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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1894-04-20, Page 6Iv • ' - ' • • -• • • PROTZOTION AOAtNET MOTH ER DIVORCE CAUSE -S. • • e Se 74.fer It -order the :11tirri o.im• Vow i . • - noltau %I:1110.W Of Wallate Very crisp, %edema whese to -wets, A Kansas wife reeently eeenred a 41i , `tore° from her husband. lutetium,. •eoleunily set forth in her petitiote "t defendant plumed fle. wee of this Pihhi" ti t causing it to at UflL' VeVy by eausiig the pi:tit:tiff ereet padu au i ' augnieh of mime ' An 011ie nem tem ettcurd tlivorte , beetle:We. as he. .clecitired =dor oet . "tie defendant palled this planted out of bed. by his whieIcers." A. lieupteeked lune utua seenrel tit- Tome in a Iheitleylvatue mart; beceuse, in the lanstmet• of his mil emit, stile derenelthit stray* tlas pl midia violent blow wit' her lezetieS A Missonri dimmer; was oleo granted beaus. he detente, a sews gadding about leavive t petietid sapeerless. Or if he gem any he ties t (too I it him. self." Out in Plinoisa wift4 semaral a deceee beeituse he: arm . le I threw the 13.1,hy her when sine id. uha with 110111 nue kettor spitting on the stove, • .4k canneeticnt ela.1 n•ot direree 4)i the ground tit It "um tleientlitur wonld not get up in the wordage our ttall this tplaintiff. nor do euyebing she was tow." A. decree was granted in a Massaehu setta court because "the eletentaut keens - this- plaintiff awake not -uf the • night quarreling." A Wisconsin man get a -divorcebe cause his wife kept a servant girl "wle, spit on the frying pan to!see if it was ho, encuel " A Jersey wife secured a -decision be. cause "the defendant, the husband, sleeps with a razor under 11.1s plow frighten this plaintiff." A Virginia. woman was set free be eause the defendant does not eoine home till 7,0 p.m. aiid than keeps fhb, , plaintiff awake talking." A..Tennesse creirt liberated a wife 'be cause "the defendant does not wash himself, thereby causing the plaittfi2 great mental. anguish." lit Illinois a decree was obtained be - cense a loneesufferiug hasband c ow• plainecl that -timing the past your the defendant steace thie pl i 1- repeated ly with pokers, flat irons awl. ;Aber hare . substances." .In Minnesota a decree was gieen to .wife because the defendant never eutt. Lis toe nails, and, beiog restless in his sleep, scratches this plaintiff severely.' • A. youthful lieutucky hameind steam. ed a divorce on the erouna that "the de- fendant came into tue beans) n the morning after tee murriage end beat this plaintiff' 00 tile head with her ghee heel:" A. New York until pleaded in his peti- -- ttor. for divorce that "the defendant would- not sew on this.plaintiff's buttons, neither would she allow him to go to fires at night" The "court decided that the plaintiff was entitled to 0 aecree on the gronnd that this oppres:don was Cruel and. inhunian..-St Louis Re - Public. Tug color or Eleetrielty. • At a meeting. of the Dritieli Meteoro- logical society at Loudon, S.:lel-fuel Lid - well made a remarkable experiment, showingdthe effects of electricity upon • . steam. It is a well known fact that the shadow of a jet of steam cast upon any white' bachgromul under ordinary cir- entastrmces i ; of feeble intensity and of a neutral tint But., however, if the jet bo given e. discharge of electricity just at the moment when it comes in contact with the air, the density of the Shadow is• amazingly increased as a result of con- elensation, and it assumes a peculiar ottoage brown hue with lines and waves Merging into inky blackness. Mr. Bidwell, tho only porsou to my knowledge who has ever made these ex- :.peritnents. scientifically, suggests that the electricity promotes a coalescence of the exceediugly minute particles of war- ' ter contained in the jet of steam, thus forming drops large enough to obstruct the more.tefrangible rays of ligat, but 'why the color of the sharlew should change from neutral to shades of at least three well defined colors he does not tit- , tempt to explain.. From one of his late articles I gather ideas which point to the Intense blackness of thunderclouds be- ing due to similar causes. -St. Louis Re- niblicAn Interrstleg Letter. A curiously addressed letter passed through the post Oleo at Madrid recent- ly. The address was itperfect rebus. At the left-hand side was the fiearet of a ludy. This made it clear to flex the one to whom the letter was addressed be- longed. Over the lady's head was a Hs- . eng sun, which. was interpreted as in - &eating that her name was Aurora. • For her surname there was a hill with a castle tit its foot, or, in Spanish. "Mon - ties y Castillo." For the town there was Mie plan of a city drawn, in which the Alhambra appeared. Of course that zneant Granada, especially as a porno- Iota:late was drawn beside the plan of the city. The address was completed by a number in one of the streets of the plan. The postal authorities took three ids tee stttdy this curiosity, and then deli:tined it in triumph to• "Senorita, Atirora Mattes y Castillo, Ataeayas No. hte chranada." So proud were the postal patsethorities of this feat that they had the elope photographed and printed in alattridpapersasproof of the acumen the department. All the foreigners faded were very much amused by affair.. WA, 1,1*.treht 101re Popping. mons employ open wood fires, flii* Or" afford, and for the oriel theroonis. Soinekinds of 11, ilitueliftitroftia on the car- .% todunikssmelsatunoyance. To t t nopIgngi Itura„.the convex k) le of t e stick -to .the open a I much of it will be prevented, •eifkotilittch wood as you • THE WINGIIAM TIM S, APRIL 20, 1894. S. PWITINO TUX TEEM, Whitt do we Omit when we plant the witit tree? ' The most d .strautive of the household pest?. it1Z•te .:111- 1. au. the priuclipel ro. quisite tor prometion isminet it is • aromptaes 0a,c0. The hest way tO ,Wt-ites•L 4111Lent friNVI the raveges of 1.1i; busy ere:tame it to wren. them in • metesertom itome very e treed te leave riot teau ..1 it.' vetch: he whieli n. • taor teas ha i ite mem 111. This should be does ziteerly at tee season as ells gar' wants tat be *level. and they elioniti be wed, ;nevem ;I.1 hatated before wrath Pole- ueler to (11.4)110 any eggs that 11-4.ty 1.10.-nA already deposited on them. If they are put Away late, it is • Safer to teem them sometime Miring, 3nly. Tee worm will teen be batchel,. if any eg. e; ha 1 (femme(' to be left in the a:trine. et, real can be seen and lie:inte it does any cleanse. Co ler ch,sts are of uo more use in seeping oat moths than any other tight box. Gem 0;14111)1;3)r is sometimes put aniong woolen garments,. and tobacco is also nota ; lint though thew may hive some effect in keeping the miller away, they are not always, safeguards. anti the sorest way is the ...eimplest, that of wecais t_, -he gueneuts so Welt noth- at t eel t eetranee. To keep • them oat t41.11,rpe • ettrillkle the floor with tnrateithie or benZiaie before laying the carpet, ,and with .a small, flat paint b.m.:41:1 al* ;Ly freely nailer the surbase au.I in all cracks 1,3 mzint3 poured. over fnrait0re and carlets whero moths are will kill them. Great care should be ta,cen uet to use the benzine near aflame 4'0' tiny loud and there should be no, game or fire i n the rzann. until the filmes have peg m 1 .away. seecehedas or ocean itevers. . in these attys.of great mtchani- cal improvemeut, stoke -holds are losing their terrors. They are getting. to be quite comfortable. Great strides have been made LI the last twenty years in increasing the speed of ships, and it isn't toe inuclito sey that seine of it conies through better and stronger boilers. • 1 Twenty year e ;Imo the .boilers of the fast- est. slips suetained out). 70 • pounds of steanepressure to the 'equate inch, but i now they sustain •trith ease 16a punnets. This means more tem elouble the steam than formerly. and -mach faster twisting of the screw, It elm mewls more coal and more stokinee bet not near so much in proportion to the gain in steam. This is because fnruacns halm also been im- proved. bat the work of feeding their angry throats is hard eas'ugh; so hard, indeed, that steamship owners have found that it p tys to leek after the com- fort of the stokers as -ell AS others of the crew, anti hence stokeholds are be- ginning to be ventilated and to be more comforteble as working -places. , The temperature of stoke -holds is still above 100' when brisk work is going on, but ventilators keep pouring fresh cool air into the place. and the stokers ahnost never suffer from exhiustion in new steanathie4 The' ender works only eight hours a (ley. an 1 this is divided into two • 'mac: t VA" Of four hours eaele That be wades four hours. then has eight hours' rest, awl then works four hours, mid doesu't think his lot 'is ench a bad one After all. To be sure. on merchant- men he has to be hounded all the time. to do his work properly, and he expects it, for he has a chronic objection against worsing wiehont being driven to it, and oftener than not doesn't think it worth while to wash his face in his eight hours' interval of rest. He probably wouldn't thank you for your sympathy if you tried to tell hini 'that his life is hard.- Harper's Young People. arm, ne elitism le Frieuelship originates in harmony of sentitneut'i, accounetnied by kindly feel- ing. cecina spring up in a, night, for the harmony cemiot he proved to exist except after long iuterconrse. It grows unconecionely ; there. is no purpose in it. One does not set out to establish friend - shies aria edentate in advance ou the" advantage.; to he derived therefrom, for, as Cicero reCIIIrks. "hi friendship we find mailing 1 use or insincere; every- thing is straLtlit•forward and springs from the heart." No author has written on this sill doet with more appreciative insight than Cicero. and here are two more of his observations: tEvn.yone loves himself not that 111313, exact from himself some reward of his affections, but that, fur his own sake.. every one is dear to hinmelf. And 1101094 this same principle be traneferred to friend- ship. a trne friend will never be found; for sneh an otio it, as it were, a second self " " is an old principle of genuine and real friendship that friends shonla alwaye have the same wishes, nor is there ally enter bond of friendship than alt agree nent in and comintinity of designs end wishes." To complete the picture of true friendship one may quote, from George Ebers, that "friend- sliirt geadoe when two friends without speaking a word to each other can, nevertheless, find happiness in being together ;" and this from George Eliot: "It is hard to believe, long to- gether, that anything is 'worth while' unless there is some eve to kindle in comtnop with our own, some brief word uttered now and then to imply that what is infinitely precions to us is precious alike to mother mind."• e elitist the 4.1-11p 11 114 1 ort be the eele We taunt the meet to entry the roils; We pinta the plunks tu •wilbsitind the keel, the Iceelsou, end beams and Personal rateanlinese, Preventing Mildew on tioctoberries! Two, sides, Aeonseieutiousmother realises the uecee- Prof, W. J Green of the Oulu. Expert- I 'rhea; am two sides to eve say of impressing upon the minda of her meat Station, states, i '" "wet- t'' "" SIIR1 CIO teOtIlrer- I rep It children the importance of pereond dearth. ' inquiry, that We large English gooseberries. to nip in the bud partly formed habits that so commonIS. destroye thematt thin country, there are two sides. .11'1 this ,Ittneture nem The closest surveillance is required , may be grown free from the mildew thee that often followa. the exoitement and die- 1 thne anon after the leevee open, title seta :knew !maim= ialot.lombet.looking lIttltk man aka up in ; find that there is an mud& you'll ones committed to our care Some child- lath hide co unmet celled liver of snl dims the Trent sot ta say, Well it' you've POOR, I'll just sep out and • tlereeten to injure the health of the little I by suitable spraying. Ilea 1 !roe ea e poet on al y a yodel to cultivating 1 dissolve an ounce in, four phone of wean., I habits of cleanliness, arid the exhaustion and spray three or four times, the first 1 I knOW there is an iail;10, DM If I the bathing process, tempts. many mothers I Berdeeux mixture after the fruit -is growa it by Inv not- coming ha*. Melons that take piece before 414 during ',steam does not adhere to tlte'fruit like the , to postpone indefinitely the daily treatment ; and rips. Tbat has bean the exeerietete totill'll, And as be walked up the _T._011 Mean' t be alarmed it' I shouldn't Every child should be seeplied with e I in.enitrl'hoianye.oess of others. who have tried this ...'1 I -. 'll ,I. b.,.1.1 d '''i eyes o le w lo e am u c. Of tl l I 11 ic ) Their that insures perfeet health. tooth, nail flesh brush, mid they also 1 . . sympathies were with him, but they - They should be made to .understand thee After Were deficient in noral COarttiee, should be taught how to Use thern properly; 1 swift ant l sure punishment will followj hence neglect Of these important (Wife% Teeth!' April and May are the keys of the should be -brushed at least twice a airy, and ' year: the finger netts cleaned whenever the space Thunderstorm in April is the end under the nail is filled with particles, of hoar frost. A. child may be, to use a homely expres-, Whatever March' does not want, aon, "up to the eyes in dirt," but vigorous April brings along. scrubbing with ' a soft- flesh brush, will A cold and moist .April fins ' the quickly remove, every particle of dirt and cellar and. fattens the cow. make the skin clean, firm and rosy. April borrows three clays from A great point is gained when children March, and they are 111. • can be induced to listen attentively to A dry April is not the farmer's will, illustrated stories ou the subject of °Ionia rain in Awn is what he wills. ' ness. . We knew e certain boy who was, to . When April blows bis horn; use the words of' 0. relative, "chronically 'Tis good for hay Mid corn. dirty."' This boy, WaS very much impress- When. April makes much Aoise ed with a story about' a tart who noter- we will have plenty of rye and hay. cleemed or purified his Anger nails. One When on the 21th rye. -has grown day, while romping with his sister, cue of SO high so as to hide' a crow a good his nails scratched the flesh of her %rm. In harvest may be expected. - less than ten hours the inflemmation was so , great that blood poisoning set in and in 0 I . . Dust in Oampet3, few days a loved sister passed, away -4 veritable victim of uncleanliness. 1 Dust is always unwholesome, if not A. child who'was he the habit of plotting pOsitivelY poisonous, and although the 'ytill nha knee* I ; see lf there ate tWO Shies' to thiS p y • • .1 d • We phut the *hip when wo plant the WintZtreed'o we plant when We Went the tree? We Went the home for yeu and me. We plain the ratters, the ehingles, the I . iloors, We plant the studdiug, the laths, the doors. 1 The beams and sidings, all pints that be; We plant thehiutee when we plant the tree, Parente Bespoesibility, Respecting the duties of parents towards children, Herbert Spencer severely criticises over-inchlgence, by whiter children are made to receive pleasure of an artificial kind. For the leisure parts of my child's life pleasure enough can bo found in the natural world itself, and in the common incidents of life. A great evil is that by which child " becomes blase before life in its full form has been entered opon." So also does he disapprove of the accumula- tion of large fortunes for the benefit of ohildren. The desire to enable a child to live without lieber, in so far as is shows , beneficence at all, shows a mistaken form of it. The whole custom he thinks injur- ; lots alike to the parent, the child and to society. Temptations to inactivity mid carelessness when young proem abnormal lives which are at variance with the beet interest of society. Gentlemen. ---Two years ago my hus- band suffered from severe indigestion, but was completely cured by two bottles of Bur- dock Blood Bitters. I can truly recom- mend it to all sufferers froni this -disease. Mus. Jonx HIM), 13 Ci-oss St., Toronto: . A Clean Conscience. A. little girl , said to me once, I hate to . hash dishes, bot when mammy tells me to I try and wash them, so ray consoienc is clean, too. It sounded very funny from her lips,for she was a little will-o'-the-wisp, with saucy black eyes. But she was right. In the simplest daily task the conscience can be washed clean too. I saw four mon carrying bricks one day: One worked busily while bis master's eyes were watch; ing, but smoked by a sunny wall in his absence; one tossed 'bricks into his hod with feverish energy and ran, up the plank with hurried steps in the morning, but by night was unable . to work from fatigue; nein, another wandered with idle steps, stretched his arms, yawned and slowly half filled his hod; while the fourth industriously plied backward and forward from the brick pile to where the masons were at erork,dili- gently,methodicallyivorldng,withont haste, without waste. 'Which elm of the four do y m think had at night best earned his daily wages ? Nortway Pine e yrute ebres coughs, colds, asthma, bronchitis, hoarseness, sore , throat and diseases of the treat and lungs. • Price 25 and 50c. orating Wax, How to Wake grafthig wax; Take one part tallow, two parts beeswax. and four parts resiu. Melt thoroughly and pour into cold water.. W twit cool enutigh work dee molasses cantly-iming a little tallow on the heads to keep tile wax from elielcing, An Atmliesdien toe Memo To make boots waterproof and keep them soft melt and inix thoroughly one pound of thiloW, half pound of bees- wax. one-quarter pound of resin, two ounces of neat's foot ad and two ounces if glycerine. Apply it warm tn the bode Don't be .too Positive. Boys,don't be Oh certain. Remember that nothing is easier than to be mistaken; and if you permit yourself to be so very positive in your mistakes a great many times, every. body will lose confiaence in what you- say. Never make a positive statement unless yin know it is as you say. If you have any doubts, or if there is roomdor any, remove the possibility by examining before wpeaking, or speak cautiously. Don't be too certain. John, where is the hainmer ? It is in the corn -crib. • • No, it's not there; I have just been look- ing there. ' Well, I know it; 1 saw it there not half an hour ago. If you saw it there, it must be there of course; but suppose you go and fetch it. John goes to the corn -crib and presently returns with a small axe in his -hand. , Oh, it was the axe I saw; the Montle sticking out from a half bushel measure; I thought it was the hammer. I You said positively that you did see the 1 hainmeromt that you thought yen sew it. There is a great difference between the two answers. 1)o not permit yourself to make a positive statement, even about a smell matter, unless you are -quite sure; for, if you do, you will ' find the habit growing upon you, end by and by you will begin to make loose replies to questions of great importance. Doti% be too certain. -...... -a . • - • - • fi ."Be,d /3106d causes blotchee, 'hells, pimples, abseettses, elders, serofula, eta., llurclock 13Iood Bitters mires bad blood in any form front a common pimple to the worst scrofulous sore, 1 I Do yott think you love me, Dennis? a4ked Judy. Go 'way, darlin4 av coarse I do, Itow do you know it, Dennis? Be the way 1 appreciate your Drisence when Gnu away from • Ye. April Proverbs, a wet April follows n dry hey and Bladder dieeesee relieve I. in six hours by the "Groat South Arniricalt Kid. nee Cure." This great remedy is 4, great, surprise and delight to physicians on 4,0^ court of its exueoaing pro timeless in relieve ing.painin the bladder, kidneys, batik and every part of the grimly). pass .g's in nudeano 11 11.44, It relir '.es rotention of water • and pal 1 itt missing it elmost immediately. It you want ;OA reliof ard Imre this he your re,oetty( Sold at Chisholm's drug. , store. Hogan-!larrity tells me his apar-. r.tmints is heated by steam, Fwat do you think of that fOr rogan--;-Sure the maii tells the truth. His wolf() is takin" in We haw; since lie. lost ids job. Itheumattim Cared in it dey.-Scnith- American lthenmetio Cured Rheumatism. end Neuralgia radically oures in 1 to 3 days. Its action on the system is rein crkable noa. mysterious. It 'removes at mice the 'cause of the disease immediately di tap ears. The' '• first nose greetty teinefite. cents. Warranted at Chishohn's ,Irti scare. and rubbing his nose, communicated the tidy housekeeper • may faithfully bacterial poisonto the sensitive skin around guard against it, in som.e Sev. eral of the - Sea islands. the nostrils, and for many weeks the chilS's way it- will always find an entrance have a species of mulberry tree from head and face were covered with. fcsteriug into our living rooms, and more sores. , . •espeeially into our carpets. • Sweep- Personal cleanliness isa duty that should ing will only remove it from the be taught both at home and at school, and carpet to thi frtrniture, which after a a vast aliment of good. will be accomplished careful .cluSting, only retarns it to when parents and teachers insist upon the its old lodging -Place, and for this ce/tivation of habits that promote health reason many housekeepers think that and happiness. •I the lees the dust is stirred in sweep-. • Mg, the better the work. is done;. and Skin. Diseases are more' or less direct- tea leaves and diiMpanecl Meal are ly occasioned by bad blood. B. B, B. cures the following Skin Diseases: Shingles, strewn abtohteitantlsite• 99 Erysipelas, Itching Bashes, Sea Rheum, gather up alil1.1l t (11)11'cebo.rtleiter o its Scald Head, Eruptions, Pimples, Blotches, by real -loving all impurities from the blood e,• . . which cloth is made. The bark is. stripped off and nuleerated in water,. the inner fibers are taken and maim- • factured into a very sett, pliable cloth,. much resembling thick, .coarse, oiled. paper. It is used for clothing. • Bow Qot a edunntht" Picture - 8411d .25.iSunlight" Soap wrappers (wrap- per hewing the words Why Does a Wo- inau imek OW 80011er The I a men") to Lever .Bros., Ltd., 4» &Vt. St„ 'Toronto, met ynn will receive by. post a pretty pic- ture, free from advertising, and well worth frOm a commonthe Pimple to • worst Scro- Another class Of h011.SCli:COPOI'S hare, framing. This is an es-iy way to decorate. your imam. Thi 4wap is the beat in the. miwket and it; wilt only cost one cant post- ap • to 8101 in till wrappqrs, if you leave' ends open. Weite your melress care- fully. ,fulons Sore. . , come to the conclusion that precisely course•thc opposite is the one to be Pneikmatic-Tired Wheels. I pursued; that a good stirring up, and .. •Pneu Enable- ti red wheels' of ordinary then a good blowing Out, is what the size are now made for use on' various dust Deeds, and a.brielt wind thowing e , - ,•„te equipped appenred in Dublin in the fall of, getting rid of it. .Probahly the of 1893-a brougham and a jaunting i best way is to,take up the ea niet oar. The tires of the brougham were ! men, and have the dust thoroughly three inches. in diameter. A jaunting • beaten out as it , hangs upon the car 'with pneumatie tires made in Now clothes line. York has tires three and a half inches • weeh Atteteg d , e, .1.3 els-, • , in diameter which do not look'at all out ,rooms that are much used, it is.a area of the province is Arty& at 22,2,- Of place on a vehicle of that weight and good plan. to spread newspapeN ON4.1r 650 -square mile:4, of which 187,000) ' inflated • the:11001's, then. take clean straw- and at ta sqiumake.= r‘e miles of hind nnsold. . The- ,wof Great Britain anct ! inch. There has been relining io this then put your carpet down. It will. or _over 65,003 les; than the portion kinds of vehicles. The first vebicles so threueti ti • te . descHption. The tires are te 2000111 is Here are sone of the latest statistics which will ptobahhe amaze the people. . of Great Britaia and perha some of our own re3idents„. who may WC the new neap just issued by the Ontario • government. The- pressure of 100 pounds to the -square : scatter it evenly over the papers, and Ireland is only 121,115 square miles,. city since March 2 of the present year a • lot the cl,ust throu h on. t tile runabout equipped with pneumatic I and 'clouds of dust wi.11 not follo;pthe crown. of.:.Ontario still in the hands of the tires. Pneumatic tires for the various 1 broom on sweeping day. The carpets kind of vehicles vary in size, weight,and will last longer with this Rubio. than costmccording to the weight to be earned with any. other, and when you take. Hood s Cured. on them. The tires forth e • runabout thein. up again, y0tt find the, just mentioned cost' eihe Tires for a ; dust lodged on the papers, and After brougham would bo much more carefully' removed to the i'tthbish costly. They are essentially a luxury.pile, you Will avoid filling your lungs Invalid chairs are equipped with them,. with poisonousdust, as but .1itt1e will and there has just been ordered in this be found on sweeping the floors. • Scrofula in tho Neck -Bunches All city an ambulance with poeumatie-tired In putting down carpet's in spare Cone Now. , wheels.-LNew York Sun. e rooms, where they are not very like- _ • ly to be taken up very often, it is au English English Spavin Liniment removes all h ------- excellent plait to scatter smoking I' hard, soft, or calloused Lumps emit Mem- tobacco over the paper, to guard ishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs, againSt moths and the Buffalo bug. sS pprlittnintss,, s oirthailla Swollen STwheroenaya, CS:I:bees,' This is a. sure preventive against the' etc. Save $50 by use of ono bottle. War- atttaeles of moths, and carpel -S. may I rantedat Chilmohn's drug store. • be left down in spare rooms for a I -1. number of years. ..Toblteco or snuff I Others Failed Markin Ilis Own,phiced among firs, and then Rested) A. crowded coach started for one of those •lip tightly in a paper- bag, can be I excursions which take place daily during i kept tinkly through , the stuniner the season in the English hike distriot. !sort6on. Just as a vary deep' descent was being 1 approached, the paasengersimard the guard i n_ ep_ween the 12th of Dec., 1803, suggest to the driver the advisability of • and March 1:411, 189.!., there were (16 :. keeping the dragon and apply -in the brake -rn try it to -day without," said the eOnthetions made by magistrates in . dauntless Jehu, "Hold herd, ladies and 13ruceCo. Of these Police ithigis- entlemen," and forthwith,. gatheringWalkerton, en trate Robb, of adjud;eat- not a little terrifying to the majority of the 1 AAveast, he start. cd ni IvileolflitnttioritginttiTTaiLdigtoutol.1:erei:oeteinnts‘e, . tuathrola, Several kinds of medicines which - .10 total Inman t of flees ir C. 1. flood &Co., Lowell, Mass.: his ribbons with the utmost woe, amounted to $503 of , e' " ' in ewer of Hood's sarsaparilla. For IlYe years 1‘ inch hedo Gentler:reit:eh feel thee I cannot say enouglt ed down the ,declivity at a pace whioli was have been troublea with scrofula in my neck passengers. menced te take 1100d'S SarSitpalitla there wet solicitously, to a pommels but nervous "Have ye.a bit of heee eha 001n fhles was $20,21i. The. closing eX(trtiliCS ttle, (War- largo hunches on my neck so s ore that I could I trled did not do me fitly good, and whoa tome gentleman. Blanch! A Sangervilie. Maine. "Chalk ? was theirritable reply,. 'Chalk, 10 Veterinary College, Toronto, were s rsa. indeed? What can you want with chalk at I Ilelq on Sa.1.0 turday, arch 2. A 00 S a • nC ru& tires .were successful, not bear the slightest touch. Tahen 1 had takerr in Ones of sad eoneern, "I was just think- . "Oh," was the misoldevoue anstver,given i , tunh a moment as this,? I Aintrilgelig tillirtenlibster of juniors we noticc,. onebitehttdleteetef ntthlitsnyeddii:Inopee, atrlue:ve,oreBnwatess:airdi toe limes o ..._i. ... Aall-, son 0,. gone, ore 1 had finished the second the f Ar ` r (4- ' t Mr 1 ter Grant Culr.fss. We, coa. bunches had frig that- Nome of our legs end artut are 1 . • t AeWoon, thaterville Maine the bottom of the hi% end thee it would be will .,8 likely to be flying about before we reach With 'Sly. 3. Johnston, nd the summer months 111 him on his sticeeSS lie ins the poristaitio aottinot allmontan, oina. ,gratul to • IL /rye V, S., Hood.* Pm. cure constipation by rester.. 1111* do not bo induced to buy any other.. decide to take flood ie Bumper very desirable for every YUAN ttI Mark his 111,11,e own, for.the purpose' 01 identilleation." "er0 , • ' • --1 #14 =rim ARM CHAIR. Nob& tette in the little' arm.chi'L It steeds itt a corner dim; PI But a white-haired mother gaziel And yearningly thinking of *1141 Sees through the dusk of long ogi The bloom of her boy% Sweet ,As he rocke so- merrily to and fro, With a laugh that cheers the p1 Semetimee he holds a book ill hie Souietiiues 11 pencil and slate, 'le lesson is hard to uncterstunti, And the figura; heed to make; But she Nees the nod of his father So proud of the little son, And she hears the word so often t "No fear of our little one.' 'They ware wonderful days, th sweet days, When a.ohild with sunny hair Was hers to scold, to kiss and to At her knee in the little chair. She Iota bim back in the busy yr When the great world caught .And he strode away past hopes t To his place in the battle's vat But now and then in a wistful di Like a picture out of date, She sees a. head with a golden gl • Bent over a pencil and slate. And she lives again the happy d The day of her young life's sp 'When the small arm -chair atom the way, The centre of everything, -f Margaret E. Sangster, itt) 4/0 j d • . • .-1- Prying as it Should Be. Probably no mode of cc oftener used for meats than and yet, jtidging from the I done, it is also one of the leas stood, for, like the famous lit1 "When it is good it is awfull; And when it is bad it is hor Perhaps sueh failures are habit.more than to ignore She is indeed a courageous 'who, when driven from eat ing until late at night -as farmers' Wives are compelk ecareity of help, to bo - employ the easier because miller methods of cooking, she knows they are less desi There are two methods 4 known in English as "dr: and ,"wct frying." Dry the quicker, older and more mode of frying food in a site in a small quantity of fai only enough of the latter t food from adhering to the r wet frying is the- more 2210 <if immersing food in bo Aside from a few sorts ( bacon, liver, eggs and hat tables, wet frying is by f'at satisfactory mode, for,' co the general opinion Gf him cooks -that is persons AO skilled in this mode of coo food is far less likely to and gteasy.. It .is also economical mode, because • more easily kept from bu if properly cared for, c continuously. However, not be sodden cooked method, if good fat is use( food properly prepared Lard, which is oftener use other fat, and is general': to be the best, is more g any other, and should ne, alone when it can be avc toline is better than lard, fat -that is, the, trimmh mutton, pork and veal. soups and boiled meats cl carefully rendered and far better than either. But good fat and dry fi any means insure success • smoking hot, and the foo( must also be perfectly food can by no possibilit: dry, crisp surface. If breaded, it should be a 10 or 15 minutes before should be fried immec being dusted with flottr,it is done should be wi • yet fat should not mall, brought to that degree c sure to burn. The comm• testing it with a piece Of br sideving it hot enough wl browns quickly, is probat general rule as can be given, bers that the smaher the al the hotter the fat should he A frying basket is very e in using it ahoulcl never be the bottom of the vessel. tome be stuck in the lean .or into croquettes, fritters,. pan should be perfectly em In dry fryiug, the pan shol shaken or jerked to keep , stickle& rish should be rubbed pepper before it is fried, a should be drained in a he two thicitues4 of warm Serve on to lt,,t platter tirade, and nee. a lay one Ca:eneges, cutlets, fritte • draihed en warm brown p