HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-10-6, Page 7+-•
ZOUSEHOLD.
elp the 8011001-Tea0fler."
The mother, encumbered.with many cares
lllis.the little bathe; with bountiful lunette
hunte'up the brimless sttaw hat a- d 'places
it atop of the bliree, brown, 'or golden curls
tiee the bonnet strings securely under the
iimpTed chin, and with este' of relief teens
aemlin to the unending housework.
What a relief it is to know that the busy,
restless, mischievous little ones are off her
hands for all day and she may work, Andis.-
turbed by childith hurts and quarrels. A
mother of my acquaintance solemnly affirms
that when the children of her household are
rafely headed towards the schoolhouse half
her day's work is ended, and her children
aumber but two after all.
Now when this part of the mother's work
ends the teacher's begins, and you are so
worried by at most a half-dozen of these
little busy bodies tlzink for a moment of
the teacher serreunded by thirty or more
of these same restless ones, good, bad, and
indiffeeent, alien the same little room, and
decide whether you help or hinder that
teacher.
For the sake of your own boys and girls,
if not foe ie sake of the toiling schoolmis-
tress, be a. helper. The school is not senply
a place to send the children to keep Munn
out of your way, but the post where they
mese be trained end drilled for future use.
fulness, it is in your power to so aid the
teether that your child may receive the
greatest benefit, and you have it equally in
your power ea so cripple her efforts that in
the great account of your child's life there
will be charged up to you great loss,
I know many a mother wil say, "I can-
not aid the teeolier. What tune have I?
My dear woman, you can aid even more
by not ioing than by doing. "Firstly: "
Don't al ow the Andean to be absent from
school unless it is absolutely nuavoidahle.
If you send them at all, send regularly.
know that " Mary" is needed in the kitchen
and "John" in the hayfield or store, but
as you value your child's future welfere
playa the "jingling of the guinea " in your
pocket to -day, 1 say to you " don't. " By
the way that hest idea is not wholly for the
consideration of the mothers; the fathers
need to take two-thirds of it, leaving the
mother her lawful third,
" Secondly:" Don't scud the children /ate
to school. Some of you have yourselves
been teachers and can recall the annoyance
of having pupils reach the schoolhouse any
time from nine till noon, every fresh arrival
serving as an attraction for the wandering
minds of the urchins already assembled.
Don't send them to school, on the other
hand, at half past six in the morning to gee
them out of your way. If you do, don't
bleane the teacher for the quarrels and dia.
turbances which occur before the hem is
opened at eight.
Don't discuss the faults of the teacher and
ber failings. Many qua ify that by adding
" in the prosenee of the children," but
say to you, "don't do it at all." Common
charity forbids it and common courtesy
prohibits it. She has faults? Of course she
has and so have you ; but would you feel
that she was jastified in pointing out your
shortemnings to your children or exposing
them to the gaze of your neighbor?
I once reproved a little fellow for using
an oath, and with the truthfulness of child. -
Woe he raised his oyes to my face and said
in vindicatiau, "My papa swears." Was
I called upon to toll that child that hie
father was a very bad man ? I was not re-
quired to shake the child's faith in the fath-
er. Enough for nie to teach him that the
language was wrong, and that he must not
uso it.
Neither have you a right to destroy the
child's faith in his teacher, nor will you
find the toachar guilty of sueli wrongdoing,
Her faults are apt to leo of the head, not of
he heart. Whea you see where she fails,
if you are very sure' it is a failure, go to
her in all kindness and point out the error.
I assure you that you will be received in
the same spirit in which you come, and the
difficulty can easily be .adjusted if you come
in sincere friendliuess,.without auger, and
with the good not only of your child but of
the an ire school at heart.
Don't fly into a rage if your child is pun -
:tithed. Doubtless he richly deserved all he
received. Use a little reason and you will
realize that as you yourself find it necessary
to punish severely, the teacher also must
now and then do the same. Don't preach
governing entirely by the power of love un-
til you have used that power so constantly
at home that your children will .obey it
without question.
If " Willie" comes home in a flt of child-
ish rage because "teacher struck him over
the head, just for whispering," don't rouse
yourself up in fancied righteous indignation
and delare that "a persan who will strike
bild on the head is unfit to associate with
weet little ones."
foes? Yes, no doubt it is. But be -
judge' the teacher recall your own
s the day that same "sweat little
"spilled *pan of milk on your clean
floor. Didn't yeu miff him soundly? Yes,
I know you were worn out and tired almost
to death, but I *shouldn't wonder if the
teacher was a little 'eked and worried also.
She gets so sometime's.
For the sake of youiephildren have char-
ity for their teacher's failings, Let them
once suspect that you have a rofty con-
tempt of her efforts, and they will at once
become posed .of a like spirit and you
have thereby destroyed half that teacher's
power for good.
Terich your child that he mnst render un-
conditional obedience to the teacher. When
you fine one teacher o abuses the power
of government yOu will fled hundreds of
parents who do so.
Fall fruit. •
PEAE PRESEEVES.—Pare, quacter, and
core, boil for half an hour in enough Water
to cover them. .Add one pound of white
mot for each pound of fruit. Flavor with
the juice of lemons. When the pears are
cooked soft pour them into jars, and tie
them up when cold, • ,
PEAR MARACALADE.--Boil pears with the
akin on ; when soft rub thro ugh a sieve
For each pound of pulp take three-fourths
' of a pound of sugar. Stew slowly midi
thick, stirring coneiantly.
PICKLED Pexas.e-Seven pounds of ripe
pears, halved, three pounds of sugar, one
pint of vinegateeone ounce of whole cloves
one mince of stick cinnamon. Boil the
syrup .one'bour, steani the pears until soft,
boil ;n the syrup a few minutes.
PEMBA' PEARS.—Drop q,uarters of p r
served wars into one . quart of whipped
cream and freeze as you would ice-crearn.
Nice in fruit cakes.
e
SWEAT Pzerteep PEARS. —Dissolve one
potind of sugar in a quart of strong vinegar,
flavor with mace,ciennimon and nutmeg; let'
it come te - bole Pare ripe, firm pears;
leave the stems on, mad drop into the syrup;
take up in a few moments andgmt in a jar;
reemild nine morning's, when the syrup
'shoold be tlaiek„ Put into cleave jars. and
teal bee
•WRISIIIIII•OUI1610011111
, .
PEARS AND WILEPPED Caletex.---Pare and
quarter ten nice pears. Cook until tender,
in a little water, then remove to a platter.
'Make a syrup of one pound of su gar and a
pint of the pear -water. Add the juice of
two lemone and the grated rind of one.
Cook the pears a few minutes in this syrup;
then remove to the dieh in which they are
to be moulded. Soak one ounce of gelatine
one boar in enoagli water to cover it ; when
dissolved stir into the hoe syrup; let boil
up; the turn it over the free). Dip the
mould in Gold water before putting in the
mixture. When cold, turn into a dish
and ECEVC with whipped cream. This is
nice for eunday dinner as it may be prepar-
ed on Saturday, and it is very nice servei
with thick, sweet cream.
BAKED PAARS, —Simply pare them and
sprinkle with swear and nutmeg, adding a
few spoonfuls oewater.
Some New Receipts.
Mous, MILK GINGERBRAAD.--One Cup of
sugar and one-half cup of better beaten
together, one egg, oue cum of molasses, one
cup of sour milk, one teaspoonful of soda
sifted into two and one-half ceps of flour,
one tablespoonful of ginger, one-half tea-
spoonful of salt.
nettle Coax Cake.-eTwo cupfuhi of
indian meal, three cupfuls flour, one pint
buttermilk or sour milk, four tablespoonfuls
molasses, two teaspoonfuls soda, a little salt.
To be eaten hot.
Maneree part.—Three-
fourths cupful of white sugar, one-fourth
cupful of tweet milk, one-fourth cupful of
butter, whites of two eggs, one-half tea-
spoonful of soda, one-half teaspoonful of
cream tartar, one and one-fourth cupfuls of
flour. Dark part.—One half cupful of brown
sugar, one-fourth cupful of butter, one-
fourth cupful of soer milk, one cupful of
flour, yolks of two eggs, one-fourth tea-
spoonful of cream tartar, one -heli tea.
spoonful of soda, ono -half teaspoonful
of °loves, one-half teaspoontul of cin-
namon. When cake, is mixed, put .part
of light part in pan first, and then put in all
the dark part and remaining white on top.
APPLE Bums:sem—Pare eight medium-
sized apples, cut out the core, leaving them
whole; make a syrup of ono and one-half
cups of auger. When it boils, put in the
frnie and let it cook until tender, being
careful to keep it whole. With a apoon
carefully remove the apples from the syrup
to a jelly mould—any earthen howl will an
-
ewer. Add to the hot syrup one-third of a
package of gelatine, which has previously
been soaked twenty minutes in cold water,
then strain all over the apples, setting them
upon the ice to cool. ,Serve with whipped
cream.
Little Economies.
There is an old saying that a woman can
throw out With a spoon faster than a man
Can throw in with a shovel. Without ref-
erence to the apparent injustice of the coin -
purism between the two sexes, it must be
uilmitted that the thriftiness of the family
depends as muck upon the economy of' the
house mother as upon the iudustry of the
wage-earner. No ono, says the Now York
Tribene, should despise small menorah:a
though it is not an economy to use up a dol.
lar's worth of timo in order to save a tup.
penny worth of material. Clothes may be
patched and mended to that extent that it
were actual sewing of money to buy- new
material rather than put so much new cloth
on old garments. Despite all this, there is
not the least excuse for any woman al-
lowing any particle of good nourishing
food to be thrown away. It is just as
easy to cook the meat that has been
cooked before as it is to cook fresh meat,
Every particle of fat cut from the kitch-
en moats should be carefully fried out.
Coarse fats like mutton, lamb and turkey
are for the soap fats, but are none the lase
valuable for that. 13eof fat properly clar-
ified and strained is equal to butter for
shortening and frying. It is incomparably
better than lard. Breadcrumbe saved from
each day's cutting of bread, properly dried
in the oven and rolled and sifted, go far to-
ward keeping a stook of breaderembs on
hand tor veal, croquettes and other dishes.
If every particle of stale bread is saved,
pounded and sifted, there need be not, a jar
of cracker -crumbs purchased. If the house-
wife is careful to save all the bits of twine,
wrapping paper, etc, she will always find
them useful and a great deal of time and
petty annoyance will be saved in this way.
Habits of small saving imuleate a spirit of
thrift which goes far in young people to-
ward making them useful and efficient
members of society. One of the greatest
follies which eau be committed in this di-
rection, however, is to ccumet uses merely
to use up material. The pasty bread pud-
dings, wbich no one likes, and probably no
one ever did like, may be charged to such
excess of ill -directed economy. Valuable
eggs; milk and other materials Which would
make an excellent custard aro wasted in
the desire "to use up " the breadcrumbs In
this way. There are excellent bread pud-
dings, but they are not made of undried
breadcrumbs soaked in cnstard apparently
for no other reason than to save them.
Wonderful Railroad.
When the railroad between Moscow and
St, Petersburg 'was opened, it inspired great
terror in the breasts of superstitious peasan-
try, who thought theremust be some witch-
craft in an invention which could make a
train of heavy cars run along without horses,
at the rate of twenty miles an hour. Some
of them would not go within sight of a
train. Others took timid peeps at the
smoke -breathing creat are, which they be-
lieved to be eliveand ready to devour what-
ever mime in its way. When the whistle
sounded they said, "The monster is hungry;
he's soreaming for somebody to eat !"
By degree; however, their terror wore
away, and following the example of the vil-
lage priests, the peasants began to try the
" smoke-vregons," though with fear a,nd
trembling. The superstition had gone, but
the mystery still remained. .
One day an old, man who had never been
away from . his own village determined to
take a look et "Mether lelescow," which is
regarded by all tl• e Russian peesan try as the
most wonderful city in the world.
The down express and the up express met
ac Bologoe,--hale way between St. Peters-
burg and. Moscow, and .the passengers of
both trains werealloived half an ,hour for
supper. Among the 'people who alighted
from the other train, the old peasant recog:
nized a friendwhom. he had not seen for a
lon g time.
They had a delightful chat together °vet
theie tea in the restaurant, and then, with-,
out any thought e of what he.was doing, the
old peasant boarded his friend's train instead
of his own. •
The talk was very merry for some time,
but at, last the old man became grave and
silent, and appeared to be puzzling deeply
over something. ' At lase he broke out;
"Ah, Ivan, what a wonderful bhing are
them railroads 1 Here we sit in the sang
tar, I goiag, to Moscow, , ezed you. to St.
I P. etersburg 1'
. WAR ON SLAVE STEALERS.
The Latest Battles for Iltaittaittly in the
:Depths or Africa.
The war on the slave raiders iriAfriea is
going on, and. is responsible for most of the
lighting that we hear of in the Dark Conti-
nent. The. Germans have hanged eight sieve
traders at Lindi recently, Four of the vics
tims were Arabs. Many others who were
convicted of complicity in slave raids have
been sentenced to prison, where they have
begun long terms at hard labor. An Arab
bark, Which was careying slaves from tbe
east coast, was caught and confiscated re-
cently. Baron de Souon, the Goeernor' of
German East Africa, writes that the prin.
eipel difficulty iu suppressing the trade is
to know what to do with the freed slaves
who, it appears, beeome it charge upon the
colony.
'tiapet.nJdarfTues in December last at the
south
auganyika built a station
whieh he named Albertville and another
some distance up the WeSt coast called
Bauboinville. These stations are new een-
tres on Lake Tanganyika, from which ex-
peditions a:e to be sent club against the
slave raiders when news of their exploits is
received. The latest news from Tampa-
yiko., reported that the Arabs were collect.,
ing to put an end to the watfare on their
trade, and that unlese re-inforcements
came soou to the white force, weich for e.
year has been engaged in the seppressioe
of slave raiding, there Was likelihood of
grave disaster. The third anteslave trade
expedition that has been sent to Tangari-
ylika within a little more than a year was
despatched up the Congo in June last, tis
composed of 10e soldiers and 103 porters.
It is hoped that it reached Tanganyika
in time to rescue the atations there front
disaster,
Prince Henri de Croy, who is in command
at the district of Liduaburg in the Congo
Free State, reports that he has had a, battle
with the slave dealers. Otte day ho heard
that, a petty of 1,200 men, who bad come
from lithe, far south of his station, for the
purpose of cetching sla,ves, had encamped
withie about fifteen miles of Lulnaburg.
They had 300 slaves in chains, The Prince
decided, although he had only forty soldiers
available tor a march againet the raiders, to
make an effort to release the slaves. Ile
trusted to the superiority of his weapons.
The ahlAre raiders were led by Antonia Al.
vaz, a renegade Portuguese. De Croy oedema
ored to surprise the party by a. night at-
tack. He arrived near their camp at 4
o'eloek in the morning. He was not able,
with his small force, to surround the large
camp. Unfortunately, in spite of all his
precautions, the slave raiders became aware
Of the proximity of enemies, and ten min,
utes aufliced to place them on the defensive.
The little force of the Congo State, how-
ever, did not hesitate to attack the aver -
whelming numbers of the Bib° slavers. The
fight was very warm for forty minutes, and
at the end of that time the people of Bihe
were put, to flight. They abandoned all of
their slaves and a quantity of powder and
flintlock guns. The slaves were taken to
the station. The Prince says that no words
can give an idea of the terrible condition in
which he found the unfortunates.
A Remarkable Mineral.
Lithomarbon, width is a mineral ammo'
whet resembling asphalt, is the moat re-
markable mineral of its °lase known. It is
claimed, that it makes a perfect insulator
that as a paint it will resist heat or gases of
any kind ; that it is capable of being renal
into a tissue free from odor, and practically
indestructible when employed in the pro-
duction of znaokintosheo, canvas belting,
water -proof tents, etc. It possesses peoul-
iar powers, enabling it to enter and fill the
pores of iron and steel, rendering those
nietals impervious to acids, etc. It is also
said to make common leather waterproof,
and it can be applied to wood -pulp for the
transformation of that material into -what
looks and acts like ebony or horn. The
saturation of a ship's plates with hot litho.
carbon frustrates the attack of barnacles,
and the plate will neither mat nor foul. A
portion of the smoke stack of the steamer
Dean Richmond, where the heal, through
the use of a blower, rises to SOO degrees
Fahrenheit, was painted with litho -carbon
several months ago, and remaiued un-
disturbed and unblistered, while other parts
of the vessel have necessarily been peinted
many times. A piece of sheet -iron covered
with teitho-carbon japan le stated to have
been subjected to an actual hetet of 415 de-
grees Fahrenheit, without crack or blieter,
and remained so tenacious that the iron
could be bent at any angle without disturb-
ing the glossy surface. For varnishing
railway and private carriages, painting iron
bridges, roofs, steamships, houses, etc., tbie
material acts as an insulator, and it is
reported that it will neither crack nor blis-
ter under any known atmespheric tempera-
ture. At great heat litho -carbon will
soften, but it will not take fire at -any point.
If all that we hear of this mineral be true,
it will form one of the most widely useful
substances of ite class known.—[Iron.
A'.13it of News.
Willie Sissybud—Ah, there 1 that you,
,Censsie, old ?
Gustavus Lillypad—Ah, Willie, inc boy,
how goes it?
• Willie—First class, Gussie, boy; heard
the news, eh?
"New?" •
"About the newest thing in collahs ?"
" Naw ?"
" Weally, old fel?"
"1 Why; all the chappies at the club are
wild over it."
" New 1—well, let's have it."
" Why, deah boy; banged if they don't
say collahe are to be quittah of an inch
higher than evah before l'
"Naw r •
Yes, indeedy."
"Nam 2» ,
" W.eally and twuly."
" Pou Iona, old chappie."
I I
" Naw?"
" So long, old fel ?"
" By, by, deah boy."
A telegram from Flers, France, reports
the killing of another somalled " tamer eof
wild animals. The victim, a woman, goiug
by the professional name of Madame Marc,
entered a cage containing two beam, with
the intention of working the creatures
through a performanee which they heel been
taught. As she entered the cage she slip-
ped and fell, and the animals, seeieg their
opportunity of triumph, pounced upon her
and inflicted mortal wounds. The women's
husband, in endeavouring to rescue her,
was severely lacerated. He was saved by
the menagerie attendants after they had
killed one of the bears.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Casterici
. Asisimmoni 0111111111111. 10 s El
Adventure With 'a Whitechapal Becro.ar.
,if had an adventure in tondor'nlast
spring of a very unpleasant nature," said
the Rev. Theodore Swain, a Memphis
minister, now a guest of the Laclede Meuse.
eI was waudering about the city sight-
seeing one day, and finally found myself
near the notorioue Whitechapel district. I
was Approached by u beggar who appeared
to be a complete physical wreck. I ques-
tioned him, and las story was so pitiful
that I concluded to investigate it. He said
that he lodged in the next block, and
thither we went. He led me into a gloomy
old building and up three pairs ot rickety
stairs to a little stuffy room, lit only by a
dirty skylignt. Once in there he locked
the doer. ISM article his crutches, pulled a
his gray wig and stood up, a powerful" six-
footer in the prime of life. 'Well,' said I,
see that you are a fraud! what do you
want with me?' He replied that he wanted
ray puree, watch and chain, and to enforce
Itis claim produced an ugly -looking knife.
'It will do you no good to cry out,' he said,
'for you cannot be heard in the street, and
no one iu this building will come to your
aid,' 1 had sized him up pretty close and.
concluded that he was bluffing—that he
would not dare kill me iis the very heart of
London, so I assumed a careless air and
told him that if he robbed me he would
have to kill me first, and that he might
just as well get at it. 'Oh, I know that
you have got it pistol, but I'm not afraid of
it,' he said. 'Meet Americans carry pistols
for just *inch cattle as you,' I replied, with
all the coolness I could assume. 'Now, if
you are not afraid of it, why don't you get
to work?! I saw that he was cowed, and
throwing my haled to my hip pottiret, I step-
ped forward and said firmly, 'Give me that
knife.' He handed it to me without e.
word, unlocked the door, and held it open
for me to cam out. No, I had no pistol—
never carry one—but I made no more
visits to the dem of London beggars with -
cut it burly officer at my elbow,"
M4il
In the name of all tliat is
good, why
should girls, who are dowered by nature
with a hundred charms which make them
sweet and lovable, copy rude man? Do you
find anything in life so detestable as a
womanish man, girls? Well , • then, you
know exactly our feelings with regard to
the mannish girl. And yet there are few
things we enjoy that you breve not gaehered
unto yourselves. You wear our clothes as
nearly as the police regulation will permit.
Our coals, our shirts, collars, cravats, and
gloves have been made yours ; you cut your
hair short and surmount it by a boy's hat.
Yon adept our slang, and, alaek-astlay 1
even points; many of your pretty lips are
familiar with the taste of the cigarette.
You play cards for money, bet on horses,
and talk shop at the races. I don't know
but all this -contains a certain moral lesson
for the man—if lie doesn't like the copy he
should improve the original. Nevertheless,
ho objects to the method of instruetio».
Hold to the old fashioned charms which
constitute your real power, girls, and let,
alone the feminine imitation of a bad mascu-
line model.
The Bead Surgeon
Of the Lubon Medical Company in now at
Toronto, Canada, and may be consulted
either in person or by letter on all chronic
diseeses peculiar to man. ZiXi n, young, old,
Dr middle-aged, who find themselves nerv-
ous, weak and exhausted, who are brokea
down from excess or overwork, resulting in
many of the following symptoms Mental
.depression, premature old age, loss of vital.
ity, loss of memory, bad dreams, dimness of
palpitation of the heart, emissioue
lack of energy, pain in the kindeys,
ache, pimples on the lace or body. itching
or peculiar sensation about the scrotum,
wasting of the organs, dizziness, specka
before the eyes, twitching of the muscles,
eye lids and elsewhere,bashfulness; deposit:.
in the urine, lose ree willpower, tenderness of
the scalp and spec), weak and flab bie muscles,
desire to sleep, failure to be restea ev sleep,
constipation, dullness of hoaxing, lossof voice,
desire for solitude, excitability of temper,
punken eyes surroun (led with exenxer MOLE,
oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of
;nervous debility that lead to insanity and
;death unless cured. The spring or vital
force having lost its tension every function
evanes in conseq-emce. Those who through
iebuse committee n ignorance may be per-
manently cured. Zona' your address for
,book on all digest.* lamellar to men.
Books sent free seted. Heardisease, the
symptom': of which are faintspells, purple
kips, lerisekeess,
palpitation, skip heats,
hot flushes, reehof blood to the head, dull
m in the heart with beats strong, rapid
and irregular, the scond heart beat
toter than the first, pain about the brast
ne, etc., can positively bemired. No mu%
ho pay. Send.for book. Address, M. V.
LUBOIT, 24 Itttadonell Ave. Toronto. oitt.
The self-closing door -spring is an awful
aggravation to the man who is going out of
your office mad and wants to slain the door.
PIIREST9 STRONCEST9 BEM
Coatains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime,
Phosphates, or any Injuriant.
E. W., OILLETT. Toronto. Ont.
ilEAD-IVIAKER'S
REVE3 FA11.5 f IVF SKI1FA570
FM?
$ALE BY ALL
15
•
:2-FAMiet
THE BEST OUGH NIEUICINE.
SOU Er DEMO.= NVEITWEERS.
•
••••
/ . -
‘ZeeekeeeateeteeateeeeeeVe eee-
lekes5e.fsessseeeeseeNeee‘ceeseee,ee:-'5e.
for Infants and Children.
l'Castorlaissowelladaptedtochikirentliat
recommend itassuperior to any prescription
known to me." R. A. ARDELER, M. D.,
111 So. Orford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
"The use of 'Castoria is so universal and
its merits so well kuown that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few arethe
intelligent fandltes who do not keep Castoria
within ea,syreach."
Cantos Marrs. D.D.,
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church.
Castorla extras Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
10.118 worms, gives sleep, and promotes di-
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
"For several years I have recommended
your Cestoria.,.' and shall always contra° to
do so as it has mvatiably produced. henadcial
results:,
BAWLS' P. PARDEE, U. D.,
"I1'he Nirinthrop," 125tb. Street and. 7tb.
NewYork City.
efts CsivrA.urc COURANT, 77 Dinnuror STREET', Nnw YORE.
• -;"
DACH
CURED IN 20 ?MINUTES BY
Alpha Wafers
MONEY REFUNDED. Purely Vegetable Perfectly lia,rmlesq
and Pleasant to Take. ForSale by all Druggists. PRICE 25 Cts
MoCOLL BROS. 8c COMPANY
TOZIONTO.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following
specialties :
LardineWool.
Cylmder CHLS Bolt Cutting
Red Zazglase Zure)za.
TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL
AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER.
For Sale By BISSETT BROS. Exeter, Ont.
LIIGTroc TaLausco. OX owl•TEIIIER. ELECTRICITY WILL CURE VoU ANO niCP YOU N HEALTH.
FREE MEDICAL TREATMENT. PRIcE or eiLTS. CO. so. 1110. Cm oivE WRITT MERCURE. 1•31014'
FULL RARTIGUIARS. JUDO ELECTRIC GO., LI WELLINGTON CTREET EAST TORONTO. CANADA,
241.
•••=••••0011.01
EXETER LUMBER YARD
The undersigned wishes to inform, ths Public in gentral that h
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING MATERIAL
Dresaed or 1722,drez:ed.
PINE AND HEMLOCK LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY
900,000 XX and XXX Pine and Oed.ar Shingles now in
stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guaranted.
JAU1ES
,s4?'
Dr. LallOE'S COTTON ROOT PILLSe
Safe and absolutely pure. Most powerful Fernale Regulator
known. The only safe, sure and reliable pill tor sale. Ladies
ask oruggists for LaBoe's Star and Crescent Brand. Tak e no
otherkind. Beware of cheap imitatione. as they are danger-
ous. Sold by all reliable drag ists. Postpaid on receipt of price.
AIVIERICAN PILL CO., Detroit, Mich..
co's tifN. 4, ,b.Z>.
•
0,
•ks" 6 e.e' e Net
eft• esc,
c.;doC%. k i3s)
ae•v" -0. 0
c•`'
0
-.0 N. • q •
'\* It
•>:• tc'
ce. t-
'‘ Vc' 6.t•
,staee' ,t750 ef*
sp'‘ ,co • e.:S'A "04) 0}. ve0
be6s ;c‘
. s‘P
\c,90 -4° '‘'"* °
,c?0
0.4, '14 0 • N't
..3,
•inc.e•
0. * e
,00
-se>
de,
• ;i
\t
45
4.-e 0 ,,)
4,1, 0),
Or •
,
.4 • 4
r.e
.cerK4 la
A4,,,,v." 0 V-", 4,n1
A .%) 4iPN 4P ge,
`e`e . 'Nei eet
Manufactured only by Tb.rnas lEfolloway, 78, Yew Oxford Street, )
tato 683, Oxford Street, London.
sr Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots
)
If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, Loudon, they are spurious.
APPLWATIONS THOROUGHLY REMOVES
DANDRUFF
110
•-oa•
L. OATEN.
Toronto, Tnxvelling Passenger Agont, eP Et„
Ws: Anti-llondrudis sperfootronsovor otDa.n.
drue-it4 notion is marrellous—in my own cni,so
a Pow orpliontions not Way th9r. *nerdy removed
oxressiro &antra aonumuln. Zan I00 stoppod
GUARANTEED 1,11Itg!!',111gura.---aPliabWaad
Restores Fading hr to its
original coke.
Stops falling of hail'.
Keeps the Seale elean,
Makes hair soft and Habig
Promotes Grereth. ,