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The Huron Signal, 1887-10-21, Page 2lEngliek wawa are ler* sad de. 2 THE HURON sfGNAL FRIDAY. OCT. 21. 18S7. eldhemns�•ee eiee. C•s►mere-which tae come into style alaie ger ladies' dresses -es a favorite girls' seats this mamas. Fancy plaids iss twill mad the sleety "blanket pods" are also used, bed the plain soh oehsee is preleased. hod et NEWS OF TP 4 WEEK. ssnedly distleeteished Mr bwatp. Leaked Int." a from an eordiag t, $ waiter in l.uadm Iseeity Meets. there is hardly sneaker adios la Reeewpe whose capital ma boast of so swag beeeWel women its eon 1►` -,,00, The; the testae et easy be well to speak of the g beady is of so 'many varied tide, of se matter of the length cf skirts. (lids of Inane shades end gtsdetiose, that crib eve yeah weer skirts of maim* length, I one only martinet's the other, and fust hall way between hues s&skis ; thee• i be use type 1. repeated sotetiestly often esker wear them .hotter, jest bebw the hose, while for those soder live years, the regulation limit! is &boost to the sake. 8kirte are very full, often tate- suriog three yards, and ate untrimmed, sale a simple design in braiding is used es an r.rwmentatioe. The fullness is laid in side pleat& in trout and gather- ed behind ; and • velvet eord r sewed in with the seam which unites the waist and skirt. Drones of ladies' cloth are made ep foe small girls, and bottom of the skirt is pinked in scallops, with two other pinked bands set cm beneath, so as to .bow three walloped edges. The waist has • deep pointed yoke or rest of velvet, sod where the wait Domes up over the yoke the yoke the edges are also pinked. The back has also the deep point of velvet, and is closed with tiny buttons covered with velvet, or with bullet shaped pearl buttons. This is made mon dressy by cutting out the velvet at the neck to make It half high, and wearing the drew over a cambric or moll guimpe with • high standing collar. This style makes a very pretty and dressy snit for . little girl, end is simple and easily made. If there 1a fear that the mull guimpe may not be sufficient protection, *arab silk in white, or of the Dolor of the dross may be substituted, and the high sileaia hning nut cut out. The sash 1. gathered or laid in soft loose pleats. The dress sleeves ars full and gathered slightly to a dory cod of velvet ; or short, and the silk or mull of the guimpe forms the sleeve, which 1. full and gathered to • band. Another pretty way U to cut the neck of the dress half high, square in the back creep sterna .t s.se.../ ter re•pl• war Weal Obit `rew. w • M...T-.wser- wesYr,. cleated New t. MM m►er weeders Teaem to be.ome wearisome. This is perhaps the obefest ;shares of S.glish pumas. They are all to different to one ..uthrw. In oar own country the mixed race, klaxon, Norman adfl Dane, intermingled with countless other strains from every nationality under the son, has produced s o varied a program that the eyes are D ever satiated and the mind is never oppressed by the sameness which is other countries is apt to pall w fatally u pon the taste. English women are as fair as lilies or dark es southern hoards ; they are slen- der and graceful as the grasses of the field or they ars massive and Juno -like in their proportions : they hays eyes and hair of every shade under the sun, and there is no similarity either in their features or their firerss. The eona.- gwoce ie that, as • rule, a pretty English woman 1. nut woof to consider herself and her appearance as anything out of the ordinary way. If she r Conscious of her beauty she knows also that they are hundreds of other women who not only are as beautiful se her- self, bot whose style of basely may very possibly be preferred to her own ; she knows that the men who flatter her to- day will pay tribute to another tomor row, and the homage she may have gaited is one ball -room last night will b. -i lrterred to somebody else who may ontslligp her tonight in another. This is why oar hogdop beauties are seldom ungenerous to each other ; they understand that the mind of man is fickle and prone to change above all crated things and the raven tresses are J. D. Raymond, who was pealed Vides .uo.el i. Ottawa .boot twenty yews ago, wee (used deed Wedowee, saroiog uI last week is McCrady S Bun's Unwary at Bt..kvite, in which he was employed. A ballet bob was toed in his aide and death had evido.tly takes lace early in the night. Itis not be- liieved that he ousmitted suicide, but bow ler ahootiso traceried is unknown. The family of deonesed h.e at opfew- burg, N. Y. Heigh Oihnor, employed as switchman in the Michigan Ceatral yard. St Thomas. was roe over by an engine and instantly killed Friday night. He was standing on the rear step of an engine when he slipped and fell, the tender wheels passing over kits croaking bum in • terabits manner. Gilmour was a yours man 21 year of age, unmarried and had been employed as switchman about three months. His permits reside at Palmer- ston, Out. Joseph Abell, son of Mra John Abell, of Seaforth, met with • very painful accident in the red mill on it edurday last week. He was standing on a box fixing a belt when the bee slipped from under him, his arm coming to contact with • revolving shaft, tearing off the flesh in • terrible manner. The •mei• Household Hints. Mew Mad eae.td Ther anew. The fullewiug mestere* and Owe vatione ere: so pertie!st and 'seeable that we tags peewee in quoins' them from as sec/hafts : Whisk M the weer, to keep ter child- ren is nett profound in.eteeees of oohed that they an •beuletely without know- ledge of evil satil throws tiro the world, or to prepare them by degrees, that sash knowledge may 001 Geese with sodden shock 1 We often hear it asserted tbnt • very eitaoPbdi••t•d yuetb, oe boisg thrown souse( mixed eompeuioos, is more liable to go woos' than asepueee•e.d of • greater amount of worldly knowledge. Accurdisg to this ides, yard of virtuous training must succumb to ter first breath of evil. Surely this is wrong. "As the twig is beet the tree is Inclined," and purity of thought during the Important year when the young mind is formieg c•uuot so quickly be made of non -effect. In the avers'* mixed seboul it is so painfully tree that young children often learn much of the evil with the good. No matter how psioetakisg the teacher may be, then aro always some children d rtmo.s misde who give debasing ideas to Abair more inoucent companions. Where the children are accustomed to ouofide everything to their mother .he can learn enough of the teodeocies of of their associated to arrest any approach of evil ineuesee& But many good and welhaseniag mothers sever think of in- quiring into the 000verustion and habits cd playmates notal @hooked by some re- velation from their children. Whenever it is Arable, • child is better mentally and morally if educated under its mother's eye than when thrown among mixed companions duriug earlier years. A child educated in frankness of nature and parity of thought is far less likely to rive away to evil than one who has bleu coarsened during tender years. But it is not only vicious playmates who must be guarded against. Many a child loses the bloom of its aabesl so- _ fioement through amociaties-w- b M igoorent nursery mail. Many fondle nurses, chosen for their bright. and -•ipe•ot smouere, ere not really 6t to b3 trusted with children. They Impart their own vulgarity of thought and speech to their little charges, and the evil learned in this way tuu otter. leaves its impress. Looking Recipes. Yw.ra.L* Boer. -Half • pound seek of grated carrot tied toecap, uw 01114,11, use apple, one herd oaf o.lery, chopped floe. Add these te a ge•rt o.f butba water ; bud one hoer, and thicken with oatmeal sprinkled is grede.gy, and boil till the u•tmesl is cooked. Reuse Fowl. worm Foa.•arsit.-Take • ergs fowl, ell the breast of the fowl with a ohm weal stuldisg, and lases it for ming ; pet it dues to • clear ere, sad dredge over it a little sour. 11 • large fowl, it will require about an hoer to roast, but lees time if of a nudism B ias. When dee, remove the skewers. •std aerie it with brown gravy end bread s&wos. OaTesaL ROLLS. -Stir into cold oat- meal pudding that has been eft over suflcier't white Thur to make it stiff enough to knead. The only difficulty is making the rolls is the liability of mating them too .lid with doer. The raciest way to make them is to take • little of the mush on • floured dinner plate, enough for tree roll, sprinkle on white doer and mould in the fingers. Kull them into strips about a finger is length, and une.od one-half amebas wide, and bake in • quick oven. dent, although causiog intense pain is not likely to result seriously. Mr. Mathew Ward, of the 5th con• cession of Tnckersstith, and father ot Mr. John Ward of Soeforth, and Mr. Joseph Ward of Tuckersmith, pegged to his long home cn Monday last, harm reached the unusual age of 86 years end six months. About two weeks ago Mr. Ward went to Bethany, in the county of Durham, to visit his eldest own and daughter, and while there was attacked with inflammation of the lungs which proved fatal He was taken sick 0o Fri- day and died on Monday, A gee.& ebe teals= • "While my husband was trading in furs he came across an Indian who was frequently preferred to gold. Because taken to hi. lodge to die. He had in - and r000ding in front, and trim with a ward pains sod gain* io .Il his limbo her opo dark eyes are paramount today He gave some Yellow 0.1 internally and band od ribbon velvet 14 laches wide, she does not forget that forget me out applied It exteraally, and cared him. It which follows the outline of the neck, blue ones may steal away her adorer's also cured my husband of rheumatism, passes down the front is two rows, and and I Sod it valuable for coughs and around the waist as • belt ; the fronts fancy tomorrow, so that she i. per- 'olds, sore throat, etc." Mn. A. Belem, petually on her probation, as it were, Cooks Mills, Serpent River, tint. 2. ere ()pee betwseu the rows of velvet, and and ever ready to acknowledge the small eyelet -holes worked, and then superior claims that her friends may laced t'th coni The skirt has two w . possess to admiration. widths of cashmere simply hemmed, and gathered or shirred in two or three rows sesseesssse 1 ralltherreaeaers- at the top tie should hare said that Rev H. H. Fairall, D. D., editor of the waist buttons at the back, the lacing the /..,••t M.th.,,l;.t, says editorially, in being purely ornamental. Braiding is in faakion agaio, the Greek key and soil patterns being .quite popular. Fur plainer dresses, and fur older girls, high -necked dresses with the same straight skirts are worn. The (rout of the waist is pointed slightly, the back round, just oomioq to the waist line, and the edge is corded with velvet. The Weevers are coat -shaped, wish little velvet cuffs, and small putts at the top -these puffs extend only across the top of the sleeve, not round the entire armhole. For school dresses girls from nine to thirteen will wear serge, homespun or gay plaid woods made with belted waists gathered to a ycke, and the usual straight gaterJacket waists with e.•fnd n ra aee made for swore dressy wear, and kirts ate pleated in- stead of being gat That the styles will seem strange to some mothers who hare made that small girls' drowses copies in miniature of their own so loeg, we can well believe. Yet we give the fashions as we find them on our streets ; and really think them far snore.ensible and pretty than the very abort skirts, ruffled and frilled and pulled, with overdrapery, which prevail- ed so long and marked the en of Fussi- ness, now, happily, on the wane. Sprees or ran. We have two or three inquiries now before us as to whether spring or fall is the beet time to set out tree& We can't tell how often we bare treated on .this subject, but it is netural that the quer tion 'should continue to he sated, as young men grew up, marry, &ad either ego to terming or in other ways possess land and desire information se to what fruit time to plant sad when to plant them. , In a rery few words we would my that there is not much choice in the 5555005. If the roil is naturally moist, spring is probably to be preferred for meting out ; dry. fall. If the trees are large early fall should be chosen, and as Soon as the tree is done growing and the leaves begin to drop. to both cases the tree should be taken act of the ground carefully and with •s many of the smell roots se possible, mrd be planted as moo after as po.s;hle, bei•ire the rods become dry. To prevent their becnmipg so they should be well covered, kept out of the eon in tr.neportinw, sod "heeled in" or buried and liberally watered as soon as they arrive until ready for planting. The hole Afield be late enough to re- scue all the root. carefully .prod oat, and the groosd put about them should be fine and rich. If the roots are too big they should be.omewkat pruned,ad the br•mehe@ of the tree also. Some theca the brandies, whet[* the roots are few and bare been injeeed in taking ep, should he .eeere'y abscessed to save the life of the tree. Nstioael Til` -MMS t .aid purgative, meting i'n the Bi ate h, Liver sad Repels, removing all .1aN.Aioms. lm 71. Dement' Secretary of the Z ei hates •aammnaw that the i�. 1s. 11641ahaYaR err Ilttslab -M�Wei I IrWlli.• i1. Seidl 'gra tow, the November 1833 number of hie paper : "We have tested the merits of t Ely's Cream Balm, and believe that by a thorough course of treatment, it will cure almost every ase of catarrh. Min- isters, as • class, are afflicted with head and throat troubles and Catarrh .•ema more prevalent than ever. We cannot recommend Ely'. Cream Balm tou high- ly." Tier Straw berry's e'alus. In a discussion on the atawberry, at • recent meeting of the Columbus Horti- cultural Society, one of the speaker declared that this fruit was particularly wholesome as • correctiue of the condi- ion produced by malarial kiaease, At the same meeting the statement was made that the white of an egg coutained as much food as twelve pounds of straw- berties. MW Alan's Adrere. Miss Louie& Aloott gives the follow- ing advice to girls. It 1. • whole volume. She says : "Girl*, don't be In haste to wed. Build up healthy bodies by good food, plenty of exercise and deep. Learn all the useful household arts befwe you attempt to make a home. Cultivate your minds with the best books, that you may be able to teach your children much that school -training alone will never giro you. Choose your amo.ements wisely, for youth muat have pleasure, bet Deed not waste itself in harmful frivolity. Above all, select your friends with care. Avoid girls who live only for fashion, flirtation, and enjoymeut, end use the privilege all women may claim to decline the ac- quaintance of young thee whose lives will not bear inspectiqrtty the innocent eyes of women. Let no delusion of wealth, rank, comeliness, or love tempt you to trust your happiness to such an , one. {Catch and wait till the true lover' comes, even if it be all your life, for single blessedness is tar better than double misery and wrong. Spinsters are • very useful, happy, independent race, sever more so than when all pro- fessions are open to them, and honor, fame, and fortune are bravely won by many gifted members of the sisterhood. Set your standard hilh and live up to it, sun that the reward will c,me here or hereafter, sod in the form best suited to I your rel needs. were Remarkable still. Found at last, what the true piblic has been looking for these many years and that is • medicine which although but lately introduced, has made for itself • reputation second to none. the medicine is Jtheson's Tonic Bitters which in conjunction with Johnson's Tunic Liver Pills has performed some most wonderful cures impure or un- powtrished blood soon becomes purified and enriched. Billiousness, indigestion, sick headache, liver complaint, languor, weakness, etc , soon disappear when treated by these excellent tonic medi- cines. For Sale by Good, druggist, Al- bion block, Godericb, sole moot. Fd] Hay fever is • type of catarrh having peculiar symptoms. It is attended by an inflamed condition of the lining mem- branes of the nostrils, tear -ducts and throat. affecting the lungs. An acrid mncoua isseorated,the discharge lean: m• named with a burning sensstiox. There are severe spares of sn.ssing, (request attacks of headache, watery and inflam- ed eyes. Ely's Cream Balm is a reme- dy that can be depended upon. 50cts. at druggists ; by mail, regieter.d, (tooth Ely Brothers , Druggists, Owego. New York. ly -.111111w- A HOWARD -Of one doses "Melissa ar" to any wwe..ndin� the hest four lin- rhyme on "Tamaiwee, ' the remarkable litte ggeem for the Teeth and Batt.. Ask your dr*gge.t oe address • Womaniser Ora'. The erred organ, and one that Vero • sow/rolling part ere the health of the body is the liver. if torpid we b.adiye the whole eyeless becomes di....d. ler Laver Dr. Ob rs'. liver Cure ismode pd Kidney diesmes. sand t0 ors. hash sal .e..t.sese $ Meederebee. A sidetim of beomhe bee peeved• un- expectedly melts' es • deod.risietg Agee is street eaeaveaivaa, from whish hos. - toes •meter emaaate is this oily. Wbetk. sr it is s tree dieisfeeta•t, or meeely • quarries r W which i&a►t•ry sstboritic. differ. Rum ArrLa Pt'uuisu.-Pare and core • pound of apples, put them into • stew - pan with 'w/heisls& water l0 merino their burning, aid stew them until they will pulp, theu odd u, them half • pound of sugar crushed, the rico( of • lemari, grated, and six well bootee eggs. Stir all well together, and just before put- ting It into the oven melt half • pound of butter, and stir it into the other in gredieita. Pot • puff paste round a pie dish, pour in the posddtog and bake tt. Swage O,ISLLT. - Part the yolks ot six eggs from the whites. stir to three tablespoonfuls of pounded auger to the yolks, • spoonful of door, and a quarter oda pint of creme Mix all well togeth er, then whisk the whites to • stiff froth, and mix them gently with the other in- gredients just as you are about to fry it. Put in half at • time, cover minced -aweetmods on it, fry the other, anal Bern it over, and glaze with I_4_ er. .s a lateen attest Mr Goode, drevgist, is tot a book &geot. bet has the waw•y in Gud.rish for Juhmlee's Tunis Bitten', which he min heartily recommend for any cum pi hat to which • tonic medisise te ap- plicable. This valuable m0disine hes baw with most seo.aluegly good re- sults in ewes of general debility, weak - o..., irr.gelattties peeelsar to females, extreme paleness, impoverishment of the blood, .tomao'► •ud hear trosbles,.le.. of appetite, and fur that general wore tut fouling thea nearly every use in troubled with es soros part of the year. Don't forget the same uhnstoe's Tuve Bitten. 503. and 81 per bottle .t Geode'. drug .ton, Albino block, Ouderish. sol. .gout • A FEW Pointers If Toa Wavt a DINNER SETT, Look at NAIRN'S Stock It os tot a BEDROOM SETT, NAIRN hos theta at all prices • If You Wapt a TU SETT, NAIRN ung a fall assortment If hes 1111 WeslRAIIIU, Nadir has the finest display reW.ees bombe 55*.. Take • "woeful of 11111501 oil, inter- n ally, and bathe the wound with the same. It 1. said to have cured one case that had been thirty days standing, It will cure the sting of bees, spiders or other Insects, and persona who bamboos poisoned by • low running vine called iry. It is equally good to cure animals. To cure • horse it requires eight times as mach as for • man. Buy at • drag store one ouoce of camphorated oil, and eve cents worth of chlorate of rota.h. Whenever any sore- ness 'Lipson in the throat, put the pot- ash in half a tumbler of water, and wink it gargle the throat thoroughly, then rub the neck thoroughly with the cam phorated cal at night before going to bed, and alio place around the throat • small strip of woolen flannel. This 1. a simple, cheap and sure remedy. Horseradish grated into • cup of cold sour milk -let it stone twelve lours, then strain and apply two or three times • day -will, it is mid, remove freckles from hands or free in • short tied. Or, one ounce of lemon joie., mixed with a quarter of • drachm of pulverised borax and half • drachm of sugar, will also re - trove them. Keep the lotion in a glass bottle corked tightly s few days before using, and &ply to the freckles oeeasiom- ally, and they will soon be removed. • Free .Ne. Around each bottle of 1)r Chase's Liver Care is a eddied guide and rrwwip book eoetaini.g useful information. one 900 receipts, and pronounced by doctors and drengiete es worth tee times the enst of the medselee. Medicine and took 51. 8.N by all dreggista M.'e 1M.Mas.. Ram es cask in baiter medicine, but try the greet Kidney sed Liver regale - toe, .est. loy Dr Chase, outline et Obs..'. Apmms.s.ry O2..s'. over Oeste for st dissstiss 'if the Lever. Kidneys, Stooaeh .cad Bowels. Mehl by J.... wires, &mew, 11 there is any place for so called "lady helps" it is certainly in the position of nurse or nursery governess. A well mannered and amiable young wean, correct inspeech and refined in character, would indeed be a treasure to many a mother whom circumstances compel to intrust her children to an- other's are ; for a vulgar and ignorant woman not only demoralises her little charges, giving them a taint of vuleerity that no after education removes, but she is also apt to tomb them inaccuracies of speech or pronunciation which cling to them after they are removed from her Care. The beat safeguards are a vigilant watch over the companions of our child- ren and the preservation of a complete confidence. Evil will be all the more i boil all together for half an hour. hideous to them after their life has been moulded in spotless purity through their pars of mental growth. AY Ex' SLLI'T WHITS Socr.-Take two pounds of scrag of mutton, a termite of real, after cutting off suffi- cient meat fur cullops, two shank blues of mutton, and • quarter of a pound of lean bacon, with • bunch of sweet herbs, the peel of half • lemon, two onium, three blades of mace, and some white pepper ; boil all in seven pints of water till the meat falls to pieces. Skim it well ; set it by to cool until the next day ; then take Off the fat, remove the jelly from the udimrnt, and put it into a stewpan. Have ready the thiekeuing, which is to be made of had • pound of sweet almonds, blanched and pounded in • mortar, with • spoonful of water to prevent them from oiling ; • large slice of cold vest or chicken minced and well beaten with • shoe of stele bread ; all added t:. • pint of cream, half a rind of a lemon, and a dads of mace finely powdered. Boil it a few minutes, and pour in a pint of stock ; strain and rub it through a coarse sieve ; add it to the rest, with two ounces of vermicelli, sod Farm anb ear en. Mew to Meow • Cow. The family of Rip Van Winkle appears to have some lineal descendants still left in the State of New York. One of them has recently sent to the newspapers a loner and able treatise on the moon and its influences, of which the following is an extract : "1 see a gnat deal in the paters bow to choose • good cow, but I can tell you • rate worth all the rest. If • cow was calved when the horns of the moon pointed down she will be a good milker, but if born when the borne of the moon pointed up she will go to flesh, and sometimes to akin and bones. I never need a calf born in the wrong time of the moon. I always butcher in the n ew of the moon and have fully one- third more meet, I always build my fence when the horns of the moon point up, and stake and rider it when the moon points down ; the two draw to- gether and my fence newer fails. The moon should govern us in all our operations. I once attended a camp meeting sad joined the church in the dark of the moon, and I b•cks'id won- derfully. Sino* then I became coarser ed in the light of the moos and rare stock ever since. Our school boom, contrary to my advice, was rooted in the light of the moon. and last winter nearly .II the children had the measles and now the roof is leaking badly." mass •.d 6wea.ms. The Des Marries State R.J.drr, in re. ply to • eorreapoadeet, says that medi- cal and *bowieal writers claim that the true ergot seldom develops in wheat, wire it is most prevalent is rye, MM gram and wild rye, red top, eta Ergot, or smut, is not dieemed grain, but a fungus growth from spores which by some prows becomes lodged in the ovary of the grain and prevents the de- velopment of the seed. it is entirely a fungus growth, and is an independent organism. it is said that the microeccps of high power develop great wonders is this parasitic plant o0 rye and the greases. If it is not the real ergot there is no danger to stock. There say be asset ow the stalks and diseased grains in the head, and yet be safe and healthy food fur week. The meteorological condition favorable for the prodoctioe of ergot is wars, droop, foggy or rainy weather. The must wheat ewes, ex beck or blasted friss, are more or leas penitent is .11 wheat. if these suet grain* rete UM nal poieow- ows enrol, the early ..tilers would have had a hard time braes it they had not all hese swept hem the earth. In the early days the (io.i.kiag mile had w smut endives, .ad the 8..r made by swell sills was very desk motored by the grstaa of smut 1 the whmat. The writer hes seen wheat se& into (leer eh.e there wee *vial.M from ate to two quarte of amid grebes to the Umbel cat wheat, sad yet s deign el optima. TLe Measliest tespe•Ilte. of M as. Itfis !ut AgtkiRE IR SASS. NAIRN'S before purchas- ing elsewhere. From a chemical point of view, men 'a body is composed of thirteen elements, of which five are gasses and eight are solids. If we c►oaider the chemical oompositee of a man of the average weight of LA pounds, we will find that he is composed insister* part of oxygen, which w ir. a state of extreme compres- sion. In fact, • man weighing 134 pounds contains ninety-seven pounds of ozygte, the volume of which. at ordinary temperature would exceed 980 cubic fest. The hydrogen is mock less in quantity, then being lees than fifteen pounds, but which in a free state, would occupy a volume of 2800 cabers feet. The three other gases are nitrogen, Dearly four pounds ; cholrine, about twenty-six ounces ; and florin*, three and • quarter ounces. Of the solids, carbon wads at the head of the metalloids, there being forty-eight pounds. Next onme• phosphorus, twenty-six minces, and sulphur, three and a quarter ounce& The moot "bon. dant metal is calcium, more than three pounds ; next, potessi.m, two ed • half osoess ; sodium. two and a quarter oenees ; and, lastly, iron, ore and a geartee ounce. It is needless to my that the rariow oombivationa made by the thirteen elements an also in- numerable. wet.em gar ob. Ueema. "This Is ens of the cutest things in the watch line that has yet appeared,' mid jeweler Charles 8. Crossman hold• ing up one of his new Swiss watches de- signed for the use of the blind. "Tne old raised 6q ore watches were clumsy and the blind people were eon.tantly bending or breaking the wat.h hands by touching them. In this watch a small peg is net is the centre of each figure. When the hour hand is approaching a certain hour the peg for that hour drop when the (sorter before it is passed. The person feels the peg is down, and then counts bock to twelve. He an thus t.11 the tine within a few minot55, and by p eetisisg w can bosom* so el pert as to tell the time slalom ezactly. They hare heart in use about Mx months. and then is • steady and growing d.. seed for them. -New York San. aiaY seine ee. Ren no rl.* ie baying medicine, but try tee most Kidney mai Liver rigida tor, mods by Dr. Obese, w her of Chem'. reesippeses.� Try Obrs's Liver Ogre fir all dlss..e of the carer, Mil- es,* Stoseeelt Bowels. field by all For Pure. Caad.issnYd FRESH GROCERIES! CHAS A. 1\T I R I•T —HAS TREM— EV ERYTHING WARRANTED. YOUR TRADE SOLICITED Ooderi b. April tate. IAS'. HEAT HEAT SAU NDERS CSL SO N Are prepared to caress estimates tor heating PRIVATE HOUSES on PUBLIC BC'ILDINOS .r1Tr1 bot Ai.r or got Water SANIT1BT PLUIBIIU. S ole Agents for THE E. k C. GURNEY CO -8 Stoaes, Bang.'; and Farm CALL ASS tar rams& The Cheapest Nouse UNDER THE SUN. West-st., next door to the Poet Offie.. Dederick. July 1S. IU?. DR HODDER'S BURDOCK THE GREAT REGULATOR et lite tiesemeb. Leery, Newels sod Wrest. Came At rlirbe. te.•te .moss. Tema* 1.mphibeet. sad I..Mde lip ten twosome. Asan 17ra roL owtwO: For years port 1 have weed frees d pepsla sad i was ream t• IN Hodder'" Compound. i �at�r/� tR a perfect care. IL J. CCR pa" Sold everywhere. Pales• 0.e, N. MMEe'1 dell AN UM MK Never Pelts. Haraaterd. Pelee, m*. t ase. THE UNION MKDiCIRZ 00.. Sit-ly Proprietors. Tireesse. pal. Farmers Al1011t1011 ! Nevem lately purchased eke 5-urstept•a.Mg. re pesos. Use Ives, 1 ea soar y Pres Hay by the tea at tke bare �et ssttaas.. 11 tat/ Orders aise tee Pr Wily lisafrUJd be /h.M b the let of August HALT HAY at.wara 1517 ON Maw. 1 •'•o wasenteetw" APPI,R DARRELA Fl.nt•R BARREL". RE'TT*R TUB5.'Orr WATER CIRTERlin, he. APPLE DEALERS: I teak. APPi.E BARRELS spMetA TT. Mr faolllti.s tor supply ,ase. the paneM..ee ser � the woerwe sp•elg. MOM itally estp.t ► q►, N bard& as.* ase s ball. se.eerseteas awremeawe CHAS. BATES, S eep sad Restdwee■ ssv Ta_tatee. PAY UM.wR Y.i. 111111104 A • I bad slippers, and the and to IL ting ve al pru8c:abh form it bjr eery bell & 00 411101 Fennegh la-. "I'11 ce I should any odor, naafi rue there no more, • tare elm however nut hide nor detra ale face- -the rip whits bi smooth e yea ttlur' Mpsr hat i�.I .p tst� Ile � i.t a.s and w•rold ( h.•onznd the chest walked wound ie 1>tsatg.. s1 pis ism, Wray se ,glee a ot =I t. doctors' ever, oth Gess." His wi 1 had "g, and to m: lied to b stood coni whom I y"ung, to, a • is a -lam r themsel' By thi heiress, money, 1 :hequee. t , make battle in and I do hive had & roas a lady. Still, 1 joked a1 over the ed amore ret see 1o0a. nem of sole alts sister, h ' `Cbai used to TWA, an "He t bis Iwai Coomeb wealthy latiom I with ata agonal harsh 1 they ha le • d:011 little oo amigo • tlst r rad chi elle ey eh* we the .x the eye the bl hood. Nat inteve tonity fel we r shed in: sr to do Oft garde work look t knew little Who emelt ..1e 'ghee