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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1884-9-26, Page 2Box Boa Over u team lavor IKN1 tlj pest Ors tare t 1 1:' l of tw' 13. Dt l Jar the` sail w MAI yowl lost Mit of �f bet a sex elf Tr DM I cea No col do gel 1e. the 1 j tkkip t t1q rM of t 2 THE HURON S JNAL. FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 1884. Honseholb Hints. To make gond mustard, take three tea- spooefule u1 ground mustard, a teaspoue- d white sugar. Mia tomeher, pour ower bailing water and mix to smooth, tkisk paste. When cold add a lealpoun- of an and vinegar to make thin enough fee use. BwaiT FIcaLsn Peat' .—To seven p00ads of psechta silver three and three- quarter pounds of sugar, ort• quart of vimgar, two ounces of cloves and two manses of suck cuuasnou. Pare the peaches and stick one or two cloves Into sash one, Boil the sugar and vinegar, with the cinnamon for Ove minutes; then pet in the peaches. When cooked till thoroughly done, take them out. Buil the syrup, reducing it to nearly half, .ind pour it over the peaches. Ycu a Flue. -To eight pounds of pealed and staved peaches add three pounds of brown sugar, cook without water until the au;pr penetrates and they are semi -transparent. Take out, spread on dishes and dry ie. the sun, sprinkling on a little syrup while drying ; pack in jar, or boxes in layers with powdered sugar between. Thus put up they will keep for any length of time, and are nearly equal to figs. Tomatoes may be preserved in the same way. Pargsaysn Totrarou. — To seven pounds of tomatoes add one pint of vine gar,"three and • half pounds of sugar, one ounce of cloves. allspice, and cinna- mon. Scald and peel the tomatoes, which should be fully ripe, and dram them. Let the vinegar, sugar and spices buil for live minutes, then put the toma- toes auto the kettle and boil for half an hour. Take out the tomatoes with a akiminer and boil down the syrup till thick and pour over them. Keep in jars closely covered. Farm anb Garden. A parasitic grub is rwp,rt.d to have at- tacked the Colored., beetle in New Jee- se; in such members as to pereeptibly thin of this pest e1 the potato Uhl. The rparaett. ..ease to be the larva of some kind of a ay. Maine papas report that the c owsump- tion of Paris grime m that State daisy's: amounts to 00,000 in value. Putaeo bogs are an expensive pest to this ouun- try but it is fortunate that by the use of a few hundred tb.wsaod dollars many million* tit dollars worth of potatoes ere annually saved Coouanet oil rake is used in Java quite largely for live Mock hod. It is mads by crushing the kernel and extract- ing from it the oil, by means of hydrae tic pressure. The refuse left after the extraction of the oil is then pressed into cakes, and is eagerly devoured by cattle, who are stud to fatten eery rapidly on it. The numher of the varieties of com- mon fruit seems astonishing to the aver- age purchaser of the hunted stock of fruit on the stands. Cf the pear there are as many as 1,500 kinds named in some works of horticulture ; over 1.500 different sorts of apples are grown, there are no fewer than 150 aorta of plugs, over 100 varieties of guuseoerry and about 125 kinds of strawberry. For shipping potatoes from distant points, barrels are much better than sacks ; they are inure sa'eeble. Ascan with care, sending (July those that are large, smooth, sound, and as uniform iu size as possible. Use strung, sound, un- iform barrels, shake down very thorough- ly, and till so full that the head will press yery tigktly upon the potatoes. Torero SAeca—Put a dozen tomatoes in a stone jlr and let them stand to • hot oven three '.r four hours. When cool remove the skins and mix with the pulp and juice two teaspoonfuls pulveris- ed ginger, one head of garlic chopped very fine. two tablespoonfuls vinegar, one salt spoonful of cayenne pepper and a dessert spoonful of salt. Put in bot- tles owtles sod seal tightly. This sauce will keep well a long time. To Pas,tnvr PEA. -R[4. — Peel free- stone peaches and cut then in halves ; weigh them and take their weight in sugar; put your sugar In a porcelain kettle and cover it well with cold water ; add the beaten whites of two eggs to every ten pounds ; stir it well and put it over the fire ; boil and skiin it until per- fectly clear, then put in the peaches and auk slowly until the syrup is as thick as honey, carefully removing the scum that rises to the top. Put them in your jars warm, and place paper, dipped iu white of egg, on the top of the peaches. Fast- en securely, and keep in a dry place. Casey SALAD. — Take nice, white celery ; clean with a brush ; do not scrape celery with a knife for any kind of dish ; break it and put it into, salt and water, to makeit hard mud crispy. For dress- ing take yolks of four eggs, well beaten ; add to this one tablespoonful of mixed mustard, one-half teaspoonful of Clack . pepper ; set the ran sailing in a pan of hot water, and cook till it becomes as thick as custard ; set away to cal. When cold add a quarter oaf a cup of olive nil, if liked, if not, use swyet cream to Wn the dressing. Take celery nut of the water, drain through a colander, and pour the dressing over it just before sending to the table. Ornament this dish prettily with the tops of the celery. New WAV To Coot CBlegiNA. •-Cut the chicken up, put it in a pan and cover it over with water ; let it stew as usual, and when done nuke a thickening of cream and flour, adding a piece of but- - ter, and pepper and salt. Have made and bake a pair of short cakes, made as for pie -crust, but roll thin and cut in small squares. This is much better titan chicken pia and more simple to make. ,+The crusts should be laid on • dish and the chicken gravy poured over while both are hot Moc. Lzeos Pia -One cup of sugar. one heaping tablespoonful of flour, the yolk`f.` of two eggs (save the whitest or the top othe pie), 00o teaspoonful of ex- tract of lemon, two-thirds of stewed pie - plant; raiz the sugar, flour, eggs and ex- tract, together ; then pour on the water, then the pia•plant ; bake with one crust; wheo done beat the whites to a stiff froth and spread it over the pie, setting it back in the oven for four minutes. An OLn Dux. --A dish equal to the best steak and cheap enough for any man, to prepared from the shank of a beef with some meat unit. Havethe bone well broken ; wash carefully to remove bits of Ione ; corer with cold water ; watch when the toiling begins and take off the scum that rises. Stew fire or six hours till the 'muscles are dissolved, break the treat small with • fork—far batter than chopping—put it in • bread Pats, boil down the gravy till in coolies* K will turn to a stiff jelly. Where this ri la done, gelatine is quite superfluous. of Add salt, and, if liked, other seasonin,p, and pour it hot mein the meat ; atir ti- there is variety and intrinsic beauty in "ether and set aside over night, when it them, they serve the purpose of pictures, will cut into handro.ne mottled slices for The curtain decoration scheme above breakfast or supper. mentioned contemplates the draping of Overall OtctLST.—Twelve oysters, if the mantel either with two sets of cur - large, double the number if small ; six tuns, one depenoing from the cornice t"p one cup of milk, one tablespoonful and terminating at the shelf, and the ofbutter, chopped parsley, salt and either hanging from the shelf to the floor, Lpepper, chop the oysters very tine ; twat or with a long pair of curtains reaching ika and whites of theeggs separate- fr cornice oe floor, and folded back at Iy, as for nice mike, the whites until they the ends of the mantel. Stead in a heap, Put three tablespoons. lel of butter in • frying -pan, and heat cruelly wavered. while you are mixing the omelet. Stir in the 1'mrleoeot(tetertorre )r ye•rtaoe ��Ied t the milk ie • deep dish, with the yolks aide are ."' sip slowly manse by akiwt- N I unwluulr. nntrted waotrums for each coo - and seasotling� ext add the chopped plaints as costiveness. IedmResttan. User tlwaba UMW Inseams. This shading yusatiow we eaewer again fix the fiftieth time. Starch the beroass after they peas the rinse water in starch made thus : Dissolve the starch in add water, and poor boiling water on the solution, stirring all the time, till it is of the auasistency of molasses and pr- iestly clear and smooth. Add a little white soap dissolved ih water, and • little batter. Boil two or throe minutes. Wring the bowing trues the hot starch and dry. Then wring them in thin oi.ld starch, or starch des uived iu culla water (a teaspoonful of starch to a quart of water), with a hall teaspoonful uf ppoow. dared borax added w it. Roll tightly and put away for two or three hours or over night. Then iron in the usual way. Then lay the bosom on a plate board with une thickness of muslin over it, pass damp cloth over the bosom, and polish with a polishing iron, which may be bought at any hardware store for $1. Try un an old brow first. E.perience will soon teach what points are to be guarded Have a clean linen cloth and a bowl of clean water at hand to remove any possible smooch from the linea. A bit of beeswax inside a folded loaf of paper is geoid to give a smooth surface w the iron. • Prof. A. J. Cook says the Short -horn is fur beef, the Ayrshire for milk, the Jersey for cream and butter. Nu breed can be excellent in all these directions. It u enough that an animal gives very rich milk, without giving • Targe quan- tity. Beef and milk qualities of the highest excellence cannot exist in the same animal. So, too, the draft horse and roadster are wide apart in their forms and habits, as also in the kind of work which each is expected to perform. In Kansas City almest ninety five per cent. of the swine received for sale are black ; in Chicago about ninety per cent. are of that color, and iu Cincinnati, ac- cording to L. N. Benham, an authority on swine nutters, a white hog is almost a cunoeity, so seldom •does one appear there. The last issue of the Kansas,City Indicator has an article on this subject, in which it states that at the Kansas State fair of 1881, there was one white hog, 18 Jersey Reds, 23 Esse:, 350 Pol- and Chinas, and 368 Berkshires. At the Iowa State fair, of the same year, there were 253 dark hogs, and 110 of the whites. At the Minneapolis fair, 75 per cent. of the awiue exhibited were of the dark breeds. A correspondent of the Prairie Farmer writes :—"A Deem which was forced up- on me in my early days bas since prov- ed to be of much practical value. My father was an "old-faehiueed" farmer, who always made a good crop of corn by dint of thorough work. He waited until the inner husks were dead and the kern- els hard, before he began t.. cut up the corn. But one autumn, after a frosty spring and cold aunimer, there was a t'ireateniog suggestion of frost while the corn wet, yet in milk ; so we went to cutting it as oxen as it began to glaze on the kernels, coin letiog the job just in time to escape a killing frust. When we came to husk the corn we found, some- what to our surprise, uncommonly plump, heavy ears. We never raised a better crop, and the fodder was sweet and palatable all through. From that time forward, year by year, we always began cutting the corn as soon as it glaz- ed, and I pursue the same practice in farming for myself.'' war Drapery. " ;W'rr& An oddity in depuration was recently seen that may prove usefulin a few oases, and the principal mtoht be otherwise sp- ieled, though it is obviously artificial. It is the hanging with drapery of panels of a panelled room, or large blank spaces of wall without panels ; in other words, curtains are hung against squares of blind wall. This is a revival of thearras,which was used even as late as the last century; but it u merely an effect without • cause, ler the arras had a purpose, either that of om.•ucealing an unornamentaf wall or serving as a portiere to close some corri- dor or recess A plush, lace or silken curtain has, to most people, an unpleas- antly artificial effect, as tf the decorator wished to be artistic but did not know how. As a rule, a curtain, no nutter of what material, implies corceslment of some sort. But • curtain hung flatly against a wall implies nothing, and con - moats nothing that there u reason to con- ceal. Its only excuse is, that its coke and texture may be beautiful. In stud- ies one not infrequently finds tapestries and such things hung against walla and used too partition off small corners, but,as 'Yes, they are excellent boats,' raid the shoe dealer to the young lady pur- chaser ; 'they will wear like iron.' 'Do you think the buttons are sewn on mecure- ly r she asked. 'They are ; the boots are supp'ied with 'the old maid's weL- din;' button, • new invention.' 'Why is it calla 1 'the old maid's wedding' but- ton 1' 'Because it never comes ult.' Placa Tula to Karla. • Wool tlrl ssvwr That is daily beitetpog toy to the tames el tkoasaads by saving many of their dear ones tress as early grave. Trely is Dr. Kings new Discovery for enca tp- tiou, Coegbs, Cada, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Luse el Voioe, Tickling in the Thrust. Paint in Side and Ch.st,or- -y discs o. the Throat and Lungs a nasitive Lure. Guaranteed. Trial Bot Nes free at J. W ileoa's Drug Store, Large sine $1.00. (u) Your every day toilet is a part of your character. A girl who looks like a 'furry' or a sloven in the morning u not to be trusted, however finely ane may luck in the evening. No matter how humble your nom may be, there are eight things it should contain, viz.: a mirror, wash- stand, soap, towel, comb, hair, nail and tooth brushes. Those are just as essen- tial as your breakfast, before which you should make god and -free use of them. Parents who fail to provide their chil- dren with such appliances not only make • great mistake, but commit a sin of omission. Look tidy in the morning, and after the dinner work u over, improve your toilet. Make it a rule of your dail, life to 'dress up' in the afternoon. lour doss may, or need not be, anything better than calico, but with a ribbon, or flower, or some bit of ornament, you can have an air of self-respect and satisfaction, that invariably comes with being well dress- ed. (•RAPTOR rl, "Maiden. Mas., Feb. 1, MO. Gentlemen — I suffered with attacks of sick headset -v." Neur•lgis, female trouble, for years in the most ternble and excruciating man- ner. No medicine or doctor could give me relief or cure until I used Hop Bitten. 'The first bottle Nearly cured me ;' The second made me as well and strong as when a child. 'god I have been so to this day.' My husband was an invalid for twenty years with a serious 'Kidney, liver and urinary complaint, 'Pronounced by Boston's best physi- ciaos— 'Incurable'' Seven beetles of your bitters cured him, and I know of the 'Lives uf eigt't persons' In my neighborhood that have been saved by your bitten, And many more are using them with great benetit. 'They almost Du miracles !' 1ln Mrs. E. D. Slack. Later estimates of the damage by the flood at Chippewa Falls and Eau Claire show that it will amount to a million and a half. Five lives werekst. A BANssa's Tsxrr,toNY. — For a Cough, Cold eer any Brinchiml affecion. "Pectora," in myopinion, u just the thing. 1 have useit in my family for Cough.. and Colds for the past four years with the matt unvaried succeaa, and to- day my opinion of it is that I continue to think still more of that which I bp,an thinking well of. Geo. Kama, Manager •Oata-io Bank, Pickering. Price 25 Dents at all drogvists. m A Wide ate J Wikvnn is else nese, and spares no pins beat of every article in hie line. He has secured the agency for the celebratedDr King's New Discovery for Consumption, the only certain cure known for Con- sumption, Coughs, C..Ids, Hoarseness Asthma, Hay Fever, Bronchitis, or any afyecticn :of the Throat and Lungs. Sold on a positive guarantee. Trial bottles free. Regular sire 51.00. (3 CrtoALaaa - A name well known in onnection with the Hair Renewer,which *stores grey hair to is natural color by • few weeks me. Sold at 60 cents per bottle by James Wilson. 2m Pans. Low's MAGI(' Mt•t.Pwt'e SOAP,__ Heeling, anothint, and cleansing for all eruptive diseases of the skin. Delightful for toilet use. lm Oystw., heating them well as you add u ump.laint, lildwey Ttonbka et... who might Wilton Malty !t'aaln i.t.t MRngth slat eaerty r THAT vo . 1 e (.[T �ta/lally. thor.nghly mixed .ions rod;remar'k Speedy Curr Toeenvlsee pear is melted butter, and final) in the theta that each is the ram we sill �ito them a free trial bottle at Ova Rhyne. Ifrut WWoo. CHOICE COAFECTIOI vibe. as lightly as p esible. Have the ,.r,...• to, sad et gee teeeonouai_ f obo Klloii! ERY, bettor� the pan �•hot. .�at pour t .ons in your own town. � °'r CANNED FRUITS ANN FISH, TOBACCO, CIGARS, 4 0 Illia as to atil/en, ship a Mrtad.hladel . when Thousands hear witness to the pose ]iaife tits ecrative power around the aides and cautiously r of the Gagar rira- taaAer the omelet, that the hotter cautiously assiNvIOORATou, the only remedy that Mash mu/ Ps" as soon as the tonere i. has pond itself a specific (..r general `tel, eat, and the beton, brown, turn duty' seminal weakness, impr.tsney, toed into a hot dish. Lay the dean bot 5.. upward over the frying pan, which sad be turned upside down dexteronsly T71ia brio" the brown std. of the omelet This is a debaooi beak - or sapper omelet Dr- Low'. Worm Ryrwp will remove -t timate d Wore from abuhhes or mod testimonials o.f genuine earea. QN Im ) Itliynas, thelerisk $Ili etc., and all diseases that arise from aelf- abtss.w overtaxed brain, finally ending in consumption, insanity and a prema- ture grave Ro.ld by all druggists, or will he sent free on receipt ..f 51 00 per box, or six hoses for $5. Address F. J. Cwswwv, Toledo, Ohio, sole agent for the United States. Send for cire'alar Domestic and Fore1rt, Traits. (MMaltere of tl•e Beat Brands Freeh and amnked t Water Fish In mums A full amnrtwtead of all kinds of Neta *maims *sewed a !very Style lNNrrd l(`8 CRIAMR I x MICAMN Moroi Dmtgae. Wrestles. ('manes. lot gsefa, Ire.. meow to ,race. riewe.taa uremia t .earaawrs to orange - AT- E. GE X 1il>et/Tl9'11L,r 2g T - users Meuse ',we, 111. 1111. Weallliuroie, D.C., Maylbth, 1880. Gs3TLartts—Having a sufferer for a long time from nervous prostration and general debility, I wee advised to try Hop Bitters. I have takes one bot- tle, and 1 have been rapidly gutting bet- ter ever sines, and I think it the best medicine I ever used. I aim now gaining strength and appetite, which WAS all gone, and I was in despair until 1 tried your Bitters. I am n..w well, able to go abut and do my own work. Before taking it 1 was completely Rr�efs�tratd. Mks. MaiT STUART.. Tttteasaaada Say Se. T. W. Aitkins, Girard, Kan., writes: 'I never hesitate to recommend your Electric Bitters to my crtomera, they rive entire satisfaction and are rapid sellers.' Electric Bitters are the purest and best medirne known and will posi- tively cure Kidney and Liver complaints Purify the blood and regulate the bowels Nu family can afford to be without them They will save lundreds of dollars in doctor's bilis every year. fold at 50cts. • bottle oy J. Wilson. 13] Wen Stewarded. A liberal reward will be paid to any party who will pr•duce t ease of Liver, Kidney or Stomach complaint that Elec- tric !titters will not speedily cure. Bring them along, it will art you nothing for the medicine if it fails to cure, and you will be well rewarded for your troeble besides. All Blood diseases, Bilious- ness. Jaundice, Constipation, and gene- ral debility are quickly cured. Satisfac- tion guaranteed or money refunded Price only fifty cents por bottle. For sale by J. Wilson. f 5 Krone. F1a$d I ialag Is the only instantaneous relief for Neu- ralgia, Headache, Toothache, etc. Rub- bing a few drops briskly is all that is needed. No taking nauseous medicines for weeks, but one minute's application removes all pain and will prove the great value of Kram's Fluid Lightning. 25 cents per bottle at George Rhynas' drug store. h These are /acid nets. The best blood purifier and system re- gulator ever placed within the reach' of suffering humanity, truly is Electric Bit- ters. Inactivity of the Liver. Biliousnes Jaundice, Constipation, Weak Kidneys, or any disease of the urinary organs, or whoever requires an appetizer, tonic or wild stimulant, will always find Electric Bitters the best and only certain cure known. They act surely and quickly, every bottle guaranteed to give entire satisfaction or money refunded. S.dd .t fifty cents s bottle by J. Wilson. [4] New Lire for Venetians Weakened by 01 - caw, Debility and telmlpation. The Great German Invigorator is the only specific for impotency, nervous de bility, universal lassitude, forgetfulness, pain in the back or aides, no matter how shattered the system may he from ex- cesses of any kind, the Great German Remedy will restore the Inst functions and secure health and happiness. 51.00 per box, six boxes for $5.00. Sold by all druggida Sent on receipt of price, postage paid, by F..1. Cheney, Toledo, Ohio, sole relent for United States. Cir- culars and testimonials sent free. Sold by Geo. Rayne', sole agent for Gods - rich 3m : National Pills are unsurpassed as a safe, mild, yet thorough, purgative, act ing upon the biliary organs promptly and effectually. lm DANIEL GORDON CABINETMAKER (pANn Ie3dll1 Undertaker Has oa hand now the LASOKIST STOCK of First - Class Furniture In the County, and as f now arehaae for cash, will act be undersold any one. i offer TapestryCarpet Lounges, from Skil upwards. Wtnots, good. from $250 up. Bow Hoek ('hale. from ft4e. up. and every- thing else in the mane prop..rtion, AT THE OLI) STAND Between the Post O ee t Rank of 111oatrsa G-ODERICEC- Oct. inti, IN1. >p1g- D. K. STRACHAN, /2' FLA. eL MACHINIST, Keep on hand a simply of material for the repairing of boners and Reaers Sulky HayRakes, Plows and Agriculural Implements and Machinery Generally. All WORK THOROUGHLY 001IE* D. K. STRACHAN, GDERICH MA CHINE SH P Oeserteb. March rib, 1161. hilar. 1.' the working elms. Rend 10 eta for pastarteand we will mall you ►rata. • royal. valashle hoe of saw pie panda that will pat you in the any of making MM." mosey In a few days than yes ever Monett posslhie st say business. No capital required. Wo will dart yen. Neu c�Ms-m work all u Ham uveor In spare time soly. The work is mai venally adapted to bob tba awseet eoae Gael old. you pain early pars ham ter. ga ovary leaches. Tba( all tette waist wear* may tont tbs baslawas wee mate lbw uo el- lalea MO/. ; t. as was ars act well estiolkei we rs Tal will wadi gto pay tar the tr i tremble et wrltltig reetleaeat�IL - "'yeas tese r''' :` `'vis F. JORWAN', Medical Hall, Goderich, Keeps constantly oa hand a !elect Stock of Prue, Medicines. ('bemlcals, $pMaee. Dye *1R Perfumery. tic.. Rc. Toilet articles in great t aricty. 1'b, siclans I'rescripttsas • speelaly, FARMERS! Why me poor OIL on your Reapers and Mowers, obis you tan gel s LARD OIL Formic by Su Cheap. It has no equaL Try it and you will use no otter. McCOLL BROS. & Co., TORONTO. R. W.. Mc=NZS.R, 000CBICH *HUGH DUNLOP Fashionable Tailor, WEST STREET, Has the Finest Assortment of Summer Goods to j Choose F4otr. 1P YOU WANT A Nobby Suit ata Reasonable Price CALL ON i u0 -H DuI IOP? CIGARS. fi':: CIGARS. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC THE BEST ASSORTMENT IN TOWN A1full line of all the Leading Patent Medicines always kept on haat! (Physicians Prescriptions a Svecialty.) GEORGE RHYNAS, BLAKE'S BLOCK, THE SQTThR a 0 t 6 00 0 m 0 r 0 (D Z I 0 m r re. r lJ mMld PC m 4 tj r+ W ,0?„ 14/ m H 1 m Ari Designs 111 a11 P aper. New sties time. it you wish sae or two nlee reeves at howe,jte reotPatter's room paper He bas overt 20,000 Rolls of the Latest Designs *.a.Uful celorasad at prkesIeus than very wtueh inferior goods, Call and see them are the boat she Is Iowa. and must be sold The Latest Spng Bazaar P s Ja8hioos, JT