HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1891-4-16, Page 7ONTARIO
The Speedier t
Mr. H. I. Clar
followed had prey
that hitherto no o
Tbe Speaker r
lenutenant•Gover
estimatee for 1891
Mr. White, in
debate on the bud
no doubt filet th
of our Province
importance, and o
die/mead and exp
might underetand
would first speak
year, which he fo
• receipts had bee
over•expenditure
this the Governm
balance on hand o
our epeoial dep
other small items
expenditure for
statement of 112
63,653,366 and
63,538,405, teem'
of $114,951. Th
upon this queen
upon the Oppos
were given to ape
deficits, and he 12
finanoiel speech
4600,000 in bank
could be a deficit.
who had reeent
would have to ad
of working, that
year, because he
6500,000, but so
• hon. gentleman i
and his preolthes
that, notwithsta
were beyond w
upon, they had e
the affairs wit
Provinee. Hon.
professed a grea
their professions
Mr. Balfour,
of the Dominion
thin the Doux
admitted a deb
Province. The
Treasurer was o
was admitted by
as if the Opposi
deny all the debt
Province. The i
admitted debt
Province, at 5 p
per year. Th
might properly
$500,000 which
Parliament gron
believed that the
more then pay f
the new Perlis
said the Provin
ing in a raid o
creased subeidie
always opposed
Liberals. Ever
Coneervetive G
Wing the terms
purpose of givi
other provinces.
ing the lion's ab
had not received
aubsidies. It ve
be a finality mn t
Ontario had a
Ment for the e6,
railways &ince
surprised at the
from North Ess
, annexation pro
Toledo. He w
ultranloyal nisix
,Clerks) declare
young men for 11
anyone on the
a statement he
a traitor.
Mr. Cleary,
/reluctant to p
Heath, but felt
the feet that the
onto (01r. Tait)]
.esty since enter
ernment was pr
and e aleo felt
gentleman was
thought the nos
efficient membe
not tampered w
/(APPlause.)1
members of the
licensing ayste
owed their ele
liquor traffie Wft
for the Goveroxi
'Scott lot the
powers to such
were compelled
conclading, he
vince of Ontari
realize the gre
had marked on
Mr. Waters
French in the
buried. It wo
• until all the p
dead or were
gnage. The
truckling to t
was deed, an
people he appr
be seriously he
of the Govern
Ontario the
taught, and th
approval of the
acknowledge t
exceeded the
justified from
He Mien mov
debate and the,
of the day for
The Speake
question raise
tion with the
Kellar, of Hs
The followi
read a firattiux
For the reli
William Dunn
To incorpor
Warehousing
'
To amend t
,ronto Finance
Reepeoting
Toronto Stre
To ineorpor
/Railway Com
To amend t
Mr. Gibson.
To amend
,Guthrie.
To amend t
• Railway Com
To ineorpo
atria Railway
Respeoting
/graphere—M
To enthor
Judiaature o
McGregor th
Mr. Tait.
Reepeeting
Tait.
To incorpo
Bail
Tint
LEGISLATURE a
, ,
bill
St,
notice
point
Proceeded
The
The
Respecting
To
C°r3dwull•
Mr.
Act.
Railway
Act.
Ththat
supply
mitten
end
The
time:
The
sity
other
solicitors
supply,
of
the
$10,000.
asked
and
were
this
an
on
speeohee
estrous
out
of
to
for
many
bat
of
towards
should
year.
°ate
represent
read
Ain—Mr.
Robillard.
tirnber
money,
absence
the
purpose
Torrens
countiee
the
Toronto
the
are
The
system
pieced
vince
difference.
adopt
that
oommodation.
and
the,
ment
practical
that
public
mein
The
the
of
shown
the
had
leaving
would
the
system
distriete,
and
opinion
fecilitiee
tion
them
rime
'
.
az
of
•
r.
entitled on lot thepeeting the City of doctors
Catharines.
Ir. VrOser said this was one of 14h0Be
Of which sufficient net.ioe bed not been feat/We
and the Standing Orden Committee they
re888"2.8hdea that the gni° requiring
be dispensed with. He took the
of order that until the repork of the
was adopted the bill could not be representetion
with.
epeaker reeerved his dean/ion.
SECOND liminess.
following Bills were read a ealond
1 ' ,
St. George's Sthielly of To.
consondate the debt of the Town of
`
tremens or eLOTION.
Tait—Bibi to amend the Municipal
Mr. Robillard—Bill to amend the Street
lot.
Ur- White—Bill to amend the Municipal
H •
e motion the OUSO go into
was deolared (serried, and the corn-
went into sap 1 d
p y, muse an item,
rem. .
After Recess.
following bills were read a semnid
amend the lot respecting dentistry.
Respecting the federation of the Univer.
set Toronto and Universit C 11 with y o ege wi
rinivereitiee and colleges.
To amend the law tie to barristers and
in certain ono. /..
into o
the Houee went Committeef
Mr. Meredith wished to know the reason
the vast incresee in the estimates in
Imrnigretion department from $5,800 to
Mr. Dryden replied that 51,000 was
for an allowence for maps, circulars,
literature. These revs and literature
dietribated in Englend as well as in
country, An additional inoreeme was
item of e2,000 to encourage new settlere
Benny river.
Mr. Meredith asked whether the election
of the hon. gentleman on the dia.
stete of the Province would be sent
with the ciroulere and literature.
Mr. White wished to know how the item
" incidentala " had increased from 61,300
$2,000.
Mr. Dryden replied that much of it was
transportation servithe for immigrants,
of whom would go into the country
had not the mean°.
Mr. Meredith thought the Department
Publics Werke hardly did its duty
Osgoode Hall. The vseet wing
be painted the same se the east.
Mr. Fraser—We intend to do that thio
The speaker laid upon the table a certifi.
of election of the member elected to
South Grey.
The following bills were introduced and
a first time a
To amend the Illunicipel Water Works
McKay (Oxford.)
To amend the Street Railway Aot—Mr.
Respeoting liens for labor on logs and
and the payment of wages—Mr.
Mr. Wood (Hestinge) asked in the
of Mr. Monk, is it the intention of
Government to take any stepa for the
of extending the benefits of the
system of land transfer to other
of Ontario on the seine terms as
system was introduced into the city of
and County of York:
Mr. Mowat replied that the terms are
same for the whole Province as they
with reference to Toronto end York.
Land Titles Act, under which the
was introduced into Toronto,
every county and town in the Pro-
on the same footing with a alight
The county or town wishing to
the system meet pass a bynew to
effect and provide the necessary am
In the thee of Toronto
York the system was applied without
passage of a by-law, as the Govern.
desired to give an exempla of its
working. It was also provided
the expense ehould be borne out of the
treasury and in return the Govern-
should receive the fees collected.
let wets peened in 1885, and during
fast four yeare the cost of maintenance
the ay/nem in Toronto and York had
a deficit of $4,600 as compared with
receipts. Since 1889, however, there
been ampinees aggregating $4,200,
an "%nal defir3it of but $331. This
soon be more than made up for and
office would yield a revenue. The
wee also applied to five outlying
and was left to the counties, cities
.towns to adopt it at their option.
Mr. McLenaghan moved that, " in the
of this House greater local
should be given to 'farmers' sone
by vshich they could secure a better edam.
in their own calling than is afforded
under the provisions of the law as it
standee/ He considered this was a
very important question. A wealthy
Province like Ontario should look well
after the humors, as upon them depended
every brenth of commerce.
Mr. R "'t d t d We
. the, in reply, gm e nn ers oo i
hon. friend presenting the viewshe did,
representing a rural oonstitnenoy. It
seemed to him a familiar theme, and (sem
thinly was one of great importance.
The remarks of the hon. gen.
(stamen would apply with almost equal
force to every other calling in the land. 11
might be said, what were the Government
doing for the education of the laborer, the
domestics the blacksmith, or the them-
stress? ' 'The laborer wee not instructed
how to hendle hie pick and shovel, nor was
the bleckeraith taught how to wield hia
hammer. What he (Mr. Rose) did objeot
to mainly, perhaps he should say firstly,
.
was that the hon. member did not reoog.
niza the great prinoiple that elementary
•
ethuntion wets purely fundamental, ahd
that what was neeful to the fermere was
equally useful to those engaged in any
other calling. Agricultural education ill
be nais laced,
the Public ethoole would , P
. Mr. Whitney said it Was generelly under-
stood that the results from the Agricultural
Col ega a no een es 'Atm actorY Its was
1 h d t 13 ' f
expected.
me aim any opposi
Dr. Willoughbyd' I • d '
-.
t* t the Ge 1 le Ag • nit ral 0 flee It
ion 0 e 0 P rt° u - ° e•
woe unjust on the pert of the Government
. f 1' t th 0
to impute etuth ee ings o e onserve.
e. m tth le e s in athi ed with
ttv'm 'Ale/ neve e a • n P F
the proposed to localize agricultural
inetruction. . . . .
Mr. Awrey considered thus discussion
wag simply in direet bid on the part of the
., •
Opposition or amen vo es. a
Conservatives been as anxious before tlae
a u s o
5th of March to renaove th b rden f the
omens, t at o heel might now e in
f' h 1 • ht b '
better position. The olaarge that the leo.
turere sent on* by the Fariners Inatintite
_ere not on/Mittel men ems not well
"-- - - s
founded. Those gentlemen were Florae
OBt eminent an(Ma i e in
the inoat t d • boat 111 4 ' th
preference/1 of agriculture. /t wart not the
- • • •
fault en the ' Government that /so Many
young men left' the fame., The system
now adepted wee to keen the dull`boys on
• holds' ' h 61.1 ' T
the ferret. Thie 0 be o god. he
Meyer boys 'should be kept on the ferret
meat
ef the
own
Mr'
and
Was
fielr.
(Le4righter.)
wh"13aUse8
It
were
esserted
have
Present.
by
the
the
the
'
glasses
onseion,
cluSiOn
tion.
doubt
required
to•day,
and
acquiring
others,
any
are
applied
perfeetione
sible)
and
(for
we
to
we
warn
begin
to
meat
more
found
eyes
that
ward;
gradual
else
will
causing
less
go
the
dren.
lesson.
Gramiseer
head'
ing
himself
likely
soon
will
sons
not
"Robinson
Book*"
less
to
teachers
inatitiotion
tneke
whether
not.
the
tion
for
preservation
ventive
bad
that
they
tests,
sehool•room.
exeliotion
conies
we
we
not
leafed
and
be
hand
less
me
mush
out,
pein
are
on
tures
thumps
have
ing
sternum
easinees
though
/sprout
the
sensetion
-
.
e
a
o e
e
and lawyer% The Governs
bad used every effort for the benefit
farm/ere, It woe not tight that the
, .
ehonld ask for epeeist fevers. Ali
wanted Wee a fair field, enn by their
energy and thrift they Would sumeed.
ah'n°Y itmght the fe'lme" th"ght
rightly, that theth should be al larger
of farmere in the Cabinet,
it. a request in whioh they' were join
.
Awrey—I think Bo. ' / think so. il3
410W 'rat etAice 0.00D SICIVAD .
—
with the 8usgestlen That There is a Good
D°4''" watching the oven Fine.
1 lencote at the neer thh Cm 't
hands covered with dougz h. 1 ssnyWwl hyraoi
grnivnekilligt tor the Beltiline°nEt°of"tab3rosteb.jethIoSs-hh'tinidi
breadmaking a troublesome nunness,
withe mimeo the yeast, of course, and ems
Pmeaedletro fo°rIlt°bwrsee: large potetom and boil
them in enffieient water to eeeld one tea.
spoonful of flour. When done pour the
potatoes and water over the flour, and
mash all together, Steep a a
a hope in a'' emu' aidh tkaad motlitil ahhaentoupl
water to the mixture, or you can tie the
hopa in a smell muslin eamt and ben with
the Potatoes if You prefer. Do not make
it too strong of hops or the yeaat will be
bitter. Add a / teee;poonful ea* of salt
sulighar ahndthegi11 gia'rtBut
& onepowere
t eirf you r ehdai ve lea tait arela bandy,
.
abaci/lately nethesary.
Have the mixture th"
_ ,about as iek as ordi.
narysoelie better and run it through a
sieve or mesh it fine to r II th
emove a e
ps o e and when lukewarm
lam f the potato,
add one good est(X I d)
ye oke . HAM Ve , or one.
half teaspoonful of any good yearn stock,
p ewe o nee. lwaYs
end set it in a werm 1 t • A
prepare the yeast the da before' h
3" you wis
to bake.
,
Now you are ready to proceed with the
bread makin I th Svl-
g. n e evening remove ono -
half the mixture to a AO 1 ' dwithoutrelief
ue or g the tar, an
set it away where it will keepcool but n t
0
ad sufficient
freeze, mo the remainderd *
our to ma e e
lukewarm water and ft ' k th
- 4 I • -
desired ruing sponge," and act thin in a
warm place to "rise."
Yon can mix your breed before break.
feet if you. desire to have it out of the way
early in. the day. Sometimes I boil pone
ye en 08.3 e
toes on bread, making de d th
an
potato water for mixing the broad,a
often throw in a spoonful or more of the
an a easpoon a o BM •
Mashedpotatoesd t f 1 f It
This make the bread moist and spongy.
The bread thus made will also be coarse
l
p eases the palate as long as
grained, but it 1
it lasts.
If you wish a fine grained bread, to
pa a
'please the eye es well as thepalate,t
teacupful of sweet milk, a generous lurnP
et butter end a teaspoonful of salt in tb,e
first mixing and knead. it well. Set it in a
p ace o rise, at o not
moderately warm. I t • b d
at any stage let it get too hot, as it mine it
to hurry it with forced heat. Always take
e
care to keep it covered closely with s ler a
clean cloth. n
When suffiniently light mold into small
loaves, Bet it aside to rise elowly, and bake
before it gets too light and spongy.
• If you wish to meke Graham bread take
the desired amount of the rising. sponge
gla wi re am
and mix, to a stiff dou with G h
flour instead of white, and add oue tea.
spoonful of molaeses or brown auger and a
I f b tt the * f b t t
temp o n er e size o a utternu o
each two medium sized losves • mold it into
• • ' -
small loaves at the firet mixing and set it
away to rise. It will rise much slower
ye ru me e
the white bread. Alma b It d
butter over your loam when you put them
gain when you remove
in the pans and a •
them from the oven, and von will have a
crisp deliciona ornet. Now ,that is the
h ' • '
w ole story end it should all be told before
dinner time. When you are to bake again
save work have boiled potatoes for dinner,
and the boiling water, with two or three
potatoes dropped into flour, will
do as well and - [save extra
an:A pro„ed „ more e„ept
y o ABBthere
that it ili not neeesser t hot
water, save when reservingthe stook, which
musttbeedone.theasionally or the yeest will
t I T th'potatod ld d fl
get azy. o is an scut e . onr
add when °efficiently 000l the contents of
the yeest jar, and by evening you will have
the liveliest kind of "new yeast." When
the yeast gets " lazy," se it will after sem
eral renewals, dimerd the contents of the
yeast jar entirely and proceed to make
fresh yeest as at first direeted.
erma
9,
Syrup
For Coughs & Colds.
ns
John LI-. Jones, Edom,Tex.,writes:
1 have used German Syrup for the
Cough,pastsimcoymeasr, years,Pains SizioretileTherioltt,
and Lungs, and let me say to any -
the
yet
ohow
leiria:millustofetoar•nm6lalnlYvh°pLeeorb'
themselves
ties
zmrutt
,
,
1
e
o
s
. -
d
I
,,
ha
so
on
? e
-
it
be
by
as
the
is
the
tun,
its
old
the
60
of
a
are
h
?
are
s
bed
to
the
earl
A se,
•
Is
'
in
the
yet
Lan.
an
me
nut
be recently
many
mueh•gtalignen
there
that
advice
knhaOwlsongLeve.breyetnhian:rattabiOnifltn
arum,
of cities
;
of
arranged
vgralePdhitaiodthienfcloirgmniattyionof4e"
pher and
of true
earente
on dimpled
tootsymmotsiee,
sought
AO a venerable
kindly
from
snpreraely
words
A
. young
such an
oope
complaint
when
phrase),
and her
father,
BU lied
pp
some
a silk
her father
a
since
beve been
. .
divided
..
muslin,
was substituted
-
a to
. en
' o go
not the
•r1 says,"i
filparty
house
young
room
mother
severe
laid .
horrid
I oomplemed
not interfere.
like a
years
In
you advise
said,
8 ,
Good
the
anking."
°P-
thoughtful
the revival
12* la
w 1.°
desuetude.
questioned.
.
sighed
that
should
future
against
The
° ome
commemorated
t •
tieftev.in
'
t m
ot e
dsheurrY/
s a
i s
sacred
formula
three
the temples,
was
of the
matter
and.
h
ty ioli
th
te
of 0 his
That
d't
e 1 '3
that
makes
James
, manse
d
the
torily
well
burgh
Glasgow
commercial.
beside
presence
mrudestene2
p eached
it
i
athlete
comic
A
ehe
ia
Marr'aver
Tag OTISPAIOrlisda.
Enitows Eeneetione
mother,
&Niel inetittition,
been the
that° of (sheep
ere =melons'
she hoe
eeboalim:,kew:'hienfife6hyseebril°tIo4"eny6bfinWeel:
in ani
to the editor
unions end
and the BiZe
and that he
all hie knowledge
late the
has widened.
burectu
ft' ii" •
len ,
love does
are obdurate,
cheeke,
then
from the
Lome,
eyes seated
/
the bustle of
hannv
- —
of conneel and
woman,
exalted idea
with great problems,
to a New
*4 boiled down"
is as follows:
mother died
being well
. her with
time she had
divided skirt.
married
New
that time the
°hanged
- •
skirt wee forbidden,
without
• .
wear fashionable
th h tre
th a i ea
worst.
attended
and eame home
gentleman se
and we just
entered and
'
leoture on the
me soma her
.
spanking with
to my
It
baby, and
an myse
older'eh
answer to the
me to
" Bepatient,d
advice, althoughnot
humili tion
&
- But
observer
of an old
h f latefall
"8
Its
Many
for its restoration
a stepmother
make the
to one who
than sinning.—Fhiladelphia
on the
the etemnothers
of alneest
and ridieute
instancee
usee, tend that
ifl write'
a newspaper.
td4iaettanaenes1961aitn7
„Amputations
political
MO longing.
to the .ourlonere
belief
Frorn a carefully
and
ghnaidae,bepebnilosaelee.
'
when the
smooth,
or trooklee
corns on
advice is at
, who is mo
snowy hair
hie hermit cell
world, and
- when uttering
•
evidently has
editorial ability
sent a
editor,
use a newepaper
She is 19 years
yeara ago,
cii"n u gentti I ,
clothe an
e,
the dignity
last Christmas.
the bride
woman,.
, g
the wearing
/ .
and plain
or needlework.
she was
.
tight skirto
This, however,
week," the
a friend'
2 o'clock
I went
when my
after giving
of parties
&
and gave
.
bread leather
but he
to be
woman only
.
"What
the editor
t hl's
get home
likely to
d b that
9
will strike
.
in this
of punishment.
•
into "innoonona.
has never
helve
; and
set the
more' °heritable
often more
litmen
as
ad
; and
wnioll
the
for
It
major&
tee
in bid
geo-
comae
when
appear
little
onen.
t A
ttre
and
far
never
•
jtust
to
pitiful
13` h
w us
old,
Her
always
a for
at
being
and.
ementa
of the
.
white,
.
forbid -
en
'
was/
e Poe
se
with
to my
step
me
elle
'
me re
stre
would
a ked
pan
three
would
simply
early
remove
"horrid
the
story
been.
often.
the rant
example
in
einned
Record..
lately,
was/
in his'
tieing
up
of
the
doe
different
omen
of a raoe
apple
Glasgow
ease '
senses's-
be ver
,
Etha-
while
vulgarly
the
labors:
a genial
As ODD
favor,-
been
singe
'
'
.
•
e
-
r
a
-
a
'
is
in
-
m.
se
at
am
-
be
.
of
Y°
am
a
get
--
objeet
wit
rnotheminnaw
her
di lid011ItY•
of
dentin?
of
'in
popular
of statietioal
and
not run
or
editor,"
with
in
the
MVO
guidance
who
of
York
(to
three
ans
off
good
g
attained
But
again,
England
familyarran
First
.
ruffles
Next
.
"Last
teat
at
theorte
retiring
/
evils
knee
k
a
father,
is terrible
by a
If."
question,
do ?"
an
dans e
what
moat
mode
en
efficacy
persons
has
world
is
---ar----s. bills
en the „hair 0 3 030100n. given,
e said thet the pmetotice it"
wed far many neon, and
en3plaint lied been made.
ad a, meow from the oonunitto
nor conveying the interim
, tamemaing a0 3300,000.
reguming the adjourned
get, send then there eras
a question of the finencee
wee one of the IHMOBt tithe
ne that ;mould be fully
Lained so that the people r°nto.
their true p °anon. He
ef the expenditure of last
ind to be e3,941,116. The
1 $3,423,154, leaving an
if n517,902. To make up
ent bad to draw from a
f last year 1O5518,from
len e411,742, end from
the aum of n699. The
1889, according to the
.o late Treasurer, was
the receipts • had been
ig a defieit or elsortage
3 Treasurer, in speaking
sn, had stated that they
tion side of the House
thing of these matters me
ed. further stetted in his
that when we had sorne
he did not see how there
Yet the hon. Tree/Borer
ly made hie statement
nit, Recording to this way
there was a deficit, this
had drawn not only this
Le $517,000 beeides. The
3 making hi statements.
3or, had both admitted
riding that the revenues
2et they had calculated
it been able to administer
aim the income of the
gentle/nen had always
t . deal of economy, but
had long since vanished.
• - •
eating with the 110)11319
to Ontario, pointed out
to Ontario,
'Mien public Remounts
of 64,827,640 to thia
slaim of the Provincial
My el18,000 more than
the Dominion. It seemed
non were determined to
a of the Dominion to this
nterest on $4,827,640, the
3f the Dominion to the
w cent, would be $240,000
' assets of , the Province
Imre inolnoed the sum of
xad been expended on the
ads and buildings. He
/ Bele of the old site would
er every cent expended on
ment buildings. It was
ce of Ontario was join.
n the Dominion for in.
e. Who eves it that had
a/creased subsidies 2 The
since Confederation the
svernment had been vim
of 0 )nteaeration for the
ig 'ergo subsidies to the
Ontario had been boar-
ere of the taxation, end
the lion's share of the
Is better that there should
iis matter. He believed
/ight to claim reimburse-
M0,000 she had spent on
onfederation. He was not
rem/nits of the member
a, who had preaohed an
pagande at Detroit and
he surprised to hear the
sber for Toronto (ULM E.
hat Canada was edneating
ao United States. Why, if
iberel side had made snob
meld have been branded es
as a new member, felt
eess his views npon the
3ncouraged in doing so by
s junior member ' for Tor-
bed shown no special mod.
lig the House. The Gov-
Dad of their new Treasurer,
proud oi him, bemuse that
me of his constituents. He
v Treseurer would make an
r of the Cabinet if he was
r
by the wioked partners.
fe was not surprisedS at
House defending the liquor
3, because many of them
otioh to the fact that the
,s worked, and worked well,
aent. In administering the
Government abused their
an extent that the people
to repeal the measure. In
aid he had faith in the Pro-
n and believed it would yet
n destiny which providence
t for it.
%greed that the question of
schoole was not dead and
Lid not be dead and buried
note who used Frenoh were
/illing to give np their lan•
Marge that there hed been
e Roam Catholic Church
l after the verdiet of the
Mended that no more would
era of it. Ie was ene pollee'
lent that in every school in
Inglish language should be
it pollee, had met with the
/ people. He was willing to
sat the total expenditure had
total receipts, but that wets
Me position of the Province.
3d the adjournment of the
1 it stand as the.first order
Io -morrow. •
r read his deeieton on the
d a few days ago in connem
petition from Sheriff Mo.
Mon.
Winn= OF BILLS.
m bills were introduced and
Le : •
ef of the estate of the late
—Mr. Tait.
tte the Toronto Transfer and
ead Railway Com ee„.,e410
1---.7
he Ant incorporating the To.
Of Corporation—Mr. Tait.
-
the Weston, High Fere
y Compeny Dr.
et RailWa —
• •
ate the Tilsonburg Spur Line
pany—Mr. MoRety (Oxford).
he Ontario Insurance lot--
the Atheeeraent Aet—Mr.
he Perry Sound Colonization
Many'a let—Mr. Sharp.
ate the Niagara FAO Elec.
nompany—Mr. Tait.
the Profession of Steno.
.Ross,
ize the Stspren3e Cony*
' Ontario be admit Geerge
* •
trdner to %et as a eolioitor—
the City ' —M
of TOronto
/ate the rort Arthur on4 Vort
may Company—Mr. Tait.
AT. BAitatuNES emn.
Ditreioreams 'meow.
.
— r.
et and Ilaw UM"' h0 ona ea
' ' ' Agalwit4
is jest 600 years/ ago since pectaole
first invented, and it can be
that at no thrie in their
they been so generelly worn aa at
Formerly they were worn only
the aged; now it is quite common to see
young and even littte children wearing
universal adjunot to ,uhe windowe of
•
soul ' '
Why so many children should require
. nowadeys is often a matter of dim
and to arrive at a definite con.
on the sulejeot requires considers.
There certainly eiturtot be any
that many. children in former times
glasses mat aa much ars they do
but with the advancement of edemas
the opportunitiee which we have for
knowledge, , this subject, like all
is now better understood, and where
defects or imperfectives in the body
discovered the earnedy is sPeedilY
(if pessiblet.
Besides these inherited defects and im.
(for which we etre net respon.
there are others which are acquired
are brought on by a misuse of the eyes
whith we are , responeiblen . To these
would pertioularly refer and endeavor
point mit both cause and effect, which
trust. may three as a beacon of light to
°there of the danger.
Children of tender years, when first they
to -book intently at near objeets (i. e.,
reed or. write), often acquire some OP the
serious ,defecte of vision. This is
especially the case when the oyes are
to be unequal in focus, or when the
are not quite normal, the remelt' tieing
the weeniest eye frequently 'finne in-
causing strabismus or squint, and se
loss •of vision in the effected eye, or
the child, being unable to. see clearly,
hold the object too near. the eyee, thus
. .
myopia, or neereight, whiett, . um
spe.ediln and perfectly corrected, will
on increasing until the age of 27.
A few illnatrations will best explein the
causes and effeeta of bad eight in chin
A bad light; a email print • a difficult
•
The boy hopes to get the Latin
into 'his head by putting his
into the Latin Grammer. • He is do.
.
hie best wilhout knowing . it, to make
. shori•sighted for life, end is very
to succeed.
Five o'clock in the afternoon. "Too
,than
to light the lanip." Tho good boy
not waelte his time; he learns hie les.
by fire light. . .Perhaps, however, it is
a lesson book which he is, reading, but
CrUBM3 " or the " Boys' Own
•
lf, th, itie all the worth, for he is
likely to put it down.
Too, ranch attention could not be given
this ineportiant subject by parents,
and all those concerned in the
of the young. Parente should
. . .
it their busmen the athertain
their children's eyes are right or
Teachers should see that the light,
construction -Of the desks onenthe pod.
of the body are -just whet is required
all these are essential, not only to the
of the sight, but as a pre
to disease.
Aa a safeguard against the prevelence of
siglat in children, we would auggest
before entering on the duties of sehool
be required to undeego within simple
which should be on the well of every
The losa of our sight is the greatest
that can befall U3. and when we
to understand the wonderfulmethan-
of the eye and the injustice none to it,
cannot bat wonder that more people do
lose their sight. Let theme who have
sight see to it tht vision see at at it is preserved,
those withimperfooithit
.
made perfect before it be too late.
one wanting such a medicine --
G best
ermall Syrup the ''
B.W... Baldwin, Carnesville Tenn
, ',
eafvaemunsye,danydoufirnGd eirnt tiahne
ntsyrruiteps :in my
bestI r tried f r coughs
medicine eveo
and colds. I recornraend it to every-
one for these troubles.
—
waist Of
lh D •
R. Schtua ausen Druggist,
' ) '''' '
Charleston, Ill.,writes : After trying
scores of prescriptions and prepara-
ti I had my files and shelves
ons on
f severecold
or a very
which dsettled l
had on my lungs,
•
tried your German Syrup. It gave
me immediate relief and a perma
elent cure. 0
G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer,
.
Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A.
mossassaasossesmissaszo.momosammassa*
'
HOW HE BROKE THE NEWS.
____
A Heartrending Narrative Given to the
•strapping•
World in a Western Paper. 1
Yon say that I'm pale and flustered, and.
shivering in my slams ; r11 be hanged if
you wouldn't shiver if you had to "break
the news." I suppose you have heard
how Qaimby is stretched on a bunk
.
down there, with a pint or more of his
own blue blood mixed up with his auburn
hair? Well, they made me a joint oora.
mittee to go to his house and. tell his wife
all about the scrimmage and what a_
her man befell. I went to the heath up
yonder, not meshed on the job, you bet,
and my Manic and blue -veined forehead
wee bathed in a quart of sweat The
woman was in the kitchen, msinging
plaintive song, bat she dried tip When.
he saw me 'for the knew there wee sem
s-- -- 1 -
thing wrong. Then I coughed and
hemmed and stammered, and " Madam,
said I, " be brave I your husband ia now
anying"—Oe, Lord! what a shriek she
gave I And she walked up and down
a•moaning and wringing her furrowed
hands, and her hair fell down like sem
weed adrif 1 by the ocean sands. " Oh,
heaven!" she cried, "my husband ! They've
taken my love from me," and the way
•
then the reeled and staggered was a mg
for a man to see. "So breve, so kind,
noble I So loving, ao grand and strong, and
now must I wait his ooming in vain all the
v's children will
dark da bong? And in
wail in sorrow and never a gain in glee troop
down in. the miety twilight and duster
about his knee." And so she went
emaving ; her sorethis for a block were
heard, and I, like a graven image, stood
without saying a word. It seemed
like my tongue was frozen or glued to my
peerly teeth, and hardly e. breath came up.
ward from the porelyzed lungs beneath.
'he
Bat I braced np all of a sudden, and
"Madam," said I, again, " I'm sorry—I'm
deuced sorry—to have caused you this
needlees pain. Let up on your frenzied
screaming ; you don't need to weep and
wail; your old man ain't dead by a long
ehot : he's only looked up in jail." she
glared at me for a minute—for a minute
or two—and then said, "So the darned
old loafer is down there in jail again
Then she picked up a tub and smaehed
all over my princely head, and I saw she
was getting ready to paint the whole land.
escape red. So I skipped through the gate
and moseyed so fast that I tore my shoes,
and they don't make me a committee in the
future to break the news.--Lineoln journal.
-
Now or Age.
Crown Prince of Sim having
of age—the age of 14—the event
with imposing ceremonials,
most uni ue of which consisted
his hair q . _ _ ,
gTothe;eta lontiats inst. time
p atcticalf ATenean,
d t ohavingtthat tune ion done
no aeous.otmed to regarding
Td. t
at a invested with traditions
nature, it might seem that
gone through With, comprising
days of processions, invocations
turneents by brass bands,
out of ali proportion to the importance
event. Bat, then, it's a
when there's a prince in the
Prince
• II C P •
coven. y a their
treasure cues as sacredly
lmeoan is wont to treasure the
n
eye.
•
THE ELLIPPOGRAPEL
A New Device for Drawing Perfect Egg-
Shaped Figures.
, There is a demand for a simple Matra.
ment that will make an ellipse quickly. A.
Swedish inventor has recently patented a
device that seems to meet the demand. It
consists of a drawing•pen or nencil fixed at
right angles to a horizontal bar, at the
other end of which is a leg used as a sap.
port. A handle is at the top of this bar,
and at the lower end of 11 10 a reel around
whioh is wound a doable thread. The
thread poses down to the point of the pen
or pencil, and is passed around two bail.
heeded pins pressed into the paper at the
foci of the ellipse. The thread is placed
around these piat, and all that needs now
to be done is to draw the curve in the usual
fashion.
Editing rdagaZines.
a London magazine should
from co an is chrions
d f S tl d ' 'enough;
the editor should reside in
' feet all the more wonderful
the
Payne in the ease of " Chambers"
_ d
d E H '
an W. E. enley in the
"National Observer," have
proved that such a feat oan
_ _ _, _
done from Edinburgh, nut then
is Athenian in many senses,
is Philistine, foggy, and
Yet Dr. Donald Macleod,
of " Good Worde " lives and
/
the Clyde. He has
personality
and s strong •
eo ap aum he has frequently
' h I•
a7Btimlmorel, and is a great
with Her enmity. Is has
in his day, and he still
song with wonderful unction.
, How Thread is Numbered.
The seamstress, whether she wants No.
30 or 40 or 120 thread, knows from the
number 31151 what kind of sewing it oan
need for. When 840 yards of yarn weigh
7,000 grains, a pound of cotton, the thread
mekere mark it No. I. If 1,680 yarde
weigh a pound, it is marked No. 2. For
n1
No. 50 yarn it wo d take 50 multiplied
439 to weigh a pOnnd. ThiS is the wlaole
explanation of the yard measurement
used by the spool manufaeturer. The
early manufactured thread was of three•
cord, the number being derived from
number of yards to the pound, juin ese it
to•daY. No. 60 yarn made No. 60 thread,
though the point of feet the actual calibre
of No. 60 thread would equal No. 20 yarn,
being made Of three No. 20 brands twisted
together.
When the /sewing machine cense into
market as a great thread coneatner,
reasoning in ite work and inexorable in
demands for mechanical accuracy, six cord
cotton had to be made in place of the
and rougher threemord, it being much
smoother. As thread numbers were already
established, they wore not altered for
new article, and No. 60 simeord and No.
three -cord were left identical in both eize
and number. To effect this the aim cord
had to be made of yarn twice asfine as that
demanded in making the three. cord variety.
The No. 60 cord is made of six 'strande
No. 120 yarn. The three•cord spool cotton
is of the same number as the yarn is made
f. Six -cord s ool cotton is alwa a made
0 P Y
rom double its number. Thread ie
1 .
temple thing, but simple ae it is, there
in s o x ena megoes rong
2 000 k• d f •t d h kind th
. .de
hundreds of dffferent prothesen—Dry Goods
Beefew.
Then Tou Have the Grip.
Chicago Herald: Nature with a lavish
has endowed the human body with no
than steen million of emote to 'which
ache or .Pain can be attached. When
one of these spots, both inside and
is filled with a hard platinum•tipped
; when • your head aches so that yon
coneciona of all the ruffles and seellops
yonebrein jaat as you see thena in the pie.
in your.physiology ; when your heart
and your stomach wobbles and you
the feeling that eomething LI wallow-
through your inside worke ; when your
feels stove in and there is an urn
under your shoulder blades as
your wings were beginning to
; when you are one inoment alive to
finger tips with thinking of the things
you mos get up an o. an e next eem.
t t d ci d th t
pletely exhausted by even the thought of
doing them; when your backbone has the
of being twisted by a monkey.
wrench; when you are so dizzy you can't
see, and Your ears ring and Your eYee water
and your nose is in Bath a state that it is
presumption to lay aside your handkerchief
for one short minute; when you cough and
sneeze and groan in aurn—in fine, vshen
yore feel like the very deuce—yen oan set it
down that you have the grip. '
Women as Bee -Keepers.
Bee•keeping offers to women an agree -editor
able, healthful and lucrative employment,
says the Ladies' Efome Journal. While
there may be no fortune in bee.keeping,
except to the few, yet to slither° in usually,
satiefaetory reward for labor and money
expended. Women ought to be better bee.
eepers an men, or ey ave, us , a
k th f they h its Ily
gentler, finer touch then men. The gust.
ifiestions of a bee -keeper are gentleness,
patience, absence of fear, and perfeet coon
mend of self. Fear must be overcome or
concealed. It .may be present at first, but
ususuelly gives place to confidence
after a little experience. The theory
that beet/ instinctively select some per-
sons aa mental enemies has to founds-
tion in fact. In an ordinary Beeson
a colony of bees, by the non -swarming,
double -hive eystem, will producse not less
than 50 pounds of honey, often 75 and 100
pounds. Thio honey, if properly marketed,
P • •
will bring the producer 20 cents a poand.
One person, with occasional help, may
attend to 100 colonies if aomb honey be the
produot If extracted honey be the object
'
• • ' .OPv
ting
aseigtanne will be reqhihed in entree .
oney. Though millions ot ponnds of
the h . . e
hone are reduced every year, yet honey
Y P
"s Praotioall unknown to the great body of
1 Y a f
the people There are abandons arms
e ' •
north, east, rionth and west, and there are
tons o honey on ese arms rnnmng o
f th f t
vsaste ; and a t the /Jame time there are
th d fpinched by wa t
onsen s o women, n
"ad b toil, who could earn on thee
wean dr 10
farms with the help of the bees, more than
• , / •
rn now and be comfortable and
sheY e& •
tented.
oon _
-
women is never so good.looking that
cannot remain an old metid, and a man
neso homely that he cannot
ed.
D. D. IS I. 16. 91
----
p t•
e • 3
i,
le /
.
'etd:Metd
• •
den
'
d
td.ntindInnt .'
•
4 p
g
elee r 47tfailVA',
'
de ,
e ,
'IftV ,
i
‘u
m
i k
CI
Mr
iii
Why Girls Can't Throw stones.
T • 3
The difference between a girl s throwing
and a boy's ie substantially this : The boy
crooke his elbow and reathes back with the
upper 'part of hie' arm about at right angles
-
i ise rearm st an angle
with h• body and she fo
o or y. ve egrees. The direct ao t 0e
f i t fi d
throwing is accomplished by bringing the
•
arm baok with a sort of einem, working
—
every Joint from shoulder to wrist. The
- h "th h h 1th
girl t rows wi her w o e arm rigid,
,
boy with hia whole arm relaxed. Why th's
- '
merkod and unmietakeable difference mintsCURES
may be explained by the fent that the
- n
deviate ' or collar -bone in the feminine
• • '
anatomy is some mehes longed., and set
e d greee lower down than m the e
some e ma
online frame. The long, crooked, awkward
• .
bone interferes with the full and free use
This is the reason why A girt ' - -
of the armg
,
(mind throw a stone,
ItI
s
17
/
) e
IT
VT
a
0
to
" /
g
alii„
•
IS
,
e
'
. •
C
_
4
• `{s
Annt.
PERMANENTLY
s 11."
C
Inems,
inn
'
THE,
s'
r
r
tl
' ne..
1
,TICA.
c
/
FR
/
- li
el
t
.
Cb
e
•
t'
0
-
13
' l
e
,s
.
ES
.
The Cat Question.
York World • Are sesta a nuisance
New Y .
Dead ono most certainly are. So. too,
• • instinct
vagabond night oats with musiced
, bat no voice. The alien oat who deftly
e excavates the newly laid.ont garden
ruing ite bloomin remises is also
and . g p
be reprobated. But them are bad eats,
criminal Mess of the feline tribe, and
i
the whole family be maligned for *til
worthy members? The cat in the normal
s
cat, the softly putring, milk -drinking,
beribboned ornament of the homehold.
••
that a nuisance ? Tho Board of Elealth
'
he New jersey town haa got to eettle
,
point, for a Woman had entered a formal
&ergo before it, based on the ground that
eats are nuisances end shoold be abated.
Let the board ornery° an intrepid °elm
in eolving the point.
n
' '
The English soldiere in the Soudan were
eupplied with St. Jacobs Oil.
---e--
• • '
The body of a men with a bullet in the
I • *
. brain was found ly ing across a brightly
burning fire hear East Cerondelet, Ill.,
yesterday morning. The body was dis•
. . b. ,
covered Just in urns to prevent its beam
•
burned and centred beyond recognition. It
was a ease ef suicide. .
• • •• ht b
Ix looks as if the ooming man raig e
• new h fi la Ith
women. meg° as ye women ea
inspeotore who each drew an annual salary
• _ . -
cif $1,000. They ate etnpowered with full
atithority to enforce their reoomtuenda-
none, and wear an official badge which
' thotity is disputed
they ehtele When their en
Mheie work liets in the poorer sna dirtier
(in coal offiee)--Can r
Lady yon not lin ry
this coal hp for rne • my bin le empty.
1 e e ,_ _ . t _ .. . , _..
' lope h won e mine eo man Long. tnerx
(asenntigly)—I will rush Atm/dem. You
will have a yer i. e
y short weight, I ensure
ne„
'Y n*
The Mirtneapolin flour Mills which were
not bought up by the English syndicate are
, .• •
to go into a oornbiestion of their own.
—The Weitz had it e beginning in Ger-
• 0
many, end then e WM4 taken to Femme,
ehortly after which it Wee introdneed into
tnglaud. Hungary was the birthplace of
.he galepail fi' a
t e or ,alep, an from Poland
Minns the stetelY nelorittase or poltecoa rind.
a --
' Sarah Bernhardt is 47 ems/ old,
she lesolse to be only 25. -
Beaton dog•feomiets have fully half
million donate invested in rare deg flesh.
ennels at
The dogs in the Hillside K '
t ' t $100
• the er, Masse are valued a ,000,
Mimes at the Melrosie Rounds are woriti
dile AAA
e
Eli PISO'S CUR E FOR:
es • -
es THEitesT conga mosentEk
d es / OW lit Dina little/lit ' '
'CON
. ,SQ. .. i? T 10:
,
' '
. ,-p, •
Mr. aisoott inovod for leave to introduce and the dull once gent to eoordepreao are,
e