HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1889-4-25, Page 7HOUSEHOLD.
WasbingDis1 es.
Washing dishes 1 washing dither' 1
__How I hate the very words
$ow I longto 4and: leave them
,
Free and happy as the birds ;
When I see a waiting tower
On a level with my nose.
Dirty, sticlry, gummy, gritty,
Each and d1 my deadly foes.
" How we hate you I how we hate you!"
Goblin•like, methinks, they cry ;
"Now you've got to wash us 1 wash ne 1,
And there'll be moro by and by 1"
Every dish now grins in, malice,
3I don g
Sleeves rolled up, hair tiedrwith Blume+tringe,
pion covers all the rest.
Then 1 wrestle with these deem
Foran age, I do believe, fai
Ere they're fly, squarelyvanquiehsd,
And the kitchen I can leave.
But ere long again I'm eummonsd--•
Dishes grin in impish glee—
And again I battle with them,
Till they're forced to set me free.
So it goes from morn till evening,
To the pan a helpless slave,.
And some time --if nothing happens
From its clutches mo to save --
I'll be found a rigid figure,
Grasping
in m o est tc
n re tel hand
Pan andihcloth, white around me
Dishes by the aoore will stand,
All the diebee, pate, and kettle?,
Glare and ai.lver, porta and knives,
All I've ever in my life -time,
(Equal to a mat's nine lives,
Fall ot ecratchere kicks, and waitings,)
Washed, all, all willgather there,
While a apoon will grace Ivy fathead,
And a ateel fork pin my betel
Spring Bons° Cleaning.
Devote at least a week to preparation for
cleaning hsase. Sec • that all needed repairs
are made, and have every necessary tool on
hand and in good order. Provide limo for
whitewashing, etrpet tacks, good soap,
sawdust, carbolic acid, copperas, and spirits
of ammonia. Have closets', bureau drawers,
etc , thoroughly cleaned and renovated.
Re•organize sewing table, and arrange bags
for the odds and ends that have aconin,
lated during the winter, and having difFerent
onea for each artielt, and
markingthe o
at.
aide of each a in game waF at piepe8
of ribbon, velvet, lace, and flowers in a box,
and have ready for the spring" fixing up."
If you
Live I-\ TILS COUNTRY.
while all this is being done In the bongo, sea
that the boys clean away the rubbish and
litter from the yards, and watch carefully
that no waste from the kitchen se thrown
out to decay and scent the air, carrying ita
paean to other houaeholde, as welt as dif-
fusing it around your own. Finally, when
you begin to clean, don't upset all the rooms
at once and drive your husband crazy; but
use a little teat; clean one or two rooms at
a time ; settle and re-arraego thoroughly
before proceeding to the next.
The cellar should be cleaned first of all,
for out of it emanate all manner of diseases.
Remove every p .rtiole of vegetable remnants
and sprinkle and rorab the places wbero
they have lain with strong copperas 'water.
Remove boxes and barrels to
mesa remeraTIRS IN THE CELLAR,
to that the place whore they have stood
may becotno dry, Now wash the windows,
ands whitewash every nook and corner with
common whitewash made yellow with cop-
peras, Scrub out all boxes and barrels and
dry thoroughly; parry oub any unnecessary
acoumulatione ; leave the door and windows
open, and go next to the garret.
Piok up, Sort, and arrange Mirage, papers,
etc., putting each kinel in its appropriate
place, and watobing for traces of moths.
Old newspapers and paper halms havo many
uses; old papera are good for cleaning win.
dews and mirrors, for spreading on the
kitchen table while engaged in greasy work;
in fact they will be found of labor saving
utility all through. After blanking a stove,
it can be kept bright for a long time by rub-
bing ib with old newspapers every morning.
Paper bags, in whioh many arbioles are sent
home from the grocery store, should be sav-
ed for use
WHEN IELACKING A STOVE.
Yon can slip the hand into one of these and
bandle the brush just as well, and the band
wilinot bo soiled, and when through with
them they can be dropped into the fire.
After all your different articles have been'
arranged in the garret remove and burn all
useless. rubbish. Use beezino wherever
moths are found, but handle carefully, for
it is vary dangerous. Wash the windows,
clean the walls, paint and floor thoroughly,
and your room is ready for packing away
winter clothing and bedclothes.
Now, we will suppose you are ready to pro-
ceed to the other rooms. I have always
found it a good plan to clean. the sleeping
rooms first. To`'commence, first remove all
the piotnres from the walls, carefully dust
down the walls and the frames before pro.
ceeding to beat beds, brush furniture and
clean all the paint, windows and floors.
Clothes, carpeting and all "trumpery"
should be thoroughly aired and beaten in
sun and wind before being pub away for the
summer.
The different rooms mast be cared for in
regular order, heavy draperies put away,
light ones replacing them, and matting if
used put down for the summer months. If
these few details will aid even a single house-
keeper in arranging her spring house clean-
ing, our task will nob have been in vain.
—[Godey's Lady's Book.
An Old Connecticut " Boiled Dinner."
At this season of the year a New Eng-
land boiled dinner consists of a brisket piece
of corned beef, boiled or rather simmered
twelve minutes to the pound and served with
spring greens instead of cabbage. The meat
end the greens aro cooked separately ; so
are carrots, turnips and potatoes.
The healthiest and at the same time the
cheapest greens are tho wholesome dandelion
which may be had for the pinking. The
mistake most housewives make is in boiling
this vegetable. The water in which they
aro boiled is invariably thrown away. This
is a mistake, as ib centaina much of the
health -giving properties of the plant. The
best way to cook them is to out the donde.
lion moderately fine and nook it in a frying
pan with a little of the corned beet water,
Add a thin slice of bacon or ham, cover, and
nook fifteen minutes.
Along the hedges and in neglected planes
the tender shoots of the dook are now to be
found. They are very wholesome and re-
quire but little cooking.
Pussley, with its red, fleshy stem and
think oar.shaped leaves no longer than a
quarter of an molt,will soon show their
heads above ground. As a vegetable it,
cannot be surpassed, and if, more universally
used gardnera would soon cease their com-
plaints against it. They should look upon it
as a blessing, instead of palling it an ob.
noxious weed. Later in the season, when
more fully developed, the fleshy stems are
gathered, tied into bunches, pocked and
served as asparagus. It; this form puesley
is a charming tidbit.
In a few weeks more the goose foot' or
lamb's quarter, as it is palled, by some•
may be gathered. It is easily recognized
by its dark green, fleshy leaven, strewn with
a silvery dust -like formation.
Probably one of the most delightful of
apringgreens is the stinging nettle, Gather
them with glovers on, trine off the young
nettles and, you
havea dish of very
ac-
ceptable greens.
n swampy places may soon be gathered
the cowslip, with yellow buttercup timers.
They should s o
b o e
udbn c k asarethe d h dans'°-
lions, andshould any moisture remain add
a litre dissolved flour to absorb it,
The quickest way to prepare a boiled
dinner is to buy a can of corned beef, heat
it fifteen minutes, open the can and turn It
out in a dials, surround it with the greens
alternated with little mounds of boiled
carrots, turnips, potatoes, and baked beets.
—New York San.
WITH THE BBB AND TLOW
The Causes of the Shifting To and ,Fro of
the Tide.
No movement of the Sea is mare impor-
tant than the regular rico and fall, once in
about twenty flv® hours,which h we
know
the tele. Temvernebiadue to the if-
# enbetween the ado a exerted by
the moon and sun upon the aolid earth and
those exerted upon 'the aoeanio envelope.
A.ttraotion, as shown by Newton, varies not
only direotly as the masa, bat Mee ieversoly
as the sgnaro of the distance; thus ab an
email d eiance one body will exert dou%la
the attraction of another of half the maria:
but iffthed11stance of oho body he twice
*het the other, us' heir massesiqual, the
nttrecticn of the more distant will ao but A
quarter of that of the nearer, So the iln-
alenan masa of the man exerts, ltl spite: of eta
greater dietan ^o, a far, greater attraction
upon the earth as a whole than dose the
MOOD.
The difference, however, between tite
aun's attraction upon the solid earth and its
attraction epee the ocean le, en account of
its diatauce, but asmall fraction of its total
attraotion ; whilst that between the moon's
attraotion upon the solid earth and eta et-
traotiam upon the ocean, owing to eta PAM,
parasively email distance of 240,000 mites,
is s, very considerable fraction of eta total
action. So
that whiIabthe eat
h a attraotian
vansea the moon to travel
round it once a�
month, the tacipro:al Attraction of the moon
18 mainly effectual in causing the tides, the
arm's action being only about one-third as
great, Tno waters of the open ocean have a
tendency to rise up in a heap on the wide
neeeeet the moon, because they Are pulled
more strongly than is the solid globe, and,
being liquid, yield to the attraction. Sim.
ultaneously a similar heaping up occurs at
this antipodes of , title point—on the side,
that is, farthest from the moon—because
tho solid globe is, as it were, pulled away
from the water there.
Two great tidal waves are thus originated;
and, as tho onrth'a movement in its orbit,
coupled with ate dant' rotation, makes the
moon occupy the sante relative poditicn
every twenty five hours—or, more exactly,
every twenty-four hours and fifty minutes
—high tide at any place occurs twice in
every such period of time,
The Aut' $tans Dyke.
Aul' Danvib Shaw and Widow Meg
Were neibore at the Gene—
The widow tended sheep and kyo,
While Dauvit cal the plane.
A guid bit farm Meg hold in lease
Free Pat, the lairdly tyke ;
An' Dauvit own'd a muokie yaird
Surrounded by a dyke.
Aul' Danvit'a yaird aye bora gold craps
0' tattles, kali, and corn;
An' in Mog's flesh this long had boon
A dainty, faahiout thorn.
She oouldna thole tap see the beds
Each marked off wi' a spike ;
She nursed AO Dauvit's mucklo yaird,
An' swore the ant' steno dyke.
Adjoinin' Dauvit s yaird Meg had
An or'nar' guid grass park,
So tae hereel' she yae day says,
" My frith, I'll nae a lark.
This blessed day my queye I'll put
On grass, or if they like,
They'll hao a rive o' Daavit'a kali
By kncokin' owre his dyke.
An hour or two gaed skimmin' past
E'er Dauvit saw the row,
An' then he was a wrathfu' man
That day at Meg, I Crow ;
For in his yaird were kyo an' creeps,
An' wi' nose like ony pike,
A boar was busy ploughln' owre
The garden ail' stave dye.
A dizzen quays had stocks a piece ;
The kye were in the corn,
An' hashn't up like doevils starved,
Jiat like it had been shorn :
A monstrous pig frac "Paddy's tan',"
That the weans had christened "Mike,"
Was busy howkin' up the yaird,
While the boar knock'd ower the dyke.
Aul llauvit cursed an stamp'd d an
,
swore,
,
Then seized a mucklo stick,
An' ower the hurdles o' a quey
Cam' ae tremendous lick.
He struck the boar atween the lugs—
"Tak' that yin gin ye like ;
Ye brutes," said he, ".Ci1 learn ye a'
Tae keep oot ower the dyke."
An' poo a gen'ral rape began
'Tween kye, an' quays, an' pigs ;
They ran richt thro' the hail an' corn,
An' danc'd across the riggs ;
Then a' thegither in a lot,
Like bees swarm'd oot a byke,
The deevils jump'd richt oot the yaird
An' levell'd flit the dyke.
Aul' Dauvit swore that he'd mak' Meg
Posy sweetly for her lark ;
Tae marts he'd gang an' law he'd hae
Tho' he should sell his nark;
Nay, mair, ho swore he'd sell tho yaird,
Sae 'strong was his dislike,
• If in the end they'd only mak'
The widow build the dyke.
But noo the row's a thing that's past
The yaird is lookin' brew,
An' Dauvit has for anoe proved sage
In bidin' baok free law.
Wi' willing help free Rab and Wull,
He has things as trim's ye like,
An' roon the yaird the loons hae built
Anither guid stone dyke.
TA BA SA.
Russett leather shoes and slippers for
ladies promiseto be as fashionable as ever
this summer.
Some of the new silks for bummer are in
the most gorgeous tartan patterns. i by all dealers in medicine,
HEALTH.
Matter of Diet.
Sir HeneryThompson,aprcm#nentEnglish
eurgeon, in a little book published in 188b.
Diet in Relation to Age and Activity,'
gives a great deal of exceedingly good advice.
After some preliminary observations, in
which the learned writer puts in a vigorous
protest against the use of alcoholic be.
vermeil, condemning them as not only use-
less, but absolutely prejudicial to the
human organism, ho begins his treatise
by remarking that he has, neverthlesa,
been compelled ao accept the conolr}sion
Vett "more mischief ia the form of actual
disease, of impaired vigor and of short-
ened life amuse to oivilized man from
erroneous habits of citing than from the
habitual use of ,alcoholic drink, consider.
able as I know the evil of that to bo," Ile
asserts, too, that nob less that one-half
of the diseases which embitter the middle
and latter part of life, and even shorten
exiatenoe, among the leisurely classes, is
due
to er ora.
r of diet the e
t a riiia vol
able. At the aline time he takes pains to
express hie lack of sympathy with any
dietary system which excludes the present
generally recognized aoitrcoa and varieties of
food ; it being his belief that every sorb of
nutriment is desirable, and any portion
may even be essential to life; While veg-
etarianism, in diet is oommenled, and its
valne to many persona fully admitted, the
f ace
c' ,
n c o
f '
.Wren e e e e
th r a a
term v t r
Y .
8
in
, as
commonly employed, is made m►Ani#(st b
showing that the species. of diet ae liaised
tap' des animal food in a highly cancentrett
ed form --as milk, butter, eggs, cheese, eta.
The doctor gelate his remarks here by call-
ing attention to the fact that during the
dratt o `
ti t year ot axes sac.., in which a larger
growth occurs and a mare important demi.
opment is made than In any other twelve•
months in the whole of life, the diet pro=
vides' by nature e1 the purely animal food,
milk.
The great practical rule of life is declared
to moist in the perfect (lodgment of the
art of adapting food of any and every kind
to the needs of the body, according to the
varied circumstances of the individual and
different Ages, with d.tF rent forms of activ-
ity, different inherent personal peculiarities
and different environnlmnts. The youogand
healthy, habituated to active life in the
open air, alas of ten largely exceed too qusati-
ty and variety of food neilealarg to euppiy
all the deunsttda of the syaten without pay,
'u i
i an exarb taut en t
at the he a ma
R P ko nit
Y
i v 7 e
s net cry' p w° til it eauiatimea rejects an
extravagaut ration of foil ; but if the digea-
tivo force is considerable the superabundant
measure graduelly absorbed and the sitrplae
nutriment is stored up. When a certain
amount has been diep.aed of au nndetireble
balane° renegue against the feeder, and this
in young people is
C'ttitiQNLY ItttuvCEA Ifh A IMMLtUt t ATTACK,
a few hours of enfferiag rquaring the ae-
count, If the individual takes abundant
exercise stud expends much energy in the
busiuees of life a largo quantity ot food pan
be properly dispcaed of, and not only ie na
berm done, but tho frame is consolidated
and bettor fitted to resist exposure and at.
taoke of decease. If, on the other hand,
he is inactive and aponde the mob of his
time in a eloae air and a warm temperetuhe,
shaping his diet, nevertheless, on a liberal
plan, the balance of unexpended nutriment
soon tells against him, and moat ho thrown
off in some form mare or lege disagreeable.
When the first half of lite is about peeled
the unemployed material, instead of ending
vent is aaoh periodical attacks of sickness,
may take the form of fat stored on the eater.
nal surface of the body, or packed among
the internal organs. Should the constitution
bo one Incapable ofatoriagfat, the aver•aup-
ply of nutrltiaao elements meet go some-
where elao to produce disease in eomo other
form, probably at first affecting the action
of the livor, and next producing gent or
rheumatism, or flutes or obstructions of
varione kinds. Gout performs about the
same duty at this timo of life as than ttccom.
pliahed in youth by billions attacks ; with,
however, the important difference that gout
is far moro damaging to the conetitation.
Ib is the failure to nuderetand the import.
once of preserving a near approach to equ.1.
ity between the aupply of nutriment to the
body and the expenditure produced by the
activity of the latter ; and, secondly, ignor-
ance of the metbod of attaining this object
in practice, which give rite to various forms
of disease tbat embitter and shorten life
after the period of prime is passed. As we
increase in age after the first half century
lees energy remains, and, in consequence,
less expenditure can be made. Less nutri-
ment. therefore, ahonld be taken in propor-
tion as age advances, or rather as activity
diminishes ; otherwise tho individual will
suffer, either accumulating fat, or becoming
gouty and rheumatic, or showing signs of -
unhealthy denosits of some kind.
The matter of appropriate drink is also
dwelt upon. The primary objecb of drink
is said to be to satisfy thirst. Thirst is a
craving for the supply ot water to the tis-
aues, the only fluid they demand and utilize
moab when that sensation is felt. Water is
a solvent of solids, and is more powerful to
this end when employed free from admixture
with any solid material. Ib may be flavored,
as in tea, without
impairing its solvent
power, bub when mixed with any concrete
matter, as chocolate, cocoa, or even milk,
its capaoity for dissolving is in great part
lost.
There arePeons a
r who wash down
their ample slices of roast beef with draughts
of new milk, an unwise combination even
for those of active habits, but for men and
women whose lives are little occupied by
exercise it is
ONE OF THE GREATEST OF DIETARY BLUNDERS,
Milk as a peculiarly nutritive fluid is admir •
able for infants and small children ; it is
also serviceable to those whose muscular
exertion is great, and, when it agrees with
the 'stomach, to ouch as can not take meat ;
but to the mature, who, having achieved
their full growth. can thrive on solid fare,
ibias a rule, altogether superfluous and
mostly mischievous as a drink.
Attention is alto called the part played by
the dentist in maintaining for the man of
advancing age his career as a flesh -eater.
At this period of life frequent complaints
are heard of indigestion due, it is said, to
imperfect mastication by defective teeth,
The latter being repaired, the function of
chewing the food can again be performed
with ease. The doctor is no enemy to the
My Toothache
Is an exclamation heard every hour in the
day. Toothache ;is the most common ail-
ment of young and old, and in the aggregate
inflicts more suffering than perhaps any
other single complaint. A one minute cure
is just what every person desires to possess.
Nerviline—nerve pain Duro-sots almost in.
dandy in relieving the agony, and as a
sample bottle affords a quantity 'sufficient
for 100 applications, 10 cents fills the bill.
Poison's Nerviline is the only positive rem-
edy for toothache and all nerve pains. Sold
dentist, He concede, the valve .of dental
skill, and admita the comfort it Affords. even
going ao far as to affirm that the dentist
ranks among the neeeseitiee of civilized life.
Yet he points to the sigaifioant feet that
the dtsappearenee of the masticating powers
fs usually coincident with the pitied of life
when that species of food which moat re-
quires their aotion—solid: anina.al fibre—ia
little, if at all required. The man with im-
perfect teeth who eonforma to nature's de-
mand for a wild, non -stimulating dietary
In advanced years, will ttommonly be bleta-
ed with a betterdigeation and sounder health
than the than who, },hanks to his artificial
machinery, Ga3 eat, and does eat, 4s mach
Beall as in the days of his youth, It may be
'added t b. there n
4a ars gro ads for the belief
that those who leave througltout life Sub-
sisted on a. diet chiefly or wholly vegetable,
will be found to have preserved: their teeth
longer then those who have made flesh a
promiceub pert of their daily food.
A graphic aketcb is presented of a portly
gentleman increasing in girth as he adds
to the number of his yeas, flattered by hie
tailor
realiandty congratulated by hie friends, yet
I
RVhttIt1 THE RACE OF LIFE peatemAPI'E s
by a weight that makes active movement
difficult and reepiratient thick and pentiug.
Nor one man in fifty, it is asserted.. lives to
a good old age in We condition. The tpyi,
cal men, of eighty orninety years, stilt xe.
s
tainin area tab.? amount: of
g energyof
P�
body and mind, is lean and spare, anUrea
;oft atender rations.
While it is a universally applicable rule
for matt at all ager that the quantity of
food ought to award with tbb amount of
force employed for the porpoise of dally
life, it le right and fittieg that a certain
amount of storage mater}al, a balaaoe,.
ebould exist as a reserve to the cnnstitu•
tion of a healthy mast. Thee is abiludant
in every weli'uonrfahod individpai and
will stand hien in grid eteed whets a de.
mated arises for prolonged ar uuu±nal eat
ertion, or when any period of enforced
starvation 000411, es SluriCg a fever or
other exhausting disease. Bat care atonll
bo taken to prevent its Augmentation be,
yens' the paint At which the material cellae
to be an available source of nutriment and
begins to take the form of diseased deposit.
Eveu the natural amount of this reserve is
tea likely to ex:ead die . oscearary limit. It
la for this reason that Intraining for athletic
exploits -..which is simply a pruoeial of au-
Wring the hieheett degree of health aud
at en
B
b attainable-- aala Iliad weight c
ae
not leev
ao e
id d. Almostve man m n who seta
out to mare the beat potsslble health for bia
organ thrown cfiln the °paretic=reduadent
materials, the presenia of width le natcon-
ilistent with ilio bigk attiaflarel respired.
It should be kept in mind that although
breed ruled: of diet may be enunciated as
applicable to different dance of people in
general, no accurate Adaptation to the in.
dividuat it passible without a knowledge of
his daily habits of life as well as of his per-
sonal peculiarities. Thedifference le
groat between the man who speeds ten or
two.ve hour»f
a the day at
hard work in tri°
open air, aud the clerk. or the literary mea,
stated at his desk, and getting no exercise
except each as is taken at short periods at
a homage to hygienic duty. While manna(
laborers rarely coaenmomore food then they
expend, and are, if not injored by drink or
undue exposure, mostly hale and hearty,
the sedentary are often martyrs to minor
ailmenta which gradually 10010 so, end
make work difficult and life dreary. Most
of the derangements of rho latter pan bo
avoided by the adoption of appropriate
nauriehmenb ; and brain workers 'may enjoy
a fair degree of health and, comfort by liv-
ing on light food which does nob require
mach farce to digest and much muscular
activity to assimilate The precious nerve
power, being time called upon but aparing-
iy to despotic of the light and simple diet,
la reserved for more useful. and more delight.
fel penults than that of mere digestion.
President Harrison and:His Pias.
e, Mr. President," observed Colonel Sal-
ford to Mr. Harrison this morniog, "havo
you tried the new puzzle l"
" What puzzle, Eta alt 1" inquired the
President meetly.
"'Putting the Pigs in the Pen,' Mr, Presi-
dent."
A shade came over the President's face.
"No, Elijah," he said wearily, "I have
been so busy trying to keop the hogs nut of
cffica that I haven't had time for any other
puzzle ;" and the President picked up a
pilo of applications and muttered a mutter
too deep to be articulate.—[Washington
Critic.
Geranium is now the fashionable color
for men's ties. Drees ties are wider than
formerly.
The " Little Empire" is tbo name given
to a new dress of French design.
"When I Was a Boy" !
is an expression almost every lad has heard
his father use as abash for bombastic self -
adulation. But the boy of the last quarter
of tho ninteenth century may retort, "when
you were a boy, and had an attack of green -
apple stomaeh-ache, you had to take calomel
and jalap, but I am treated to Dr. Pierce's
Pleasant Purgative Pallets, sugar-coated,
and just as nice as chocolate caramels ; no
blue masa and castor oil for me -1'd rather
fight it out with the pain" 1
Accordionpleating 1
i is decided the fast.
P g y
ion for the fronts of dresses,
If yon don't want to disgust everybody
with your offensive breath, cure year Ca-
tarrh upon which it depends. $500 reward
is offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy for a ease of Catarrh
which they cannob cure, It is sold by drug-
gists ; 50 cents.
Twenty dollars a dozen is not En unusuav 1
price for the buttons worn on the coats a 11
mode direotoire.
Alas, bow changed! The rosy cheek ie pallid as the
dead,
And iron the eyes that were so bright the happy
ligno joy for Ler to -day ; grown old before her
prime,
She waits in hopeless suffering for that swift coming
time
• When death shall sot her free
From poor, sick woman's misery.'
But if she knew what wonderful cures Dr.
Pieroe'e Favorite Prescription has effected in
worse caries than hers, she would clutch at
the chance of recovering lost health as
drowning men catch at straws, and she might
be saved.
Jane Hading wears white gloves with her
riding habit,
Consumption Surely Cared.
To the Editor
Please inform your readers that I have a
positive remedy for the above named disease.
By its timely nae thousands of hopeless
oases have been permanently cured. I shall
be glad to send two bottles of my remedy
free to any of your readers who have con-
sumption if they will send me their Ex -
prelim and P. 0. address. Reaper, T. A.
Slocum, M. C., 164 Meet Adelaide St.,
Toronto.
1"irst A,uarahist—s"'lrat f To clot trap vat
you z ty dat Herr Most he :haf been caught
mit yen, hundret totlara in bispocket l"
Second Atlarebiet—"Yab," First Ana--
chiat"Herr Moet is no anarchist, He is
von traitor." Second, anarcbiet-4'So t
thinks mefuself at first, but I finds out dif-
ferent, Herr Moat he is all reeks. Ee
owes two hoondret toilers for beer,"
A. P. 44e.
BONCH1T1S
CtIREDI
After spending Telt W s,ielre 'South,
vas Cured by Scott's Emulsion.
14S Centre St. New York„
Jnne2ati,,, 2855.
The Winter after the great fire.
In Chicago I contracted Oronchiai
affections, and since then have
been obliged to spend nearly every
Winter South, Last? avetnfaer.vas
advlOod to try Scott's c.rnuision of
Cod Liver 011 with iI.ypophosphitee
and to rtiy fail rprlsewas relieved at
once, and by contirttring its use
three months was entirety cured,
gained flesh and strength and
lit
was nate to stand even the elle-
Bard anti attend to bosineaa every
day. Ce Ts CHURCHILL,
Sold Ik+ rNtDruggists* 40e, and Si2.o0'.
CARO1 u,;wawl, E Gf.t*a, ire'r rev o t'
r , O .
.. CANCER....4F� BSF.Ri�4.'t'NrISit iR'Pi�i:9a
beak rs'K,. PAA Meiltctf4g[.,
o.
;` , `:
to
LS4C44,+ lSttt'RaJ#$ti7S+-1;1144191A=
'„3Rtt4 ,or Pur
l b%r2elllu'trocet catabcaeue cf ilast4 metra•
mvali, tiioltas, OE ztrlrs, P,dtea, ate., lull alt kind
of Tciuimiuta. Await tor gamete's aud lie5ti'Me
Bilrieeh t'a 1i1 t11 MIK 37 Eike St
Wed, T9routo, Que..
itis ,Hitt MLITI!R 314414nRS.-4'e t(o"
telt (1*to,er,t isra ting 1lachiuo 19 the ince;
apes. Cauipietr, artietie. rayedaud dctrs'4e
lnartirt er ruveuted. Wreto tar ctreteme tilt', ton
I pwl,ti4r4. S3311eesatgeno Toronto au;tisoKNM3e1,
Meld 4
al cet ,TruoToronto.
WILUAMS & 00.,
SLATERS & FELT ROOFERS
1,laa4itctuttrtl.a':.tdraletstoil Lenoi l.,_ata1
3
Rr
haati � r., e Arrs 4 extern 9e
st it. Tereale. t' rtrtalst vi t1 i7iitsl;A' Fiat
. r
tf?,
Tla 'k. e
F
ia7t act. a
R n lI,
ttiA 'll,. nla�.R. ... � _
y}N eces r ranllslriir ikte49amla ke
tea pathtiay s t l'afc, Gtitag the I"e.tt tbal;rhte
(;lt aitlandtta Clitaelog wait, tq eaolClt, eineutapi
nasi armee the mien, mmtbere sets, mid dal ebtere
et o'rla ii. Mittel by Walter Seat 1ati. w th as
tatradmties by Rev. John Hai!. P,U, A ralcme of ,.
:Yaoe,t- Leg Akhil in P4 ?ani Poetry, tiers tbaIna,
tazs tf the ab"rst aateers ci twee T ttttii i1 beral
Wat, 011111115, Pablither,Taraate,
-00g otr FOR uvRMLARS: 00 OW
t6 A *mien sroot the haste at ,lull t Protect y cur
iFr res, lis.es dtt',IE., as sell as t:»di hoc; on
the oulstle by nett: rho t tettplao ll ars'ar farm 1
do cue can 1,'. Into a min or baiting cit set
unmet/gale
wh `-, ,
filo f.Gl al 7r ,
hyai Cx', be
10 a minute. i'au;ra:crs ail 31.n cal attach cce to any
door h,+ simple c'eslag it iln•a not rear tee door to
lhelcasG rats :sane? lav, b.tt a wcrit.tns~ie arilole.
llas'e, pit et.d aud esti hr a wolf ltouwo Menta.
Mk your herdwaro dollar for one, a', 1 lee tiara lay
name 1 ea it, or Rod 41 ani eentva ane tree. Gaal
Annie wasted lneccep newt. d. S lilall'Fl,1,1G,
10, Cox 915. Sideirran n1; rink. tt:.yttrrss,At..
AUTOMATIC SAFETY ELEVATORS
Pat. hydraulaa, hand:anti stellae elevators,
LEIITCH & TURNBULL,
Canadian El,yator Warks, ester and Queen Musts,
HAMILTON, ON'1f
LeatherBelting
BEST VALUE 12 TIM DOMINION.
F,EDIXON &CO, MAKERS, 70 KING ST. E, TORONTC
Send for ?dos Lt.ty and IY. 'nnr•
rOwn Engies
OWN ANDMEL HOURS ANY Staa,
x'Qiee taa0 =Once wollgs.
PraNcr.A -1I I'lIQIIT re*
J. Pexis Co, - .aro,
Miele Quern street Rear, Toronto
n Ey,i large srriosritotTRU
.
FUNDS re teamtat, v
UN sew weer interest on
t ce 1�
Ai sir 7 ,
_... � Ata
I'
BEA
btu p( ��[� �s�rpyp�
BEA , t1HAfW� B ACILITOOK & hili. ,,
Bsrrfetere ai 181Itis: para
,,
w'e71?agten ee, ear, tiharch, (oxer Rank cf 7foreato
TORONTO. ON+1T,
CHOICE FARMS FOR SALE hi ALL PARTS OF
MANITOBA.
1'sWet whiten psrobsaa .tnpraserl lf'. cholic
Fate w. trace ee arra 'eaPn4111, with Imo;
poeae *ion. call or wet, te ti, 1. MIA11$0110.ale*•
ArtbtWa ti'.oc'#, When at., 'Winch/v. irr-aruraldou
taralalnd trio et charge, a',d aettien ase stsd i
makinggctt
ors.
4i? Creeeter Rasa? cr Ifincosr.
ON B O `$ (.".%RRIA. CE W01%
Fl
-call tee tete aImereveato.sant ane wen -reit
r da•attl rv. •t, to +tai Nave:frau, ree kad'sa:
ateen: R ¢;idem sal theta a1 aK t'02 l rictat ilei
DUk NO trot6ti
Tmr 1it~Lfili ATE0
EffiPIRS
BLEND
COFFEE:
Gumaattel Pure.
DR. D OR' NWEE'D'S
Comet Safety. $1:, ; Comet No. 1 5150 - Oomet
No. 2,105 ; Swift Safety, 126 ; Now Rrrii, 5120.
T. 'PANE d CO.,
53 Adelaide street weet,drorento.
{air Magic
Restarts they liter, 8topa
r.,lltnx Out nt the 1eatr,
Remote le Andre tr; in Halt.
orae'xhtre the tootle arm nos
Retie, Maciewi`l produce n.
dna;:rn•rh. Is it unfathat;
try it, All d:c;;afrie every.
%herr.
t.1f ORENWENDi ,
Sala Manufacturer,
Teatttio, Uri.. CA:ra43.
Whaloy RoyaB 00
Dealer, io all Ido c
1.t i"Ste I7ISIA1lIIEt1TS.
Agen's th tt BSSSON
sun il1OIIi',l hand In- .,
,tnementS, .tr S11ti:T
1NUSIC and, 1IUSI0 (a
B?'U1S, 5iaaufatturtre lc*
of the
"t11I'ERiU,"
BAND INSTRUMENTS c4,,
C1
co
Brat in the wad, lttht
:'{ • Year Guarantee. Semi
s f - taer fila*trash t ata1igoe
* t wand Tes.irmonirt'i.
�
Yen,e St. t.:
"1----7 RONTO
O
C+_7lRt4F;l�7I:_ism'1H.�+.IrAF�CIR,bne"�tIi".^eRer�
RUDGE AND COLUMBIA BICYCLES.
REPAIRING A SrrcuLTr. SECOND.HAYD WHEELS. All
Work Guaranteed. Send for Catalogue.
H. P. DAVIES & CO.,
22 Church Street. Toronto, Ont.
BICYCLES
150 ,second -nand.
Send for•li,t.
A. T. LANE.
MONTREAL, Qtnr
WANTE*
Patent PEtules.
GEN iSTotJies ,� Line.
A few good agents to supply every family in this
locality. We furnish full instructions with outfit.
No NEED or Pses, the stronger the wind the firmer
the clothes adhere. Galvanized Seeing Wire. No
misting, freezing or discoloring. Eoonomizea apace,
timo and money. Illustrated circular to those of
experieL ce who mean business.
TARBON DUOS.. Toronto. Ont.
Allan Mine Royal Dail Steamships
Sailing during winter from Portland every Thursday
and Halifax overySaturday to Liverpool, and in sum-
mt.r frodmoQeerby every
nSatmudas ystad Lplvaesrspeonogle,oa
rslllna
for
Sooa.and and Ireland ; also from Baltimore, via Hall
fax and St. John's, N.F., to Liverpool fortnightly
durtne summer months. The steamers of the Glee-
gow lines Sail during winter to and from Halifax,
Portland, Boston and Philad elphia ;and during aunt.
mer between Glasgow and Montreal weekly ; Glas-
gow and Boston weekly, and Glasgow and Phlladel-
phis fortnightly.
For freight, passage or other information apply
A. Schumacher h Co., Baltimore ; S. Cunard a Co.,
Halifax Shea lk Co., St. John's, Nfld„ Wm. Thomp.
eon h Co., St. John, N. B.; Allen IS Co., Obiegao;
Love 6 Alden, New York ; H, Borulier, Toronto ;
Allan?, Rae A O0., Quebec; Wm. Brookie, Philadel.
phis H. A. Allen Portland Ro.ton Montreal.
ARMS
IN MANITOBA
Scottish, Manitoba and North-West
REAL ESTATE Co., Litt
W J Akin, Mgr, 357 main St, Winnipeg
lands in all puts of the Province, LAwPrice e. Easy
Terme. Lute Sent and Fullest Inforeuatioo Fur-
niched on Application. Send us your name
and we will mail you our descriptive catalogue,
1 C E
FITS!
When I say Cutts 1 do not mean merely re
stop them for a time, and then have them re-
turn again. I luEA.'d A RADICAL CURE.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS
A life long study. I WARRANT my remedy to
CURE the worst cases. Because others havo
failed is no reason
for not nowr c i
e e vin a ura.
Send atonce f
or a treatisand gg
c
e aFREE BOTTL7;<
of my INFALLIBLE italorDY. Give Ex resp
and Post Office. It costs you nothing for a
trial, and it will cure you. Address
H. G. ROOT, M.C., 164 West Adelaide St. '`
TORONTO, ONS.
FOR
LINK-BELT1NC
BEST SAWUUSh
CONVEYOR,
ELEVATING.ANO CHEAPEST.
All Sizes and;
Capacities.
Send for 130
Page Catalogue
on Link -Belting.
IMPROVE
YOUR POWER -
BY USING THZ;
Pickering Sprkg
Governor.
SENSITIVE.
QUIC111..
RELIABLE.
Easily adjusted to ani
Engine.
Special facilities for mak-..
Ing has reduced prices.
WATEROUS ENGINE.
WORKS CO.,
BRANTFORD
AND
WiNNIPE:.