HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1885-8-21, Page 22
TRH wQ11L•D 0721
es lesseeeed tet Mas OMmmmes eg ear see
dale os eismereeersea
Saturday
Middleton retu
ees.esfal soya
seated whit
and rewired the *ft
city on hit unit base.
Lich4r1 sk 1 nasi M
Enema
Aug. 6, ki
aaa • hired man 'ensue. Flee
other persons in ►e estefel7
injured.
The Englishman named Bo)dell. who
was arrested •t Vienna on July 30 for
writing to tier. (Iktd,lelte, demandrug
$1,500 before Aust 8, was sentenced
on Saturday to ail months' lmprlahrn•
anent li.,ydall bad ehreatesed to pub-
lish diaagreab!e details of • private
character.
The returns of the Oseadw ioaur
ante bumossa for last pier show great
iucressaa over those of 1883. Io bre in-
surance there was an memos* In the
total •mount insured of $11,i00,861.
During the year 89,693,148 wee pad in
premiums, 83,484,568 of whieb was rr
ceteed by purely Canadian cumpanaw,
the remainder being divided between
British and American offices,
The China Cher/and Maid, of July 4,
says the calamitous dood which began to
work destruction Jul] 19, devastated a
part of the province of Canton, causing
the death of 10,000 people, engulfing
whsle viriams, early ruiumg the rice
and silk crops, destroying an iminense
amount tf property, and reducing $ east
number of people to poverty and starva-
tion.
An odd gentlemen near Hacover,Ant.,
aged 72, presented a maiden of 23 with
the deed of 30 acres of land on condi-
tion that she married him. The young
lady believed an exercising great nonan
in affairs of this kind, and had the title
examined, when it was fuuud that in
the event of her tarrying after the old
gent's death she would hie the property.
The clutch is declared off
The Pull !scall (jo.ette has weakeoid
Ib position by an article deprecating the
-its 01 eouesot in girls to 18, on the
ground that seek a law would destroy
the means of livelihood i.1 a host of
young girls already launched tate an
tumoral life. The tartlet. says the pro-
posal is es Toreiblo an interference with
vested interests as can be contemplated.
as it would abolish the present means of
subsistence of a large number of girls
without compensating these for • legis-
latiee confiscation of their totems. The
Spectator declares it is importable to
attnbute noble motives to the Pall Mall
Gazette deer reading this groesely cynical
and atro ices palliation of prostitution
Efforts are being made to score the
return to ber mother of • missing girl
named Elim Arw.•trnow, who is illegally
held by the Salvation Army .of Landon,
England. Mrs. A rout rong amuses
General Beath, leader of the army, of
sending an agent to decoy her daughter
from home for the purpose of making
the girl a spectacle as • minor eared
from • life of wickedness by the Salva-
tionists. The girl is 13 years old. She
has been traced to the Home for Fallen
Women, started by the Salvation Arany,
and thence to the town Lorin!, in Droves,
France, when she again disappeared.
General Beath refuses to surrender the
girl, but her mother has applied to the
courts for aid in reocnenng her child.
An Emglia'i lady who hag been visiting
Canada, expresses in the Pa:I Mull
(:uutfr the opinion that "s judicious and
gradual influx of highly cultivated Eng.
lash women ink.. Canada and the United
States would be as great a boon to those
menthes as it would be a relief to Great
Britain." Her reason for this npinion
is thus stated "Altbouph the ladies
in the Older cities ..1 the Worth Ameri-
can continent are, with searcely any ex-
ceptions, supermr to English gentlewo-
men in brain power, in clearness of
mental vision, in common Dense, in
practical. sound judgement. and in gene-
ral intelligence, yet we miss w them that
indefinable charm which always clings t
a highly contested European,
A terrible accident took place nn Fri-
day last at the London and Port Stanley
ttilroad crossing near the fair grounds,
whereby three persons hat their lives.
Mr. Dempsey,nf Hamilton, accompanied
by his enter, Mrs. Fred Randers, wife of
Fred. Sanders, lumber merchant, of this
city, and her tittle G year-old son were
dnnno. when a train doming tro'n Pert
Stanley struck their h;rggy and knocked
it tt. splinters. Mrs. genders body was
found twenty yarIs frorn the creasing
With her herd cOmpletely -.tiered from
the Ludy. The child was found ori the
cow catcher of the engine dead. Mr.
1Jemptry • body was :discovered romp
aeveoty tire yards from the crossing
with Ids extinct, b.at not badly 'ouUlat-
THE HURON SIGNAL. FRIDAY. AUG. 21, 1885.
93 HAPPY.
or sae s..se.
se maeny.
Qt I.T. eiremesses i► we•
• hssehdawatleb Weds.
Nesse ties uualkr Ieodtena, .bete
the beat did not el •p eater'
, • endo was ids Binding geed -
wildly. The amu trine tur-
n tap al
nyinea.»--No, I did
poke aloes the
ed.
• angles. t'baede.
'lobe best eradicator of foul humors of
the Blood as Burdock Blond Bittes. A
few bottle, produces a radical clung* for
the better in health and beauty. 1t re-
moves
e.
moves the blood taint of Scrofula, that
terrhk thee ac ., c••temon in this c,un•
try.
A passenger ,rata on the Cincinnati
and *astern rad way fell through a Nestle
over Nine Mlle creek •tararday morning
with fatal results. The distance t•, the
erne* was 40 feet, and the entire train,
aooedme of an engine. One passenger
each and two. cal can, crashed down
Mra Densllsn, wife of the master me -
ch. was kill -el o etristht and her tw•-
shihlrvn fatally hurt. Conductor Din.
hoshall an arm and two ohs situ ken.
Harry Moto,. of eon {Richmond, ant .1
Mutton, of Bat.. ia. s,atained grave ,n
jeries, and nine other paieengers were
e.rimr.Iy hart. lt'ilham Smith and
lienar Tate, ten of the iti..r.d paaaenees
bare sine* died. Henri. Sort •n and
Obaelee !mei* dim] ••:1 Sunday. This
.sabre the total 'limber o.1 deaths fleet
Mrs. I►.maldm." s two ebtldren are still
in a precarious a.ndttiun.
• Sewer Iledmreees.am
The penple. the preen and the proftn-
sort all heartily woolens UM Merits "f
Berieek Blood Ritter. al NO hent IE. -
sea Liver moister acid pnrifyiung t one
ties le til..
.���:u
syr reaching oat to rim in
when ides s
Fritsit1Nhe beautiful neer. B is
the memory of au old-fmhi•ommd
ioned mother. It Aorta to us now like
Ole beautiful perfume, lintel some wood-
land blossoms. The yarns .of caber
voices may be lost, but the entrancing
melody of hen will echo is our semis
forayer Other faces may fade away
and b. forgotten, but here will skins ou
until she Tight from Havens portals
will gi„til „ur own. When in the Abel
pauses of busy life our feet wander back
to the old hnmestesd, and crossing the
well worn thnishuld, stand now more in
the low quaint room. en hallowed by ber
presence, how the feeling of childish in-
DO0•110e coma over us, and we kneel
dues in the molten sunshine, streaming
through the western window —just where
1 -ug yawn ago, we knelt h our mother's
bons, lisping 'Oar Father. How many
tunes. when the tempter luras us on, has
the memory of those sacred boors, that
mother's words, her faith and prayer,
saved w trona plunging into the dap
abyss of N0. Years have filled great
drift. between ber and es, bat they have
n ot hidden from our sight the glory of
her pure unselfish love.
Watermelon ►talcs.
Very few people know how to est •
watermelon, just as one man in ten
thousand knows bow to at an orange.
To be properly enjoyed the perfect
watermelon, sbou!d be pounced on in
patch just after sun up. It should be
carefully selected. In respoaw to •n
eager thump there should follow • dead
and maty sound and the melon should
w eigh not less than twenty-five pounds.
After it is purled it should be split from
co to end with • short bladed pocket-
knife. mo that in tearing it open the glow-
ing and juicy heart, bursting loose from
its confinement, shall fled • lodgment on
one side only. At this point ;the knife
is to be flung away. For • *moment the
eye should be allowed to feast itself on
the vision thus suddenly brought to
view, then the heart should be scooped
oat with the hand and its nectanous
meat thrust upon the hot and thirsty p•1.
ate. There ought to be something saw -
age in the enjoyment t.f a watermelon ;
It ought to b. 'crushed and swallowed
with avidity. The man who knows hew
to enjoy one will come away from the
fray with the sweets in his beard. m his
hair and on his elothes.
*m .51*.?.
There is no more whola..nme or deli-
cious fruit on earth than the Wild Straw-
berry, and there is on more effectual
remedy for Cholera, Dysentery, Cramps
and other summer complaints of infanta
or 'adults, than Dr Fowler's Extract of
11 ild Strawberry. 2
(rest star. Per ab. Moser.
1 am building a bank -ban, basement
9 feet in clear, and above that the maim
poets are 24 feet high, with hip roof. 1
Boor over the basement, also door above
this, leaning the entire space of second
door for hay and rein. This second
story will have a driveway in one side,
and I will occupy the first floor over the
basement for storing tools. I can pat
granary in basement, or nn first door, as
I
ch,140. I are building 40 by 75 feet.
w hich will rive in upper story room fur
200 tons of hay. and I think space below
for all *mono dolls, mowers, drags,
plouchs, ate., that are so frequently left
nutatde. To make a warn baro, instead
of lot'ening cracks, 1 *ill have boards
•11 sawed one foot wide : will nail on
the tint, then skip 8 inches, and nail on
another, then a board over the 8•inch
crack which laps two inches each side. I
will save a little lumber and get a strong-
er beaten and barn than to pet on a
3 -inch batten, as it only arts me 2 inches
off each board to batten this way, which
is one-third less than the old way. I
shall ent • strip 8 inches long to ball
under batten over girls and res 12 -pens
naih for batten board ; that will teach
through each beard into solid timber.—
[ft I'arkhurst�Mainesberg, Penn.
boles frees Mitis.
Mauy Americans spend the summer
months in Canada, and being clow ob
set vers,and titer on the alert for the bed
of everything, it is w•t surprising that
the proprietor of that marvelous oorn
remedy. Putnam's Painless Corn Extrac-
tor, should he in receipt of numerous
letters .1 emulsify free the other side of
the !me Mrs W. N. Str:.*g, 71 Adams'
Ate , i►etr.oit, had tised Putnam'• P.im.
less t' .ern Extractor with the remit amis.
factory results, and March 30th, 1883,
writes --"Kindly rive price per dozen,
as we want to get wine." Hundreds of
minder letters support our Intention
that fur a sure, safe, painless, and never
dI.ap,.antIng remedy, Putnam's Coors
Extractor stands without a rival. N. C.
P. loon It Co., Kingston, pr..prietoro
gleam reaNeoesa.
A hey who is polite to his father and
et. alio is likely to be polite to every
body elms A buy lacking politeness to
ben patents may have the eemhlaswm o1
e ourteey in anoint r, hot is never truly
polite in spirit, and is in danger, as he
hecnmte familur, of betraying his real
want 01 courtesy. We are all in Banter
of living too much for the outside world
for the impression which we make in
sorely. not coveting the good epini.el of
those who are in genes • pan of our.
Delves, and who will continue to santain
ani 'tar niterestwl in us. hotwithetanding
these defects of deportment and charac-
ter We may t.. every hey and girl.,
c'!1ivat. the haat of entriesy and pro
Kitty at h.,.ne - in the kitchen as well ,
es in the parlor. and y'me will he sure in
ether places to deport yeomen in a be -
r 'n:nng aid attreetire manner.
tare. MM.
and meat
iteewelki b le ioAg
enough to give eery part of the body a
thorough aereebing with snap and a
mohair wash -cloth, which denotes the
akin muse threnughly than a brash. The
het water dissolves misty panicle of re-
fuse that slugs the pores, the rough Meth
sad sosp ramwe i•..arehwdy, and the
towel is homily laid aside before a deli-
cious coolness and freshness cusses ape
one like that of •dewy sums.r morning,
or eeiwlion tai that meet
The dampers resulting front a madden
shack of psrspirs:ion ty pitaag tag isle
ould water when overheated, or by sit-
ting in a draught to cool, are avoided if
a greater sense of oudness full -ea Peo-
ple who suffer nisch m warm weather
should reckon this a daily enlace. All
enervating affects are warded off by an
instant's plunge into cool water, of say,
70 degrees. This temperature menus
like so ice dap after • bath of nearly 150
degrees, One ma by this eiesa& secure
in • oywmreoo batbruom much of the real
hematite of a Hussies vapor lath.
Appnrpea ui driukiug no hot weather,
the doctors differ. One adores you to
restrain your thirst as mesh as pcosible ;
another reeocesends yen.
To drink and tures sad drink again.
A well -knows sportsman, spe•kieg un
this subject, says : "From considering
how to keep people from perspiring in
hot weather, the doctors now duvet ate
to perspire as much se po will e, and to
that end ret nmmend any amount ..f cool-
ing tluid, only adviaang that too much he
n ot taken at any owe time, or upon an
empty stomach. Bandy, nm, and
whisky, all strung alcoholic liquors, are
as bad new ac they were tea yeses age,
but the more moderate •tilaulanta lager
beer, ginner Me, and the sin -called teen -
peewee drinks, are steadily growing in
favor. The old-fashioned harvesters'
drink—oatmeal and water sweetened —
s • good deal used by athletes who train
an the summer time (who aro , ntbority
on these topics), and a first claw drank
it is Iced coffee, iced tea, and iced
milk are also well •stablisbed summer
favurites, the iced tea being • special
favorite with stout people, became as
the water is boiled and contains the se -
tire
tire principle of the tea it lames much of
its fattening power,"
As fur the etaoant of food to be eaten
in excessively warm weather there is no
rule, further than to say persona of well
developed physique need not fear any
limitation of diet far • tune which does
not tell on the strength and is approved
by appetite. Never eat tow much ; never
go hungry. For people disinclined
to eat meat nothing is w relished or
strengthens so mach as the rich beef
tea, or rather gravy, prepared from the
bee( jelly sold by first class grocers. A
teaspoonful of this jelly dissolved by
pouring a eup of boiling water on it, and
drank when tool, will give as much
strength as them-fowrtbe of • pound ot
broiled beefsteak. Flavor with pasisy
and add • spoonful of crushed ice and
you have a delicious tipple. Nervous
people and sanguine ones should adopt
an these torrid days • diet of eggs, fish,
soups and salad', with fruit. This awls
the blood and leaves the strentth to
supply the nervesinstead o1 relaxing
there to digest heavy preparations.
' Lymphatic people especially should pre-
fer such lively salads as cresol, pepper gees,
horse -radish and mustard ; these are
natural correctives, and should appear
on the table from Mash to November,
to be eaten not merely ea relishes, but as
beneficial food. People who are anxious
to be rid of flesh should not forret a
drily allowance of lemons, limes, and
tamarinds, and give the cut direct to
vegetables, especially potatoes.
•s ArtMaie Temp eellt.
1 have just finished my "crazy- quilt
And it is very dear to me, as the ward-
robes of relatives and friends are there
represented.
Yes, there aro sixteen square. in it,
and I made them all myself. This one
with the velvet parasol is considered very
artistic. It is easy enough to make
. J cut the velvet as a athe
perwould when half opened, and scal!
lop it around the bottom. Baste • tin
strip of lace under the button, and catch
it don neatly with the button hole
stitch. Then you work the handle and
top t.. suit your fancy, and it is indeed
loosely.
This white dipper I call my grand-
mother's bridal &hoe, and is it not quaint 1
it 111 cut from an o'd faahi seed book,and
look at the tiny satin lacers and the faded
yellow rosette.
That half mo•.m and star were worked
on canvas, and then the threads were
pulled out.
1 ih, It is very eaey, and such charming
work ' Make ..ne: it does not take very
long. (art your friends to give )o sone
old* and endo, and 1 am sure your Inc..maker will save you a bundle. Then
tut an old sheet Into squares and baste
thin wadding on them. and arrange your
pieces any fashion. t If enure. you trust
seedy the atlas a little and you can
make some very online figures. Bute
dean the raw edges of the silks or rel•
vets, and then work all the Warne with
dsffwfont colored a a'w•mJery •ilk*. The
snitches are very easy -simply the briar
stitch or catch stitch. The herder I
quilted myself, as the brmght a apt to
be sissy : and 1' think the Aloe and ,.Id
gold owners t.otk nmee with ,ed &i.lee
Ye., satin is better for the howler than
pleb. N. 1 have no painting .m mine.
it is liable to enact and fade, and 1 want
tine to he tin hei.4...os ern ,We family
These teasels on the roomers gigs it
*n elegant finish, and are not expensive.
It is nosh mem "pick epi' work, and the
squares arm s+ little trouble. You bain
one, at any rate, and yen silty improve
wonderfully ..n mime. Mine ie lined
. ilk red allows and looks eery nine. —
(Netti. (I. in Detroit Free Pans.
spatial
AA, mei 1
Into =yews.
fumy eolema r olio of iq moo. I ap-
peopriate the funny tlun1ls meet in by
funny correspondents just as calmly as
the bersiness. teansger appropriates the
stamps encluItied for the tdero of the
yaanuemips and moor rmseaa. Me mod
the business muwtger hate suit things of
it, *peeking slier thb 1lostonew dialect.
Ntr did I intimate that it was tau old
That is, the .stilt wasn't.
But l declined to publish a libel on
that gond old quilt and the deer, good
old woman that made it. There a• mo
guile iu the women or the quilt. That
quilt is no patchwork fraud and comfor-
ter. It insm't mien( these things that
weigh sioety pounds when you tint
crawl ender it and let you wake up in
the eight, shivering at the rate of sixty-
fire
ixtyfire miles • minute, frozen still se an in-
troduction from chis to Instep, to find
forty-five pounds of artan in each end
of that comforter and nothtspF in the
middle, while the old thing rides you
lite • pair of great saddle lags. And
thew "els worsen" quilts are never made
watt, either, like thew damsons tbat
grew the guest clamber, that are narrow
in one direction and short in the other,
w that yno Aare to coil ep like a snake
too get under them.
Nor is it one of thew tormentors with
always a email bole torn in them, iuto
whish every tame you tun you thrust a
toe and either didoeaa your toe ur tear
the holm bigger, Nor is it one cf times
terms. • quilt so much longer than 11 is
wide that if you draw Mover you length-
w ise you feel as if you were covered with
• dress braid or lbs belt -cord and if you
twist it around adonis. you think you
are trying to rover yourself with a whole
belt of Muslim stretched clear nut end
only three quarters ot • yard wide. Ah.
no, "Young Funnymaa," the quilt that
"grandma" makes is now of thew.
Lar old grandma, 98 yeas old, reads
without eludes and eats pie with a knife,
sever had a day's Meknes* or wore a
bustle in her life and doesn't believe in
sewing machines and the revised Bible.
Why the quilt she makes is es big and
warm as her own blessed aid heart
You ears Omsk it under tome feet mail it
dome* ep to your *boulder blades, and
then tack the other end in around your
shoulder until it reaches down to your
fed again. then you can tees and kick
and tumble and roil around under it fur
a week before you an find your way out
od it The patchwork quilt is generally,
but quite erroneously, supposed to be a
family history. This is • piece of sent
Susan's dress, and this is a piece of
grandpa's vest, and this is • piece of era's
old dress, because with six girls in the
family there are no drosses for ma ; thew
four squares came from the girls new
dresses, end there the family records end.
The ether 984 patches the girls begged
from their neighbors, stole (nom other
virls and obtained loom the dry goods
clerks under the spacious pretence of
showing them to ms, to sea if she liked
them, before ordering a dross pattern,
the invariable experience of the poor
clerks being theta= didn't like them.
Elephant IfIg$M le i.resah.
In the eleyhant fights it Theyatmo
there were fifteen elephants on • side.
A pair of them are nater darted alone
at • fight The fights are always arrang-
ed tor the amuseuent of the nobles, and
aro great events. The battle is terrific,
the elephants aro given toddy, made out
orf the fermented juice of the palm, which
they drink not of buckets. Jersey
lightning is like water compared to the
duff. drank some under the tmptee-
sioe that it was a kind of nder. It
smelled like cider. I took only cne
finger, and I never was so drunk is my
life. I never would have felt the same
amount of whiskey. It makes the ele-
phants reel and tumble about like drunk-
en men. They snort and trumpet and
create a terrible racket In the fight at
Theyatmo the mahouts, or driven, strad-
dle their necks and urge them un. The
beasts had been maddened by prodding
and beating and rushed at each other
like mad, There were some that wheel-
ed Hund and ran away, but those that
kept en made the earth stake when they
came together. They ran right into seek
uther. They locked tusks, and gored
'and lashed one another with their
trunks. Tusks were run into elephant
shoulders six or eight inches. The fights
in India are the sante, of course. In
Burmah lights take place between ele-
phants and titers. King Tbehaw has
men fight tigers. The Burmese in power
are cruel. (hs King used to make the
people lie then for his pony to walk
over. Col. George Anttngstall, Bar•
num's elephant trainer, said elephants
were fund of whiskey or any kind of
Init,.r. One would take four or five gal-
lons at a dome.
tartar , seeIre _*��
,�a►_ OW «
en mond aged 15. •h8r JOkil/
Anderson h►e, totterie� down.
�b4 pnlaeeawn s i ejal,j lny the bods
jsd
grooms, the let Isle els ,,Vresst17
ut►a•wfurtable and out ut place to ha
'dressed up' ounditiun ; but the bride
presented a great contrast to her new•
made lord ' her se f•eatisfaction was
supreme. As the captain remarked, 'if
yen really want to witness hailstorm
and a,ateeetreeut, you u.ust see a Fiencb
Canadian bride from the rural disteets.
She has attained to the height of her
amhitit'o ; she is at hat decked out to
bridal beery.' She weut steatith: to the
saloon after coating on bused, mud hooked
round • little nerv.'usly at hot. then wt
rigidly down bo the extreme edge of the
nearest batch, and oast down her eyes,
as was supposed, in blushing modesty.
But tin! at was not modesty . it was her
•hoes upon wh.cb ber admiring glances
were directed.
The rest of her astuuie was common-
place, consisting of a black dress 44 seine
cheap material, which one of the ladies
designated as 'lustreShe wore a hat
trimmed with • wrath of tawdry -look-
ing pink and blue artificial flowers, while
bows of yellow and green ribbon reliev-
ed the sombre hue of tLe dress. But it
remained for the shoe to gave the tree
bridal character to this sn,ewhat re
markable toilet. They were of white
kid, low cut, with huge row fres ort the
instep. Her pedal extremities, which
were of rather colossal proportions, were
augmented by home knit woollen stock
Ings, which appeared just a tribe incon-
gruous. Her husband soon j.ineI her.
and took a seat beside ber, and as he sat
• psmcbless, with hr wiles bead laying in
his own, it was suppused he too was lost
in admiration mud wonder at the beauty
of the slippers. A half-hour later found
them in the same position, with the pride
d ill casting loving glances al her fent.
When the newly wedded pau left the
boat they were met by an old lean and a
=girl, who, by the way they em
the bridegroom, were set down as
his faller and sister. The former took
tbe bride gently by the band. why, re-
ceived them with rigid statehood'''. The
girl timidly ventured to kiss her newly
made sitter. The caress was passively
permitted. not returned, and afterward
deliberately wiped •4 with • blue a,tton
pocket -handkerchief. The last seen 4.1
the kid shoes they ■ere almost invisible
w their owner trudged up • steep sandy
hill on a hot August afternoon.
IIs
The Gel etas Laeglie.
(load and healthy girls are almost al.
ways cheerful. N. eli.t would con-
sider his youthful heron.* en nplete if •
'ringing laugh' were omitted from the
list of her charms, and in real life the
ries who do not laugh now and then aro
seldom trusted or liked by their cnmpan,
soda. Even beauty et not save them,
A hell who fails t.' understand the poor
..1 her admirers, and smile, 1, amiable'
bewilderment while other people ar•-
lauihing, is soars left with no console- I
tl..n este 1.i wonder what anybody meld
see In her rural the happy ptes!ss.or nl
merry eye. and a cheerful mind. The
begift of gayety is indeed s great ralum ; 1
t it must be gayety which originate. •
soirees as ttteay.
A Nee York lawyer
dimmed ar'r tin nett
and etc st foeresame
motel till eight, latel
eyrtlei /oipa!f
kis •
en tenet
irvl "1 Wal
fed h.iesl/e7s
lwsym tiem.a occ
We`es le
idl
Glees USM
hay not had a h- a r 1
illefeing I arise at 6 v
dour w for forty jeers. bks alb
',Id bath, diem in 111101140•• a
at 7 oielnekA.a . ride M
then brevicriet tnd worst at toy boeee
until 11 clock, when I walk down town,
a durance of four miles. I remain a1
um t,thce wail 3 o'clock, then waft
home and dine at 8. .tt T" 4
half an hour. site, which I am for
a,ythiug. I retire between 10 11
,i .Lock. My a,lctoe to y.uog men s to
get eight hours sleep every night. This
young men'.f today are too fast The
candle memo burn at both ends sed last
took. 1 have never smoked whamb to
any shape our furni and never will. 1k
a. 1 hate done and you will los strong at
eighty and probably at ninety
•aeloeasa lie•tee Them nese.
A housekeeper says ammonia. when
purchased in large gaatitiro, is cheaper
than wap, and cleans everything at
touches. A few drops in • ketole that is
hard to clean makes grease and stickiness
fade away, and robe the wort of all its
terrors. Let it stand ten enteutes belt"
attempting to *rape off, sad easel
corner will be clean. It cleans tl:e sink,
and penetrates into the drsiispipe. Spots
or finger marks on paint disappear ender
its magical influent*, and it is equally
effective on door and oilcloth, tboucb it
must be used with great caro on the
latter or it will injure the polish There
is nothing to equal it in cleaning the
silverware, and it gives a higher polish
and keeps clean longer than anything
else. 1f the silver ++`` only slightly
tarnished, put two.. L ilealxwnfula of
ammonia into a quart of hot water, brush
the tarnished article with it and dry with
a chamois. If badly dis:olered they mai
nes' • little whitening previous to the
washing. An old nail brush goes inc:
the cracks to polish and brighten. For
Ane muslin or delicate lace it is invalua-
ble, es it cleats, without rubbing the
finest tabula. Put a few drops into
your sponge bath in hoot water, and you
will be astmniebed at the result, as it
imparts rookie.* to the skin. the it to
clean hair-bruahw, and to wash any hair
or feathers to be seed for beds ur pillows.
When empluved in ■nyehing that i, not
especially wiled, use the waste water
afterward for the house plants that are
taken down from their usual position
and immersed in the tub of water.
Ammonia is • fertilizer, and helps to
keep healthy the plant it nourishes. In
every way, it fat, amnion.* it the ►esraats n
t
housekeeper's friend.
Says Dryden •
"She knows her man, lied when you:rant
and swear
Can draw you t„ her with • single ban.
But it mus, be beautiful hair to have
such power : are; beautiful hair an be
ensured by the use of C1%oatsta Hara
ltirotswee. Sold at 50 cta. by J. Wilsons
A Swink fanner determinei in spite
of the bad tunes to pay Ata rent tf it were
his last shilling, and saying t•. the land-
lord who received it, It is ley last shit -
ling,' he throw dorm a roll of notes.
wonted landlord ented them and said :—
'There aro £Ii0 inn much. 'Odda,man,'
said the farmer, '1 put my hand in the
wrong pouch
1
Bubby stubbed .e toe and came cry-
ing to his mother. 'There. there, Bub -
by,' gibe maid. after she had ascertained
tiedththe injury was trifling, 'you an tan
Ate • buy to cry ••ver • hide thaag like
that ' 'B but what a am i 1-+ 4•., mam-
ma 1' he asked, s»bhiugly . 'I ain't b -big
esoegtt to s •wear.'
WARREN LELAND,
as
whore everybody knewthe seesawl
maMss
amasser et
LarpstHEilupdses
et Amelia, says that wbiI a miewagsr tress
New Tors w w
beard a dila ered Cis
Earn, ,■ the ear;y ,lays of emigration to Cal-
11,r:ia he learned that cine editors edleaor
Joe.revawl el bcured bionduring Moron. dung the ray_
azoMesonMeson, of an obstinate on by the asset
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Nees then Mr. LZi a fro hes reenamwsdsd
c
Ar's aaaaapAau.0 u easy similar
ems, sad ler W sever yrs beard of its tut-
ors to alert • radical mare.
go
INN Jean eone or \err. t. rt. en's fare
rsd
laborers bi.1 s lir. moor to the bad
od
state et ha Mo, .,m m.w: • ecru:M o,w wellara
erlamp smear,d cn t:.r bruted Itmb Hor-
rible licking of 11.e eltn, with burning d
demise mommomthough the lop, mode ifs
dent ksokrabie. Tis lag becalm sear•
h
Mradyeargedliken , sad running formed.
demearging great quaa'Mem/7tltlei of'Mem/7elmtlre matter. No treatment vas at sag
*Har aaUbe ea
el e m, by ler. Lm avn's 41as►
tea, vas sapplled with Awia'e 1ataara-
an.ir, climb allayed Um palm and irritation, '
s J.d
bsoma sm.removed Um eeelliss, .el
sommeesty re wed les limb to uses
Mr. LIMA.= km persoea:1y mod
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
for ltbeyae
wttM.meow, with est ermeow ; end,
after careful otrerrat.-m, declares that, 1a
5., belief, there ti co tut...eine 111 the world
t'. it 1 r t':e rare of Limo Mie rrMre,
Gant. the *Corea of 1.bgb Welsch Milt
Sore., Eruptions. and all Om f.
various .rees of blood d:meamem,
We cure ?:r. erovz r'a p•+ta:elor to invite
all r leo ma w;d
y dielre to ibtr eeaes is regard
to Wm eatrarr.;ia•ry aunt,•a powers et
S.tusaraai.:.t to tee 1 w penes -
Sly .it .-r at LL m:-r.math (blain flael,
Moat Br dyad,, nr at CA.popular 14:tw1 tLintel,
l:roa.lwty, Toth *ad 7thStreets, N.w tick.
Mr. Lsuu
�teem.ams kaoslejge a ale
pat dome by this eamenaned crease's,,[
Used pommel err. -`+:r. b:m to civet legellrls
beck t. -asst unite. aged,
es Co., Lave!, -- .--'
salt sieve
mag ate.p.g. flMie by al: Lr'ja;ru . f 1. all ta.ttlmm !a K
It is a common impression that to take
food immediately beeore guin.t to bord
and b. sleep fa unwise. Sunk a ogees -
Lion is answered by a reminder that the
instinct of animals prompts them te.
sleep as soon as they hare eaten ; and in
summer an after dinner nap. especially
when that meal is takes at midday. is a
luxury indulged in by many. If the
ordinary hour of the evening meal as t:
or 7 o'clock, and of the first morning
meal int A o'clock, an interval of twelve
hours or more elapses without f.od, and
for persona whose mut1ititn is at fault
this as altogether tow lung a period for
fasting That such an interval without
food is permitted explains many a rest-
less night, and touch of the head and
back ache, and the languid, half rested
oondittn• on rising. which mace ' opened
by no appetite for breakfast. This nivel •
keel( often dissipates these sensations
(5t is, therefore, desirable, if not eases
l, when nutriment is to be crowded.
that the last thing before going to bed
ahoyald be the talcum of food. Sleepless '
nem is .often caused by starvation, and a
tumht.r of milk, if drank in the middle
of the night, will often put perm'. to i
sleep wheat h .lass would fail of their
purpose. well before rising is an
equally important expedient it
supplies strength for bathing and dress -
int. laborites and wearisome tams for
• OtODEllICi3
PL A NING .HILL
ESTABLIMREI► 13:3.
Buchaan,Lajjon : Robinson
marrrao•TRs►
tenor
Sash, Doors & Blinds
plump ill AIL taloa or
Luynber, Lath, Shinnies
ad h nidees material of every dero•ripUsa.1
lf:400t F3MITYM fff►EC airy.
a►.1I Order promptly'attesotpd to.
Croderith Ann. 2.lift. meaty
GOBIRICH BOILER 'WORKS
)pare ;net r «-v...! an, ,. k of
BRASS & IRON STEAM FITTINGS
.tt
BOILERS &ENGES
in • kind and cheery heart. not that the underfed, and ishotter vivo ning ' $8I Salt Pans and Boilers
wttieh a thorn of more *tcitoment ..f
tiatlt/t+a ttherleet \mice.
pork top op' than any tunic.
!gratified randy. -[Toy Preen
When the fruit of strawberries is off.
1t will M a grrd plan, to pet a few the mulch et.ould be removed and old
odor ewtilnga, *soh a* hedge slip- I maser. forked in an+mad the pltnts.
pings, is bens' siesta Venwis dao not 1 All runner alai st'omld be cot off, amts
like solaa% sew plants aro needed.
M.:1 tames for new work sad eepstn w
reedye prompt attest ie..
CHRYSTAL Is BLACK,
Werke •ear 0. T. R. Manse.
Wd*rirh, Felt. ZM 11*4.