ap- pearance. ' Bu t Witt h 1 low ing age -he is new in his eirty-eighth year -there Is nothing ef seraphic sweetness about Dronje. He svas, le, and always will be a hard naan-"As hard as tenpenny nails, and twice as eharp," al one of his men puts It. How he ever brcrught himself to con - l0 aurrender Paardoberg will always remain a mystery to his frionids, and, perinipS, to nobody more than to himiself. he Horne NEW On TO* SAWDUST. , wane .1flealialteery Isveiteti Matteelit leteelteette SOME COMPLAGEATIONS THAT CAN NEVER DE EETINOVISMEIL 1111E8 TRAT BIM, CATillOTO. Tht? vegetable which deserve* much mere ettention on account of its WilltrIfteornerietis is the much -neglected and often -despised carrot. Food ex• perts, 110WeVers 120W agree that ear - rots couatitute a valuable food, and it is to be hoped tbat they will wore ettelit be aeen on the ordinary table. Carrots are .obtainable almost the year round, end the mistake made by moat Perrone ie that of supposing that a* *Loon as they grow somewhat larger tbcy are no longer tit tor anY purpoae except to flavor soups. The trouble le not with the carrot, but with the eooktog of it, and that is common to coolang of almost all vege- tables grown under the ground, they are riot cooked enough. Old carrots, moreover, require to be boiled in, two watere, keeping plenty of it on them all the time. Then when carefully drained, they may ba chopped into smaller pieces and well seasoned with butter, salt and pepper, or tlee regu- lation white sauce may be added to them with goat) edteot. A savory and appetizing flavor may be imparted to earrota by first trying them in butter until they are elightly brown, and then adding atone sugar and cooking a little longer. Enough water to boil them ia then poured over them and they are then cooked until tender. If, however, the family taste ia too fastidious for stewed oarrots, carrot croquettes may be made after a cook- ing-sehool recipe. A dozen email croquettes can be made from four large carrota. They should be boiled until tenders drained and rubbed through a sieve. Add cane cupful of well -cooked thick wbite eauce, using for it two heaping teaspoonfuls of flour, mix, season highly, and when cold and firm, mould and finish as for other croquettes. "' When amall, young carrots are ob- tainable, they are delicious cooked with green peas, either froth or can- ned. The carrot should be bailed, scraped and cut into thin circles and then into etrips. They should then be utlxed with the boiled. or heated peas with a cupful of well -seasoned white sauce added to the whole.. When the flavor of carrots ire real- ly agreenble to the family, puree of carrot', will find a welcome place among the cream soupa which now form part of the daily menu in many householda, DRINK LESS VODKA NOW. Re sten Ittoverisnient's Priam. &&&&& ivy Lows Promote Tueolierstrice. The Irtu.slitin Governenctnt some time ago enacted a hew limiting and „re- gulating the Manufacture of spirits and controlling the sale. revo- lutionary law ha.s closed all _public drinking houses throughout the em- pire exeept 'in tifoiscow Where the law bushes to take effect next year, and in Siberia, where it will go Into' effect 1993. Farmers mantreteture a groat deal of vodka in their Otivn die- tilleries. But the atate is the mid- dleman. It alone handles+ the pro- duct ars it passes from the producer to the consumer. The aptrits are taken from the distilleries to the government stores; refined in the government mills, and de- livered to the public' from the govern- ment stiopo, with the stade'a stamp on each bot lle, When the ooneumer has emptied a bottle he takes it back to government, which pays him from ehe five kopecks for it. There are at 'present about ninety miliionS of such boiling in circulation, which seems to show that the use of vodka, a kind of whiskey nettle of rye or po- tatoes, IA still extensive, 11 is not permissible to open the bottles except in the home of the purchaser, and a person seen drinking in any public pleas cvr on the road is fined, from 02.50 to (110. The salutary effect of the reform has boon felt already. Drunkenness bas dirninished to an important extent already and deposi•ta in saving banks are on the increase. In order to pro- vide place.s of asaembly and recrea- tion for the country people, many private individual.' have opened tem- perance hou-see, that are scattered all over tho country. In many inotances, small shops are attaohed to the hous- es. Groceries, hardware, iron, [oleic- eo, cotton printa, and everything needed to supply the modest demands of the oillagera are to be found, in those shops, whioh are of especial con- venience when they are at a distance from towns, NEW LIGHT RAYS, g4grAtifiG 13,3001. hare long beim en - ;geed .the etAde vietthode of tuti- VALIn Waatib PrOdUctg. ,a3 sew- n., garbage and many ether things, formerly throws away as worthlese. After it is atieerteined Just what theme Materiale contain thee cen be utilized, ingeekius mop e*t 4.1teir ,wite to work to invent mactikaery and 4,evise pre- ceseva by Which the minable commo- dales may be estrected. In this way reanY million dollars' werth olle. fertilisers and ether uriefei substan- ce* are now staved and the world is ao much the richer. A groat deal ot aawdust has already gio.sae to waste, though many malls hest used it to aupplement theIr fuel supply. Cberoical anelyets hare bet= at work on the sawduat problem and it has boon ((Went silverly that it contains very useful clean:eta that are worth gavials; and now machinery haa been invented to extract these materiabr. The expertroenta have proven that 1,000 pounds et sawdust will yield about 160 petuvds of char 'which 1.1 pratitically the eame azt charcoal and equally serviceable. 180 pounds' of acids, 180 poundie el tar and a quan- tity of gasegt that have been tented for heating and illunainating and found to be excellent tor both pur- poses. Whle the aoids. tar and char are the produota particularly desired it Ls maid the gases are of conunerolal value. A machine has been invented in Montreal for the purpose of distilling ea walust and obtaining the desired products. A5 Canada manufacturea onorillOUB quantities of lumber it is expected that the utilization of saw- dust in this country will be an im- portant source elf valuable commo- dities. There are twenty places In Europe where oxalic acid Ls extracted from sawdust. In Scotland sawdust is u.sed to make floorcloth, coarse wrap- ping paper and millboard which is a kind of pasteboard used by book rank- ers in the covert( of books. Thus sawdust, one,e thought to be a good deal of a nuisance, ia beginning to be conaidered quite a uaeful article. GIRL COAL -HEAVERS. Novel Oren Alton of J•Pnecnr Girl, Who Help Load foal Vessels. Young girls in Japan are employ- ed to perfcrorn a task which cannot be done in the same time and with the same eaae by any other body of work -folk in the world. 'They are engaged at the different pc r ts loading the large steamer"( with coal. The coal barges are swung alongside the vessel front stem to stern of which are hung a serloa of platforms, the broadest nearest the base and di- minishing ad they rise. On eaiah these platform,e a girl stenda. Men on the barges fill baskets containing about two buckets of coal each and P11138. them, to the girl standing on the lowest platform, She passes them to the girl &Woe her, and a continoous and unbroken line of baskets pass in- to the vesael from ten in the morning until four in the .afternoon. The girls will handle from sixty to seven- ty baskets of coal per minute, and over one thousand tonS of coal a day. 'rhea really arduous toll they perform 9;9 it if svea-e mere play, for ahoy keep up a running !fire of jokes, and their laughter is eontingoos. They often break into a song, the mites; of which are clear, melodious and stimulat- ing, The New Klement !day Rival In litipori- mate nee 'Roentgen maye. A discoverry has just boon made which rimy create Fos great a sensa- tion In the erciontifio world aa the Roentgen ray. Ilioguerel, a French chemist, disoovered in 1.89,5 rny which posseissed properties similar to the Roentgen ray. The discovery of the latter, however, eclipsed the ferni- er and Becquerel rays; as they a re °Mica, were employed only ln m' ;or way in µheroical laboratorio Al nett time Do lillariaya the French ei- outlet, tits/sorted that the rays were ettnitted from a new eleanent, but Ma strttemient Made no Impression. Re- cent experiments by the Berlin High School of Technology, hare proved thia to be po. and the interesting feet has boon observed that these rays render almost ovary transparent substance luminous in the &irk. These rays make it nostaible to tell genuine dia- monds from nrtfifietal one* in the dark. Thin will prove of great prac- tical importance in testing. The ex- periments have elan resulted in ob- tnining, nor the first time, larger quantities of the new eleanent, which haat deithontetrated that rays emanat- ing from n large quantity make the air such a conductor otc,,,taltotricity that it le hoped thie properte ala be utilized in wireless telegraphy. The greateat secrets' is maintained con - veining thee. experiment*. They eonsidered to be of do much portiunees thet the result will lea laid before the Temperer. OP PROVEN HONESTY. The fire of a legal examination bi a hot owe but an aceteeed person who stand% its test doean't often emerge with a charaoter the better establish- ed, An individual of eneWevhat doubtful appearanee ,was applying for eitua- don aa von -driver, On being asked tor references, he mentioued one of the dealer'a bld bands, Nrho Wee ettlied in and questioned att to the Amon.: (Ante tonesty. The referee rebbed lila thin roeditetively foe a motnent, ealdt- Elotteett gneloor, Me !mute - tea bin ProVed *gin ted *gin, Vaitb, ba'a bin ittia41 oltin tobnM tor staitl. big, /Mel dieshalted avety tOluied the applieleit ,erite Aet engaged, A GERMS (WILT, The aneount of pride, Interest and questions one smell boy will develop in a circus glint is Immeasurable. Kept for grand oceasiens, like a con- valescence for instance, the mother wiil have cause to bless it, Some la tit ude nutterials allowable, but some fabrics wear bettor and look as well to the last, therefore should tent preference. Any quilt liable to be used in infectious diaeases should be made of fabrics which can be boil- ed. There lire various methods of mak- ing the circus quilt. A piece of solid color goods, whether silk, woolen, can- vas, taecitry stuff, lateen or cotton can be used and eubdirided into squarea or other shapes by stitches in em- broiders as desired. Also patching of odd pieces and milers io desirable, Oe these squares the animal or clown, ete„ can he out- lined, appliqued, oroas-stitched or solidly embroidered or left defiried by embroidering the background only, Arou.nd the "squares a herring -bone, feather -stitch, or any suitable etitch oan be run. The animals should by all means be of natural form and. color and a wide variety b3 shown. T he centre could appropriately shown a circug tent clown. A border design should show the entire circus parade. Elaborate productions of this model may be done in silk on silk or woolen foundation tind be finely interlined and quilted, In prose -stitch on canoes th.e animals will look less natural. In flax exolbroidery on linen the re- sult Will be benetiful and imparisih- able, A cheap and good one oan be made from those ever accumulating scrapg Muslin which, dyed with ootton dyes to any Shade, offer as wide range, Of tints .an is needed. If previeths to washing It may bo ina- mersed sngar of lead water the colors will neither run nor fade. If you make moll a quilt be sure to invest in a copy of scene exhaus- tire work an natural history. SOME EASILY PREPARED DES- SERTS. T9 piooa Cream -One cup tapioca soaked oven night in 1 pt milk. In' the morning, add another quart of milk, and let it boil until the tapioca is clear, then add the well -beaten yolks of 3 eggs and 1 cup White sugar. Beat the whites to a Stiff froth with 3 tablespoons sugar, and whon the tapioea L9 cool euough „to pour into a glass diela drop the whites in large spoonfuls over the top. Put a tiny block of bright-eolorral j-tIly on each. This, is better eaten cold. Ohocolate Orr:Ito-Dissolve 1-2 cake of eihonolote in a little hot tv-nter, add 1 imp Milk, awl let hail. Mix 5 well - beaten eggs with 2 cups milk, pour the hot ohocolate into them, stir well and boil all together for a few min- utes. Sweeten to taste and serve cold, Arrowroot Blanc Arringe-Bo'l 1 qt milk, heaving out a little to Stir 2 1-2 tablespoona arrowroot smooth in. When the Milk is boiling, stir in the arrowroot, and after it thickens, stir n 2 tablospoona sugar, 1 of rosewnter and a tiny pinch of salt. Pour into molds. Mornt Blanc -One-third, box gela- tine, *grated rind of 2 lemons, 2 cups sugar, rend 1 pt water. Stir until the Mixture is nearly stiff, then stir in l'as whitea of 5 eggs beaten to, a stiff froth Serve Ilith a custard made from the yolks of the eggs and 1 pt boiling milk. ,Sweeten to taste, and flavor svith vanilla. Let the jelly got (perfecitly cold and stiff, tbon form tin ireogular peak Nvith it in the centre of ft glass dish Pour the custard around it,' and garninh with fine large 'strawberries dusted with sugar, or tittle blocks of sugared pine- apples. Snowdrifts -Half a box of gela- tine, 1 pt boiling 'water, juiee of 2 lemone, 2 cup4 sugar and whites of 5 eggs. Dissolve; the gelatine in the water, add the lemon and sugar mix- ed together and put In a Mold to cool. When not ileitis cold, take the whites of the eggs beaten 'stiff, reveetened and flavored, and took them in boil- ing milk for a mitutte. Turn the gelatine out of the Meld, put the. lat. ter at mite in e61,3 wetter, and heat the jolly inte bits bet not liquid, Now till up the meld with elternsite *peon - Cala Of the lostkeireetip jelly and the aqiitert Of the ege. If any jelly hes eoftened, potu• it vote, the top. Set tiwtty to toot Steve Mt 4 dash stir.. rounded with a ettaterd Miede With the yolke Of tb. age and 1 pt milk Sweet- ened to taste. THE etre ettnatior ta ba tba koekt tve.e.ct ormitt dot WAitittes..41t *Sane te be tee autorite. toltb ieatte oasat, a WHERE WAS THE SWINDLE? Ethel, said Lionel Bertram. Jonea, as he dropped his slice of bread in the plote with a noise that oat the can- ary in tbe gilt cage overhead chirp- ing merrily. Ethel, I have some- thing to eay to yott. They had been married only four weeks, arid tlw time had not arrived when she did all the saying; Do you remember the day On which I pro- posed to you? Yea, She replied, I will never for- get it, Do you remember, he wetint a -s he abstraetedly drilled a hole in the loaf with the point of a carvingoknife, how, when I rang the bell, you came to the door with your fingers sticky with dough, and said you thought it was your little brother who wanted to get in? Yes. Oh, Ethel! How could you? How could you? How could I what? she responded, ris a guilty look crept into" her face. How could you make me the victim of suoh a Swindle'? SOME NEW CENTURY PROVERBS. The friends that wealth makes are as the quicksa.nd, but the friends of poverty are like the fixed stars in heaven. A witfe's wi.se counselling entereth her husband.* Mind and after many days returneth to her in jewels and precious raiment. The idler that dreameth of gold suf- fereth hunger, bat he who hath dug for it liveth in a palace. The heart Of a women is as a driv- en 'well; and he who would sound its depths must be blessed ha patience; even like one who xlives for pearls. It were safer to place your mouth on the roluzzle of a gun than on the lips of a deceitful voemaun, Sometimes we envy the prosperity a a wicked Man, little knowing how the winked' man envies us. It were better to be kicked by your friend than kissed by your enemy. 'rerene better to see elearly withone eye than 'mistily With two._ Our tears are brine to the world's palate, but bur Merriment rever- berates through the world's heart. LOVE'S SACRIFICE. The followirer, whieh we are sure, 41 an exceptional ease is narrated of a certain Mr. and Mrs. Cabiff, of No- where-in-Partioular. Mrs. Cabiff's education in the art of cookery had been *somewhat neg- lected, but ahe did her best, and her huaband struggled manfully and un- complainingly with tbe tough eteaks and aour bread she sethefore him day after eel, 11, 111M 41 it One morning, about tbree yeara af- ter their wedding aaid to him: Oliver, you don't lore your wife as you did once 1 Why do ycu eey that he asked, in aurprise. Because you don't eat the thinga I gook any Inure. phillida, rejoined Oliver, with all the earneetnetta he could command, I love Tow els fondty as ever, but my diges- tion et ruined 1 TOMMY'S D)BA Teetcher-Tbremeta, whet are "parts of speech t" Tome* Toleker, after an exhstestive mental effort -It's the way a maw tatkrt "Oleo hes Mutters-. Itinhas do not bring bappthast, aaid Mrs. Catmint, Mitt% vary tfuti anteetered the eats, rall. Ott eat Oteit lit,lot of 0114 1.00514 tan vaiy Conaldetabkr toglifated by pateitty, Y66 *bat Aiitilit ereeet The Makin illlt pitessier-rtre Siam. lag la Atlietiosa fee Forty Iniess-staverat centeries to 'epitome Am eeretsteolte narsime. Tbe recent catseteopbe, at Baku, Range, where'by tour of the richest springe in the vicinity have been eet on tire and h00 lives loat, will prob- ably breve to be elasidfiod among tbuse conflageatione that can never be ex- tinguished. (teaks). haa been vialted by two sucb disastera since the oil wells were dis- covered in 1858. On one occasion some children lit bonfires near a spring which promptly because ignited and five men perished in the flames. The owner. were ruined, for they were unable to put it out, and from that da,St to Chia it heal been ablaze. Since then the heat of the earth caused by the fire in euestion made an ad- jacent well buret into flame, and after burning for eleveu yearn and coneum- ing 80,000,000 gallons of oil the apring became dry. . Probably the moat destructive fire of this kind ever known has been burning in Arizona for Upwarde of forty yearn. FouTteen petroleuin wells are involved, and Una estimated that 10,600,000 gallons of oil are be- ing coneumed per annum. The flames continue to rage ea furiously as ever despite the fact that nearly 100 lives and more than a million of mouey have been apent in vain attempts to quench them. So great is the heat imparted to the soil that no vegetable or animal life can, exist any length of tirne within A RADUPS OF TEN MILES. There are eeveral collieries in Eng- land which are perpetually burning, and bid fair to de rio for ever. One of these is situated in 'Warwickshire not far from Birmingham, end haa been alight for many years. .Fears are en- tertained lest in the near future the flames should extend olong the rich vein of ooal which runs towards the great Midland city apd muse some of the houses to subside. Measures have been adopted to cope with them, but as yet they have proved unavail- ing. (Another diaastrous fire broke out in a Durham pit some year% ago and has not long Mime been extinguish- ed. A. narrcrw aeam of bad coal bad been previously smouldering, but the mine wao atilt worked, untill one day the flamen reached the mirrors and caused them to flee for their lives. Fortunately no one was hurt, but the colliery became useleas to its owners, who in vain tried to cut off the air supply. Eventually they broke into a neighbouring canal and allo4ved the water to deluge the mine, and thus ended the trouble. IA Very curious incident put out what was undoubtedly the most ser- iou.s colliery fire ever known in Bri- tain. In 1872 the Ta•wd Valley mine, near Preston, burst into flames, and thouaanda of pounds were laid out in trying to get them under, but they overcame all obstaelea and consumed storne MILLION'S OF TONS OF COAL. A wall 10ft. in thickness was built round the affected parte, but the heat «racked the masonry and brought it down as fast Oa it was rebuilt. Let length' In 169'7, during the heavy floods at the end of the year, the Riv- er Tawd overflowed its banks and came pouring down into the mine. No fire could withetand such an immense volume of water hurled upon it,. and although the flames extended for 500 yaras they were quenched after hav- ing raged for a quarter of a century,. It is customary in mining districts to pile up the rubbish( extracted from underground in heaps near the pit's mouth, and these frequently become alight through opontaneous combus- tion. More than thirty years ago a fire broke out in &such a manner near a Yorkshire collieey and iS still burn- ing. From time to time eand has been thrown upon it to exclude the air, but without result. Unfortunate- ly a large amount of valuable home property stands near at band, and the tenants were promptly driven out by the smoke. Lately these spacious buildings have been letting at the ri- diculously low rental of a shilling a week. The tenants have the satisfac- ticm of knowing. thnt the'srerrns of in- fectious diseases cannot reach them, and that their habitations are prob- ably healthier in this respect than any in the county. AHEAD OF THE TIMES. ••••••••• r. •Thomas Fleming Says New A-ill:mil I., waving Too 'mil. Now Zealand Ls looked upon as the most progressirve country in the world as regards experimental government. Labor is protected there by hard and fast lawg, while ali differencies beitvreen employer and employe' are settled by arbitration. Even women can vote at electoral oampaign.e well as all mein Who have reached the age of 21. Here oho 15 an old age pension, while Government owner- ship is now ancient history, so far as the little colony is concerned. "Progress( iniay be all very well," declared Mr. Thomas Fleraing, an ex- tensive nattier and grain merchant at Invercargill, Gore and Winton, N. Z., who is &pending a few weeks in this country, "but I thiek the Govern- ment is doing too much. The lab- or legielatIon aro/burs too much ef close, and I doubt tbat the Arbitra- tion and Conciliation Board's are do: ing much good." HARD ON THE FARMERS. .The la.bour laws, explained Mr. Fleming, are very hard upon the far- mer. They aet the number trf hours his handa are to work, fix tho scale of wages to he pnid by him, reatrict him regarding the employment of boys, ete. "Why, it would be just as fair and equitable to legislate what a faemer is to receive fer his prodece." All shopa in New Zealand must close at nix o'clock and at one o'clock at least ono day during tho week. It la contrury to leer for store- keeper to Sell even a lord of bread after the hours of closing, "Onr Gove.rnarkent run.s nearly all the railways, 1 believe in Govern- ment ownership of rallwaye, but I dool think the railway should be under the geverning-power of the day. They should be cowtrolled by s non- pelitleal board of three expert com- reissieners, as was formerly done." Beside( operating the telegraph4:and telephones. the Governmeht elm runs a litte INSURANCE DEPARTMENT. This department competee successful- ly &gide/it the various insurance cam, parties. Montan eutffrage, *ye, Mr. Fleming, maim vary lime ditbranne ift the eleetkele. MIA experimental Goveenment, be deeleirea, te• frightening tesety Capital. em ittiolhied to think that we eve drifting Olo to analsaitint Vim aro go- ing ttio bat foe ties good of the estsuntrt" DeafeideratiOn With Austealia le tiot alitbt yat, though ft eretuniesion Ise bboot *ptio4oto4 by the 14% 2.045,0-, atAwkittit, broskitoto tho totirtao. tip/ et Seals * Smowtoss••••usayiem•P•soi•orims•••••.•••••••••••••••••••••• UP1"w"'.(IPS B7W11 SPLENDID HEROISM DISPLAYED HY MOO T RAILROArc is NOT SOME OF -THEM, 1.1•0.11. LagInear alrenossa ancialke4 Their Errol le lave ramengors-fitanesiiiiA.ter rforntrak041 a Moira aet--Ittereeel the Exprito Mat Last litaw Utz -Telegraph 'aerator aavott Taros liteadrea Lives. Not long ago Walter Peart and Henry Dean, the driver and fireman of a Great Western train from Wind. sor to Paddington, Morificed their live.s to slave the paasengers, says Lem - don Tit -Bits. Juat as the train was approttehing Acton istatton it was ductdenly enveloped in tl cloud of esteem azi (Minders. 'PM connecting - red of the engine had broken, and at atoll revolution one of the pieces %vim being driven through the easing ul the boiler. lu the explosion- that folloatal mass of piping, fire, cholera, and steam. were blown from the fire -box right into the tames of the driver and and fireman. Terribly injured an they were, they stuck marifully to their pasta until they hati shut off steam and brought the train to without mishap. Not till M• ein did they stagger riff the engine, to be arcenveyed to Rt. Mary 'el Hospi- tal, Paddington, where they died of their injuries next morning. From the north of Scotland a rare met of nativity heroism was reported trwelve months ago. One Tuesday morning a gang of men were at work an a broken rail on the Highland line just tiouth of Altnabrea station, when a distant whistle announced the ap- proaela of the Morning mail train from Wick to Inverness. The 1.1.1011 had a bogie with them, which threat- ened to muse a terrible &easter, as conipletely blocked the line, and there was no means of stopping the train, which ut this point always ran at full apeed. While his et:in:traded beeeme panto stricken John Morrison, a young married man with two children, strove with superhuman strength to remove the bogie from the rails. He eucceeded in doing this, but only at t SACRIFICE OF 1115 OWN 1,1i le The driver of the onemning train sa w him struggling with the obstruction, but could not etop in time. Morri- son had just got ate bogie off the metals when the engine caught him and cut the brave fellow to pieces. Not long since a number of plate- layers were engaged in the four - foot way near Nunhead station. JUst ae express' from Victoria to the Ory.s.tal Palace waS due it was noticed that a wat‘dge-lbolt of the line over which the train had to pass was loose. Despite the wernin.gs of his comrades. one of the men ran forward and 'be- gan ha intu,ering t the bolt to insure the seifety of the train. His efforts were quite euccessful, but before lei mulct get off the line he WOB FOCI. by the eng-ine and killed, Mr. Joon Coate,,q, the stationmaster at 'Upper Bank station, 011 M land railway, noir Swansea, perform- ed an extremely plucky act it fl`W years ago. On a Sunday night, while paseengers were crossing the level in large numbers he noticed an engine rushing towardd the etetion al full speed. He iit once jumped on the line and pushed the passengers aside, thus saving several from. CE,STA IN DESTRUCTION. He was, however, caught by the en- gine himself, and dashed to the ground receiving serious( injuries to his head, which laid him up for a considerable time. It appears got during a heavy fog a man fell pros t rate aoroSs t hi met- als in front of an approaching train. Having seetained two broken ribs he lay there helplesa until the inspector went to his assistance. Having jumped dower on the line, Dakin the man to the side and held him between the platform and the train until the latter had peseed. He thus rescued him from certain death. Great courage wee displayed by the driver of an Edinburgh express, which met with a distaster in Octolxr, 1894. Alter the collision, search 10115 Mild° Tor him under and around the wrecked engine, but he (multi not be found. was subaequently explained by the fact that, though aeverely bruised. and with ono arm hanging, he had managed to reach the signal -box some distance away to telegraph newt of the acc.ident, and to stop the second portion of the express from coming on. On the arrival of &Cc Lori his crushed arra WIL9 immediately ampu- tated, but the crporat ion FAILED TO SAVE HIS LIFE, He was certainly not the least of t he heroes of thi.• Nbrthallerton accident. Our Ahnerican cousins can boast of some brave railway men. A switc.h- man on the Pennsylvania line in Jer- sey City 'Mali one of them. Early one morning he saw- a boy amusing himself on the metnic, in blissful ig- norance at the train that tvas rapidly. approaching. Ile ahouted, but his voice failed to reach the youngster, who continued his piny. Then the switchrean jumped' ln front of the lo- eomotive, and with one hand puelied the boy off the line. With his oth- er he endeavoured to siving himself on to the pilot, but ritiseted his grip, fell, and was crushed to death be- neath the wheels of the engine. The boy was hot nt all injured. A suporb ant of heroistm was per- formed just nix years ago by a young railway telegraph operator. It hap- pened in the course of a forest and prairie fire in Minnesota, which do ye:dated the country for many rniles. The telegraphist, whose mime was Thomas Dunn, Aral being fast sur- rounded by the flamee, but before quitting his office he determined to dispatch a message for train to ho sent to a threatened district for the rescue of 000 persona. He succeeded in getting his moorage threugh, but by the time he had done thie the fire had cut off all chance of escape, and he perished in the Mimeo But the people for whom he sacrificed his life 4vere all saved, So he did not die in vain. ELECTRIC PRINTING. Laudon Invention Dem IneY WIth ef Ink In PrIncing. ft has been discovered that by in- troducing certain cheminals in the proseeis of Menufaeture, paper noly be printed without employing inks or any other" sensitizing matter. The pre- pared paper' is etaple, aned colorless, and renmine nneffected by any otter agent than an electric current. It al elleop conttnen paper, and yields instantly a dense, blaek, per- manent print, whioh requires no sub- eespient treatment, for there is noth- hig like ink or smirching to require drying, Tbe Machine for this elec- trieal printing is simply an ordinary prime divested of its inking meehnn- ism, and baring the priper-bearing atirface eastered with A suitable cOn- ducting metal. The form is con- nected with one pole of the current- atinply, which !Joey be an incandescent light wire, and the paper -bearing sur- face to the other. The paper thus be. tomes an Inert conduoting medium, end the cheerio:AL% which ere cembined in It, betel*, eleistrolyxed at the poittle eriateet, thus feirmitig the print. th appaarahaa -that eleetrie printing is mid greatly to reeenoble lithogeephie work, y Fashionable. ViVerl11/4•11bAllelhAll• f,iniaint, month Time heu ,lid beauty, a was a thw* "" "6 j,..0001.114 de - veritable Cupid'a b., cpolettitaugin the center of, y-i1c fa1P.Pwer ,ipo,owurtrw Todr etintral Pollut Ju°1 did tee tern - five most perfec t L11 1211.1.1.0 (Now adaya -"r 1"01: c, a 0 Lewin: mbicie.tittit juat 11.0 couspioti- oourrie, but the eutv tiva:y their a bseui e Lips w hic la curve dayo, except very )oung hildren, markedly are very seldom peen news - The remoras fur t 11,s t flange of ex- pression and cuetuur it. nut far to 'Women of retreat 01.11(0 csve grown far more self-relcan and iudepend- ent than they imse.1 to he eome of thew are even brave enough to face a mouse ra pa 11 ILI I ilt•JV ogressive, latter-day tunes aud seasons , quite a few of them dare 1. u hunt a "lion or a tiger lu losing tne !Mild retiring character which unre distinguished the inemberts uf the 'tiler tuate Bea" the childlike mouth of eui vee and cor- ner dtuiples has been lust also. Becau,se-the mouth ts the mirror of bunion emotions, "Guit made OUT eyee 911(1 II0808, make uur own inuatha," rune ale N1 lUr old French adage. The change le the charac- ter and outline uf t 110 tumuli woman-' ly would seen' to attest its truth. " Don't de that." a cleiter and ob- servant woman of the ulo school was wont tu observe to a nervous young business V. 0/1141.1 uf he esent gener- ation, noticing the hitter press her ;lipssoiunto a atraigle, and nervous '11 have a regular profes- sional WOMB-WU ihr,ctly." There 43 the ease in nutshell. BUSille.88 woman, club woman, profes- sional woman uf whatever kind you choose, actresa, society 110111Ull, OBO and all have the proftisoonal mouth, nowadays, in some inic ef its many forms and modifications. The yeomen all take life so very seriously in these times. Their st raw lit sued lips are merely representat ive of t he changing- uiental trend of modern femininity. The Madonna mouth, the mouth giv- en to the pictured Madonnas by the old masters, was he finest, extremest fume of the lips n loch curved so sweetly. No modern woman, perhaps, curne-s so near to possessing a mouth 0O this kind as Mrs Maud Sallington Booth, the "Little Alother," of Sal- ra ion Army and ‘'olunt eer fame. The maternal tenderness, he eternal, nev- er-ending persistent mother heart of all feminine humanity is expressed in that Madonna month. Yet the lovely lips of the "Litt le Mot her" are some - s% hill straightened ettital. Determin- ation, 81. rongt h character, tho strength and determination which lot v lifted the tv entieth century wo- man to her present pinnacle of suc- cess and accomplishment, straighten- ed the sweet mouth a little, neces- sarily. This is the roason why pro- fessional women invariably have such straight mouths. A fjne mouth and iidmirahly chiseled is t he professional mouth, hut something lacking in the " adorable curves," which marked the Madonna and thp old-time beauty. This is the difference also, between the mouth of the famoua beauties of other days and the heauties of our own. The present day beauty has force of character in almost as great measure as she has physical loveliness. Ergo -the lips which she sets firm- ly as the "outward and visible sign" of thia inward and t ransforming quan- tity, ia apt to be aittle more than a gently echaping line, It seldom. if ever, resembles the "rosebud" or "Cu- pid's bow" of her unforceful progen- itor. The artist's mouth of the present day would he a thing of curves and graciousness were it not for this fate- ful attitude of determination. The mouth of the act ress curves more than those of most of her stators, because she yields to tend expresses mere strong, human, net ura I emotions - even though they are borrowed ones - more than do most women. Yet the mouth of Mary Mannering, the /wo- man who revels in romantic parts, and who has herself lived out a roznantic love epiaode when she gave up an im- portant cnemgement to nurae back to life and health the man to whom she had been aecretly married, belongs to the straight rather than tbe curved ordee-and it curves far more than do the mouths of many actressos,much more than do the mouthe of the average, ordinary, everyday women whom one meets from day to day. The mouth of a happy bride or a young mother will icometimes take on curves of new and unsuspected beau- ty and tenderness, a sudden illumin- ating happiness will often cause a woman's mouth to 'fall into looser, more graciously curving lines. But the cares and responsibilities of wife- hood and motherhood frequently straighten out the curving lips again all too stoon, and the woman who meets life's changes and vicissitudes with a brave and courageous apirit often los- es the youthfulness of her mouth in so doing. The tender tuTves stiffen anti at raighten, anti soft fullness and roundness is pressed down and sub- dued. And yet -is it all necessary Stnile often rind be rne.rry if you would keep your lipe youthful and eurving," said a wornan who knew whereof she spoke, n famous 'beauty and one of the earliest 'of the beauty- crulture sisterhood of 'modern times, "but do not Orin, Grinning, and too much immoderate laughter, (stretch and spoil the mouth. T.hink of all the opltehaesrawni,,tethidnogs you tan imagine, but not think too much, Brains grotv by thinking, but not of- ten beauty, at all events, the beauty of the lips. And, love always, childish- ly, simply, implirity. ist the lit- tle thild and t he Cupid, 'mho have per- fect, adorable months, Above all, do not, when in pain, anxiety or stress of m incl, press t h e lip3 BO firmly to- gether. You will soon 'straighten out and spoil alit the turves bf your mouth if ,,yitolu jador.`e' sponsibility and the aense of bearing the burdens of things which has gradually reduced the curving feminine mouth to a straight line," said a thoughtful woman phyaitian not long since. " Be anxious and straightway your lips lengthen and lose softnees. Smile, be loving, gay, and light-hearted t hen look in the mir- rosrt.'u'dy Ole etraightened imouths of actresses, profeseional women, seolety women and well-known beauty alike. Then contrast these straightened mouths with those of the svoman from whom the Madonna wee painted, and of Mmeoltecarnier, the famous beauty who /Eyed and loved and felt far more thnn ehe thought or studied, et e how keeplerself in hest and moastv bean- t"tAltliindew°11hdeintl°nni:xt you feel like preaa- Mg your pretty lips ton firmly togeth- er remember the nuggeatione herein offered you, and -don't MS SAD ExPtrtigNet. Mre. Dordenhetute, writing- Are there tvro g'a tn eggai, Mr. Skinneyt Mr. Skinney-Yes, rna'AM, AtI4 60" casks.* a elecken, ' _ ,