HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1897-8-19, Page 66 T*UR8DLY, August 19, 1897
- HOME NOTES. •
Pum." --Two cupfuls white sager. one•
bolt cupful hatter, Doe ouptal sweet milk,
whiter of eves eggs wall heaths, ewe
spoesIuls bakt:se- wder. three small cap-
fuls of flour ; flaw with almond et row.
Rake L small. r d tits, and toe thickly.
Cuiwattuv 8isErrs. -- Whip stiff the whites
of ern eggs, gram two fresh cocoanuts and
add, with me-and•a•balf cupfuls sugar rod
ase otol of flour, well sifted, with • •poen•
fed of Wthstpowder. Bake ow -hell hour
la tbk• .hast► los sad apriakle with oo-
°Maae.
Lluxr KOLIA.—GAS copied warm water,
two oap(uia milk, one yeeat oak"; flour to
make • soft batter. When light add • tagger
"poosfal of butter, and one of sags:, and
mold. Whoa well ren, divide into small
Meow maks tato rolls ; rise again ; glaze
with the white of an egg, and bake.
GOLDEN Cala -One potted of floor dried
arid sifted, one pound of soft, whim sugar,
three-quarters of • pound of butter, the
grated rind and juice of two lemons, the
yolks of fourteen egg" and one level tea-
spoonful of soda, Cream well together the
ugar and butter, add the tents of the sop
beaten vei y light. then add the 6 fur and
S. soda dis"olved in • gill of sweet cream.
Jost before baking put in the lemonjuio",
beating it thoroughly. Bake carefully, •ad
toe.
hitt TEE CA Ke.—floe pound of sugar,
[bine quartan of a pound of flour dried and
sifted, half -a -pound of butter, use pourd of
citron, the whites of fourteen eggs. Beat
the ,agar and butter to • cream, add the
egg -whims beaten to • sill froth, and, lest•
ly, add the flour with bait.,-tesep000ful of
pouoded mace and the grated rind of one
lemon. Just before Laking stir in the cit•
whioh must have lees well floured.
Bake oarsfully and ice. This is • hesutifd
and deliotuus oaks, if made according to
direction..
Btutws ST.w.—Cut op, as for frying, the
two chickens 000ked for plan ; put them
tato • bakiagpeo, sprinkling with salt and
pepper and dusting over with flour—.bout
two tablespoons. Cut op over the otichen
. • third of • pound of Dice butter and pour
in ons teacupful of rich, swestoream. S.
in • very hot oven and Lrowu quickly, from
rime to time turning the pieces. so that
they will brown on all sides. The oven
must be ver hot so that the chicken will
not be 000kiog very long. If the gravy is
too thick add • little hot water.
OaArcuz CiacLtM.—Two poptui. @near,
one (lupial butter, one oupful milk, whites
of four eggs and yolks of five, two spoon-
fuls of htking•powder, •apountul of 'Mari
flavoring, and flour to make • smooth t it -
ter ; bake quickly io round baking-powd.:
box coven. Take abs white of Doe egg.
" ' anti heat stiff with sugar ; add the jeiee of
, ,cos omens. - Plans.two oak's together with
the ioiov between, and icei'the top, The
grated akin may be used, if desired, in the
inv.
Pi a:v.—Boil two fat, young chickens in
just water enough to oover them, sod season
with salt to teat. When the chickens are
just done, remove from the Cwt Ptit into
the liquor one .lice of nice, raw ham ; wash
• pint of Caroline' r.oe, pat it in • pen and
pour over it the chicken liquor and set the
pm in the steamer where it should coek Do-
xil thb riati fa tender and each distinot. It
should b' stirred 000asiooally with • fork.
Bee that the liquor is malt enough ) seasca
the nor properly. Pelao is • oharmiog dish,
and is served with the meas just se you
would plain, boiled rice. No gravy '-i re-
quired on pelan, as it is already delightfully
r•sooed with the obioken to& in which it.
has been cooked- To be served in • cover.
ed dish
♦Arum;ArEr) JOLLIER.—Whentbefollow-
ing dish is nioely prepared the result, in
every way, is so piercing that it would be •
didionit task indeed to surreal it. Take six
rood sound oranges, out from the stalk end
of each • silos shout the size of • shilling,
and then with • Darrow instrument work
eat all the juice and pulp of the fruit, oak•
flag great oars not to break or injure the
skins in any way. Throw the latter, when
site empty, into • howl cf cold water sod
—leave them there for an hour to herded,
Um turn them upside down on alievs in
order to free them from every particle of
moisture. II any tiny holes hers aooident•
ally been made io the skins they must be
filled in with putter. When quite dry, ar-
'urge the orange skins, out side uppermost,
on • bed of los if possible, and 611 one-third
of the number with bright -colored onngs.
jefly, oorthrfd with leer Yee I r;illilaliy;
and the remainder with rich onstard jelly
that is, rioh rnatsrd tirade in the usual man-
ner and mixed with ttufioient French sheet-
Rsistine to make It stiffen when oold. Next
dry, out the oranges in quarters with a
sharp koife, pile up the pieces tastefully on
• lam dlsh•psper, and intersperse freely
with lovely, trerIP green leaves of various
shades. If the different onion ars artists.
°ally arr•ored, the dish look. elegant in the
extreme.
Or
e
i
r
0= INTEREST TO WOMEN.
A Lady Cared after Seventeen Years' Afffio•
Idols with Disorders psaular to her sax
by Dodd's Kidney Pills—Other
Unfortunates oan M cured
as Well as She.
Tdttelrrn. Anv. 16 --The pnblioatlnn of
Ms letter of Mrs. Rainy, of Ashland. We..
oescerning her ours by Dodd'■ Kidney
Pills afar 17 years of "lotuses, b •wets•
ed wfde-apread interest amongst the women
of Canada It is truly marvellous that •
woman etfiiotei as long w she was, who
had tried all the remedies within her re•ob
and all the doctors mold do for her, should
ba cored by se strolls and easily aoo.esible
a remedy as these pills. What they did
ter her they will do tor all other women
eafferlag from diseases peonllar to tboir sex.
Lady dans Grey.
Then are no two distinooished stoles is
English history that have been more em•
barr•ssod than that of Lsdy Jane Grey and
Met of Oliva Cromwell. That both them
celebrated personages were sovereigns of
England, although under different forms of
government, we know ; sad yet Lady Jane
has been 'mewled a gam as tush in
the hears of the b,ngllwh people, or eras is
monsmeoml marble, while quits rro.otly,
saly, Cromwell has Moo able to elbow hie
we/ into a rewen,red pesities in steps in
the groat English metropolis The remit.
ties to aro.pt either of these eharsotero in
the light ,f • ruler has, we lmavinh, base
prompted by John Ball's meats lees of
ment,rehioal institutstious administered by
these who or. •N *sty of royal blood, bat
who stand nearest In • direet line to LhsIr
immediate prede/cossorit was bosses* of
the exhtsnne of this mentimtent that Ledv
Esso Grey lout her Mad, and that en the
Root Tees's the r.atalne of Oliver Cromwell
were sed permitted to looter rest nude -
barbed 1. Hety t he ftJ.resth'. ohms'.
Lady Jaw, who was bens at Bradgate, is
I5g7, was the grest•Rrs.ddaugkter se
Lar) YTL She was Melly • lueated, sod
et a tlitmpoeities mast 'harming. Is aa eyU
herb, hogrofte IBI Meas provttele Vny
sordid sad labeettsd parties to 'tempt the
crows white •sewed of right to balms to
Mary, abs lister of El 'Moth, end daughter
of Henry VIIL Ha prstsstlons wen sot
supported by tbs English mop's, and the
result was her attar overthrow sad M.
preeminent is the tower, is which she was
ultimately beheaded, and on the same day
that her bwbsad, bo'd Guilford !iddley,
was brought to ON block os Tower H,IL
Tey and ltle Toys.
"1 ohculd like to hays • new icy every
dry !" ezol•ime Gladys, with s long sigh, as
she looks at the doll she ham just received
from her load Iib.r.
"Theo you'd be •u extravagant, disoes-
tested child," says curse, very sharply, for
mho thinks that Gladys bas already too
nany toys, and is not disposed to show any
favor to newoomere, sod she is right, for •1.
ready Gladys is indict 1 to break and De.
(deal bar older toys simply because they are
old.
Whoa they go for their walk, nurse looks
into the toy -shop windows longer than
Gladys has ever known her to do batore,and
as they pause bettor* one she snddesly says,
•' Miss Gladys, look at these children. and
listen to what they sty."
Two ranged btu' boys were gezior long-
ingly at balls, drums, hats, windmills and
tops which are invitingly displayed in the
window. It was • small shop in a narrow
street, and the toys were of snob • bumble
klad that Gladys had .no glaomd at them.
Ob, look bore, bill !" says the younger ;
" ain't that • lovely ball ! My ! 1'd like to
have it."
Bill looks in silence. The drum is bilis,
him with envy—t harmless sort of envy,
and bs thinus the sbopmao very stuptd ter
not m•robing ap and down besting that
dram. How oat be resift the temptation !
" Well, nurse, I listened. They were
just pc r children. Fancy liking such til.
as those'"
WOMEN RULE 'EM.
Wemlalae lagaeare l• a Typical ka.eas
Tema.
William Allen White, in the August,At-
lactic, has • paper entitled " A typical
Kansas 'Town," in whioh he soya : " Women
shape the public sentiment in • Nelms
town.
town. In most towns in other states the
corners of the prinoipil streeta are occupied
by dram .hope. In the town where this
paper is written. the influence of women has
been exerted w forcibly that throe of the
tour ooroen where the two mato streets
Groes are ooaopted ty banks. Instead of •
saloon on the fourth corner elands • book
store. Hers -the boyw7rd- Tonne tush- of
the town find • meeting plow. Here they
maks thiir appointments. Here they
browse through the weekly ittustrateu
papers sod the magazines and look through
the new hooks. 11 this book store the foot
ball games are bulletined, the base ball
games are talked over sod politics finds Is
tomer, AmoVRiW ether hominid men who
frequent this resort there u no habitual
drinker ; there.- fagot one whose Mira has
been stained with soandal. Thew young
men are basin x sap, clerks, profer.ional
men, real setas brokers aid college stu•
dents. They are clean, shrewd, active
young men, who have been brought up in •
town when the women make public senti-
ment, in • town of "Dettioost government'
wherein • woman has never herd an admin-
istrative municipal office. It to • town of
8,000 inhabit int i, without •saloon, without
• strange woman and without • town
d run k Mrd.
CONGREGATIONAL SINGING-
The congregation should stand when they
sine.
Use any given hymn always with the
same tune.
Use • book 'n which the hymn and tune
rr_e upon one page.
They should mod in the usual attitude
of worship, facing tbs pulpit.
The oonceot'oo of the hymn should not
tie broken by orgon interims', or needless,
long pauses.
Let there be no forced pauses for the ob-
servance of punotustioo nor any ncodl"as
delay at the end of the lines.
The greater part of the 000greg•tioo,male
and female, should sing upon the treble of
the tunes : it is iodispeosoble that there be
men's totter' on this part.
Let the hymns and tanes that are mod be
familiar b t next reheartt•L, hath
inpmblDocOaI•o�.m_..
They should rime rlmulten.onaly and
promptly when the organist bits reached
the beginning of the last line.
Children should be instructed to singing,
at home and in the seboola, and abonid he
e000araged to sing with the congregation.
The organ sad the thole. or precentor
should he in front ot the oosrregation, near
the pulpit and on the same level with the
pews.
Lot the singing be in steady, uniform
time from the beginning to the end of the
hymn, without* iy oo'io.able aocelers. e
or daokeaing.
Let there to no labored effort atter " ex
premien," by m..ns of frequent and sudden
changes from soft to loud and the reverse,
or by the swelling and tapering of the voice,
Or by studied aooentostioo.
Use tones that are strictly congregational
in their struotere. Bot, until these are
learned it may hs advisable to ore saoh
old tunes, judiciously selected as are a1•
ready familiar.—Presbyterian.
If the help of a choir of singers, well die.
posed toward' oosgre'ational staging, can
be secured, they may be of great ~vice in
leading the ooegrer•tlon- But 1f the roo-
i igatton ars not lead by a oho'• they
should be lead by • precentor.
Lawyer—Rimes., I believe you are the
Merit liar is the 0000try."
Judge --Sir, you forgot that I am here.
A revenue officer charged Noah with
browing boor aboard the ark, because he
saw the kangaroo going on board with hops.
Mlko-01 say, if • man 1" horn o France
he's • Frenchman.
Pat--9nre, an' if a oat had kittens in •s
oyes would you call them hlsouita Y'
A war mw of the Dominion of Canada 1*
in promises of preparation. It will show •II
the weds, bridge. tows., villages, black-
smith shop and seer.
" You Ms* a will balanced company,
said the kind oritio. i Mink es, responded
this manager, with pride. Very well bal-
anced Indeed. The heavy vtlllka Ie so light
end the light nernedlw in so heavy that UM
balance may be called almost perfe0,s
Crtmsniissk--i knew that fellow Seem
the nom.diam would mime to the fresh
Yeast And has he!
Why ~thinly. Von ranesnherbe need
be play ted part of the hind leg. of a heifer.
Y
Will sow M's playing the frost legI.
.NWG' Y.iN..
b .t ,
:tree
THE SIGNAL : UrTAKIV.
li Fdi'
AN ECONOMIC MISFIT.
The farmer tufted is kis stir' chair,
"I paid u y taxes to -day, said he,
"Aad msyhs you think it's right and fair
But duraod if It looks that way to mm,
Ditty I fled irks piece, bafat they had the
fees
To tax me as muob again. by gee 1
"Of oourse I kicked 1 and I said, " by
darn ! "
rd bk. to know if it's somethio' sew.
When a man nowt Bs ap his house and bra
"Though payln' the tow' and the punt -
en, too
It don't seem fair and 1t don't look equate,
To have to pay for Um good yuu do !
" Now L'zur Jones, his Nom Dome down,
And h. burut it up (as 1 alius s'posad),
And-•biseres got loose and ranged the town
But they taxed him !w reuse ha Wad
w ant olooed.
It's like gielo' • prise for the orossest eyes,
And the freckles& gals and the snubbest
Mosel
" Ef that's the way the ooantry's run
To tae • an for his thrives' ways,
It 'peers to me that the more that's done
Towards improvin' things, the lees it
Pe Y..
Let your place roti' dews sad disgrace the
town,
And your rows ret )2tio the road to
graze."—Paul Pastor.
.WE'VE ALWAYS BEEN PROVIDED
FOR.
'*--Mood wife, what aro you simakgj}ase, you
— know we've lost the bey —
And what we'll do with horse sad kys, is
more than 1 can say ;
Whale, like as not, with "torn. and rain,
we'll lose both tors and wheat"
She looked up with a pleasant foo., and an•
sewed low sod .,.set ;
" There's • Heart, there u • Head, we fool,
but output the ; p
We've always been provided for, and we
shall always be."
Hi turned .cooed with madden gloom. She
said : "Log , its at rest :
You cut the grass, worked soon and lam,
you aid your very best,
That was your work ; you've osogbt at all
to do wall wind and rain,
And do not doubt but you will reap rich
fields of golden ;rain ;
For there's • (1 ',rt and tho's'e s Hasa, we
fest, hut cannot sea ;
We've always been er —'pmaT1/e�10r _Jrlse_
kbaTTi7ways hs,r'
That's like a 'roman's raufesitlet are
most bemuse we mum."
-
She early said : •a I rectos tat; 1 oma
work and trust.
The harvest may redeem the day, keep
hes.., what.'er betide ;
IYbca ons door shuts, Poe •lwayi Mao w-
otLsr open wide.
There • Heart, [hers is a Hoa, we fool,
hat cannot ue :
Wive always been provided for, and we
shall always ba."
He kissed the t ilm and trustful fie ; gone
was his restless pain.
She heard him with • cheerful step go
whistling down the lane.
And went about her household tasks full of
• glad content.
Singing to time her busy hands, as to and
fro she went
There t,' • Heart, there is • Heade we feel,
bot mroot see ;
We've slwajs boss provided.1011,--and we
shall always be."
Day come and go, '[wasabristaMM
and 111s treat firs burned eller :
The farmer mid : "Dear w"., ft's hum •
rood and happy year ;
The fruit was Fain, the surplus ours lass
bought the hey, you know." --
Sbe Idid then • smll'og face, and sed z''.41.
, told you so;
For there's • Heart, and tber.'m • Hand, we
fool, tut ornnotme1
Waft always hp's ler, and we
shall always he
Tis Y.'Aea la ♦terms
If the garden has been well oultivted
through the earlier part of the summer, so
that plants have continued to grow without
ioterruptios from weeds or • crusted sur-
Early vegetables, as peas, lettnoe, radishes
etc., ars int .clog their seed, whioh
Deed
n ow to be watched mrefnlly to secure the
earliest that matures for planting next sea
eon. Mitch ret the eaoes of gardening de
nods upon the gnomes
harvesting of seeds
If the pod,' ars picked.off the t .o vines an
the vides lett in the greand, they will tiptoe
ap from the later rains and grow soothe
scall crop of peas, which is about as sate
factory as a separate planting for late use.
esmo
Early tui, 1pe, beets, tomatoes, carer
squash, otoumbere and string beans we now
supplying the table with good things, end
wooers for the welfare of this portion e
the pardon has cursed. But later varieties
of the same kind. and others whtoh mature
only in autumn are just now in their 'real-
est seed of cultivation. It would hi a fatal
mistake to relax effort while •11 rho winter
stook is in its rrowing prime, although It ieN
one quite apt to be made after the sppeta
baffled to be satisfied with fresh vegetables.
madam We frequently see madamfaultier-4y kept
up to this time, then all at en ce abandoned
to weeds and pests till in • little while they
'generate to the oondition of • wilderness. was No Implement de • qualm the hoe for whtun
im,o
o the rardem It should be sharp, whim,
requires an omsion's' filing ; them it should
be rapidly and deftly wielded, totting offm[ hosan-
na
• weed and breaking the arum
the soil all about mob plante t end eloup
m
to the stem, without patting lobo either
tom or root. Cabbage thrive gustily whoa
mender.thus treated *very ether mender. t -no
*getable, are quits particular about the
me of being worked. Cabbage moos to
refer the early mbo
motoring, while ons most
ot he worked wh.', the dew lm still es
hem. or the da.t lodging on the loathe
es them.
In addition to hoeing, bees, tarsi'',
ions, in abort all root crops, net 1 to be
Bose over tome whether the merltm Mimes*
war prop.'ly dose. It is so .'lural to want
ease the plans that the. task has to hs
meted once or twee le glee room for ithr-
nol development.
Vines are deserving of spools' .tensible.
gr
Requiring as they do • eat .mount of
moiisttrv, the *oil about their roots must be
remissibly stirred, oven after tem hart
preset. If the sneers are out off May
branch, Myles mots Barrios for fruit hear.
than if left to natural development
They wilt stelae any animist of nb•
met Mid are good mnhjeets for the applies -
Mee et has maters, whetsshould always he
wed. I ells a fewiew *remit the
=ilkwi••otter ak
la a gusto and peer water,
L
s.twnb 11., tbs. I. with the sell,
Wars rain • . rood eats M apply Its
ke a poorness .f s remdi.g fertilises es
esoumsLse
ts. All weed ashes Mee at.
1
mired ie las rutattoe . -Y. IS% trees,
baths, and Is the garden. Weeds MOM
ap so to banish eon* crop I all Maps ems
thrown where tory will b.oeit sense tteg♦e-
fatiem. By this wawa coil fertility le par.
tally psessrv.d, mad few things are of eters
vital Importa.os to the farmer than the ew-
dition of his sea ,
[seat et Iaat.ad isles.
Tits hank of Esiiandmites now to um are
the most elaborately msoufaoturd '• bits of
paper." The paper is remarkable in any
ways ; no other paper has that peculiar
tougher* and ortepnew,• sad Ms stye may
dwell with admiration on the papea's re-
markable whiteness. Ile *Mesas and
trarepareooy guard 'geed the two oyes
popular methods of forgot y—erasure with •
hods, and washing out the printing with
turpentine. The water mark Or wire marc
le an additiooel promotion •gaiaat oouater-
fetiog, and is produced in the paper while
to io pulpy crate. In the oldsaanuf•otured
bank noise this water mark was mused by
the.00rmous number of over toe chummed
wires stitched and worm together ; now it is
engraved in • ,teel•faued die, afterwards
harden(3. and in them used as • punch to
stamp the pattern out of plates of sheet
brass.. The dittioulty of oouomrfsiuog a
still further increased by the, ehedi*' of the
lettere in the water mark. The paper is
made entirely from new Moms of linen and
clone, sod its toughness is so great that •
single bank note will. when uoeised, asp -
port • weighs et thirty six pounds, and
wb.o sized you may lift flfty•mix pounds
with it.
Cenepltsseatary,
11 in said that • certain wsU-knjwa pgr-
trait painter has atmoat as great*
tion for joking w for taking sr
nesse', One evening hs was mpesktaa e; •
beautiful young giri whose portrait be had
jest finished.
•' Het features ars •:quisisly moulded, I
have heard,' mid • lady who had teen
neither the portrait nor its ortgina1.
" Beautitul forehead and eyes," returned
the arts[, concisely, , handsome noes, fins
oho. but mouth like an elephant'''
., Mouth like an elephant's'" cohoed the
lady in dismay. " What •,rrible .nafor-
tone, Do you mean that it to so enormous
Aad—What do you man !"
" Only that it it filled with .upberb
ivory," returned the artist with his usual
gravity.
NOVA SCOTIA CASE.
Suffered Without Help—$Jghteete Years
Grainy Worse—Cutaiby Dodd%
Kidney
" Baisesi►atld, N.B.-.114. 16 —Thin l
so man is this town better knows timed. 8.
Morgan. tinsmith, woo tor eighteen years
bad been going from had to worth wuthosi
help until at Iast•he got hold of the rigbt
treatment. He tray" •—" It ix,tan with Me
htckoohe, palm in the limbs, and ga0Uy
settled down as rbrnm•tims.. I- =Las
orippte fwd der I rem does greatly
wetrbt the doctors said it wee diabetes.
About • yasr and a half ago I omit every-
thing •iter sod took Dodd's Kidney Pill,
Have taken twentv•thrs* north, and have
regaissd my weight, health and strosgtt,
1 am perfectly otued."
NEW DRUNK CURE.
Morse& Bleed lsseatsted Aleebel
reMos,
San Francisco, Aug. 7.—Dr, Fred. W. D:
I3wlyo, head of St. Lake's hospital in this
sty, bas just mad. public the results of 15
yew' experiment., by whioh he Maine the
dtatinotioo of having, founds oorrata ogre,
by inoculation of horse blood, for drunk -
nese, as well as tor the treosmuiercin of
hereditary taint of alcoholism. Dr. F.velya
Mon his investigations while • surreou is
the British army to Zululand, and headset.
ad • horse a • clean animal with plenty of
blood.
His our* is on the same lines as venoms.
tioo.
The dootor introduces aloobol into the
horse sod then draws off the 1,lood into •
sterilised vewl, where it is mixed with
ohlotel to toflaeoce the clot After settling
24 boors it is subjected to • freezing process
and than shakes for ,balf as hour and aa -
mated.
d.
result - A—aligbtly—shy, straw -
mimed fluid whioh he salts equl.1.a Whet
vaccine bas been to smallpox, be says. 'qui-
nine will be to hereditary or acquired al.
cohollam. Equi.ise is prepared is small
plagues wade ty saturating Raper with
libido alalia- tires Ts'liW-Hiem a • bot-.ir
obamber. The skis of ted arm or leg of
the patient is sserifioed and • plaque moil-
ed, moistened with boiled water. Twelve
hour@ later the plaque is sgsm moistened
and applied and worn for five days. In
adult oases of alcoholism • plaque 's ap-
plied once a week for eight or nos maks.
The doctor declares that ho bas been sue-
oessfa' in all came where sedatives or oar-
ootios were not teed
Friend—That was a good poem you wroth
some tiee ago deneasoing the love of
mons y."
Poet--Yse ; but 1 can't sell it"
Howsom—Beastly mem of you to refuse
te lend me 110. One friend should always
heilp another."
Lensunse—Fe. ; bub you always want to
As the ether."
" The codfish," says the professor, " lays
oonsiderobly mere ohm • million eggs."
" It's mighty Iaoky for the codfish that
she doom's have to cackle over every mg,"
said the student who came from the sons
try.
g 2 STEARNS'
BIOYOLES
..fro .
27 GOLD
WATCHES
emir awit&Y
-111111RY MONTH
a Tose Wee goad lir; dtllgatt limber M
. Use drown will gipaan.M gip~ve you y REAM
er crop
L*VIR BR08.(Limited)Toronto
11114,
(3.
THE BEST
FAMILY MEDICINE
. IiIse /tree Laws. Weeds at noise
arm a lbw Test IMO ter
AYER'S 'PILLS
"I would like to add my testimony to
[kat of others who Lave used Ayer's
Pills, sad to say that I have taken them
for many years, sod always derived the
hest results from their use. For stom-
ach and liver troubles, and for the care
of headache caused by these derange.
aunts, Ayer's PILL cannot les equaled.
r
kk 6.
OFTBI
JUBIIIBE YB18'
CANADA'S
Victorian Era Exposition
AND
!NDUSTRIAL FAIR
TORONTO,
AUGUST 30th to SEPT.ith
Gland Attractions, New Fea-
tures.
8pfcial Jubilee Novelie3
The Latest Invenions 'n
the Industrial and Amusement
Field- Improvements and Ad-
vancement in all Departments
belling all Protons Tears
MITESILCILOMIL �p s AU0 Tth.
P UN7ALLaLiNES OF ieseVm,a
Rise Iles, entry forme. orteralleitf,ged
ttnttealare, c trio ,
s J- ZELL. -
Yu ►Ott
TO
Whoa my friends Mak se what is the -{ a,
a. wlzow,
Mono.best re midy for disorders of the ono. 1 raaywess.
rr liver, or bowels, my invariable
' mower
is, Ayer's Pills. Taken in sea-
son, they will break up a oold, prevent
la grippe, check fever, and regulate the
digestive. organs. They are easy to
tate,-and are, indeed, the best all-round
family medicine I have ever known.'S..
Mrs. M.T Jainism, 368 Rider Armee%
Few York City.
AYER'S PILLS '
lUshast Honors at World's Fair.
Apes 1jL Cum e1 OM MutrlR
4
Es, s tandem ' W hat ea earth de we
want of • tandem, Maria! Why, I ammo,
Jobb, we could do • part of our oteylsR
next Saturday sod save money.
MANITOBA
. . . FLOUR
LEADS THE WORLD.
I have Jost reoerved • oar load of Flour
from Like of the Woods mill. Kee-
watin.
The flour le made from the cream of
the Manitoba Wheat end u the best
the world can produce, This *loin M
now offered for sale at •
D. CANTELON'S
BAKERY.
People who bay !lour should not mine
this cppurtuoly,
apedial Rates to k armee Buying
Lards Quantities.
MT 00140 Is made from this beauti-
ful Irlour and hop yeast, anti is the
moat wholesome thou ma be made.
D: CANTELONI
C!tTThE EROS.
Plumbers
Steam-Pltter8
V4asmiths
II •
HAMM _
•
ChDdIOXich
WE MAKe�•m�.....
Sewer and
Culvert Pipes
All Mace Bene a Is- a s em, Art
Beeneemmos.
weirs FOR PRIOR..
THE ONTARIO SEWER PIPE CO
e0i ADG'Jttx •T. •.,
immure AT sssom TTRONTC
CMJNTY
A. Mc$IQON,
��i
N1LIER FL1O-ST &-J�flll-
will brindle and keep in stock From and Wood's RtoderiorMowers,
Rakes and Phew., Sylvester Drills, Mans Giant Dino rind Cult(vs.'
TOM Chatham Wagons, Wettl•nfer Pea Harvnetir, Boggles, Carts,
Scnfflsre, Harrows, Churns, Washing Mso*Ue.
'Examine our Binders
One oanyw, stool table,simplest knottier,
most durable, easiest running sod best•bsj-
ano.d manhiue ea the market. If you erne
one, your horse's meek will not seed bath-
ing during and after harvest Compare It
with others.
Our 97 Mower
is • baulky, baslag several new and import -
est (eaters.—greater width of tread, new
foot lift, seises out, •djutabls ocher bar,
sod roller bearings. S. them beton air-
ier your order.
The Old. Reliable Tiger Rake
Y up -to -deal, beviog high wheel., gond steel
axles, perfect robs% dump, .p"-odid shaft
osmnestien with long and ad,,,,rabI1 •d•
'anted teeth. In
Plows
our austomere In (lnderich s,.,1 Colborne
townships cheerfully aeknowl.dge their re-
t..rlority over other lines of plows, berm
spry light of draft, *ay to operate, dots(
splendid work.
Drills
fa oar MONITER DRILLS w' bags,
without fear of oeotredlotiou, tiro newest,
moat compact. beet balanced and mess per
timely oobtrolled and nearest t' perfeotioo
of any 1h -ill os the market
Cultivators
'1'hs isisdid remotion given the MANN
GIANT CULTIVATOR, SEEDER and
DISC by the femora of Huron ,rove with•
out • doubt what we ohim for them, the
beet in Canada. Before you boy • .
Pea Harvester
oali and as the WETTLAUFER HAR-
VESTER, winner of diploma at World's'
Fair.'
Farmers and Teamsters
d' you want abs WAGGON that eompetsd
with and defeated the bent Waggons is Can•
ma sad the United States, 'Innisw a gold.
medal nod diploma at World's Fair, also
medal at Loudon, Hog., and Iedwtri•1 Fie-
bibitlos, Toronto' If you do, buy tits
am CHATHAM, equipped with Van Al-
les's patent Blast malleable arm., Rimpsos's
at►1le•ble adjustable stake& best whits oak
boss -dried wheels ; hickory or maple axles-
Dos's lot • dealer encumber you with sa
old-timer before seeing our Wagons.
We handle the beet assorted mo em s the meaty not being wtrletod to
dasl with any me floe, nor see we repnm.dtattves if any oowthin. Our maehlsw are
built on Honorand we sellthem epos tboir merits, (let our priose, examine ear ma-
chines, enquire of ted host and moot programiv* farmers who or. aline 'hut, and ben
guided by your own judgment and theirexperiemoo.
REPAIRS ALL kiNneter any m•ohine. Pekes f" .11 Plow* furnished ..d w.
UO Plowshares 250 : other merem y part of the Comm. when CUMsamempssNe order.
Call and nes our sample, BINDER TWINE okasper thee ever.
A. MCKINN O N., satLTON ST.
Ask "sr *Mkt tif.,
Wonderful Tonle r ..
end
1111111 �
1011
Remedy Olt
-weak end impure Sloe,
Kidney and Uwe, Troutie .
•(1. 111. meet e00. efMrMe, eon