The Exeter Advocate, 1894-4-26, Page 6A HAPPY IIfANL.
Als life looks very bright to mos
Slime have hoard her say,
With
ll1 becoming
y,Se'maly, mSmd �
2I
will give up smoking f
Xt X willo to church;
If I will out the olub and leas,.
Mairot,ah
If
My
rower obey out
But hasteu home at eine;
If I will let her have her ways
She's promised to be mine
If I will move to Brooklyn;
And never touch a oard;.
Xi I will buckle down to works
And labor long and hard.
To buy her stylish bonnets,
And gowns and lots or glover l
Then 1 may "be that happy man,
The luoky man she loves l
If I'll be always pleasant,
And never, never scold;
And never make her nuns mo,
And not grow Dross, and old;
And always stay good-looking--
She oau't stand ugly men—
If I Dome up to her ideal,
Why, we'll be married, then 1
That's why I am so happy,
And why I often seem
Unconscious and abetreoted-
I'm living in a dream!
She is so sweet and pretty,
And so unselfish, too i
I wonder how I won her leve—
I can't believe it's true I
NO BABY IN THE HOUSE.
No baby in the house, I know;
'Tia far too nice and clean A
No tops by careless fingers thrown
Upon the floor are seen ;
No finger masks are on the paned,
No scratches on the chairs ;
No wooden men net up in rows
Or marshalled off in pairs ;
No little stockings to be darned,
All ragged at the ton ;
No pile of mending to be done,
Made up of baby clothes ;
No little troubles to be soothed,
No little hands to fold;
No grimy fingers to be washed,
No stories to be told ;
No tender kisses to be given,
No nicknames—Love and than ;
No merry frolics after tea;
No baby in the house..
A DOLLAR OR TWO.
With cautious step, as we tread our way
through
This intricate world as other folks do,
May we still on our journey be able to view
The benevolent face of a dollar or two;
For an excellent thing is a dollar or two;
No friend is so true as a dollar or two;
Through country and town, as we pass up
and down,
No passport's so good as a dollar or two.
Would you read yourself out of the bach-
elor crew,
And the hand of a female divinity sue Y
You must always be ready the handsome
to do,
Although it should cost you a dollar or two.
Love's arrows are tipped with a dollar
er two,
And affection is gained by a dollar or
two;
The best aid you can meet in advanoing
your auit
Is the eloquent chink of a dollar or two.
Would you wish your exiatenee with faith
to imbue,
And enroll. in the ranks of the sanotitied
fewY
4o enjoy a good name and a well-oushion-
ed pew,
You must freely come down with a dollar
or two.
The gospel is preached for a dollar or
two,
And salvation is claimed for a dollar
or two;
You may sin some at times, but the worst
of all crimes
Is to find yourself short of a dollar or
two.
BE LOVED A CROSS-EYED GIRL.
!Twee jest this way : I saw one day a chip-
per, erose -eyed girl.
Han'aome Y I guess I 'Twan't nuthtn' less
than set my head ;whirl I
X ain't so nice, nor so enrolee that I can't
beauty see
pa things thatyou might likely view quite
different from me.
X e'poae, now, w'en you city man get out o'
doors ter gaze,
Xf a sunbeam shad kinder seem cries-oroas
er in a haze,
Er if a breeze among the trees thud turn
leaves wrong side out,
Er blow the grass all in a mass, you'd think
natur' about
Ez quick an' wild ez some ap'ilt child that's
bound ter squirm an' laugh
3P.'en someone tries ter hold its] eyes fer
gib a fotygraph i
That is ter say, Vile you folks may want
everything to look
asst ez it would—jest ez it could—ef it wuz
in a book,
Blain ones like me jest like ter Ree odd
things mixed with the straight;
An' w'at some folks think fit fer jokes quite
often fits my trait.
phis orosa-eyed girl wuz jeab a pearl, of I
know w'ab I say,
Her name
more n Jane,
summer days t she a'n't plain,
Her shape wuz trim—not fat, nor slim ;,her
cheeks war like a rose ;
An' how her eyes cud tantalize 1 'Cause
they war crossed, I s'pose.
One huskin' bee she went with mo, and all
the way I planned
!per gib a chance, after the dance, to make
my mania' clear.
X wuz in love ; but though I etruv my
feelin's grew more queer ;
Wen we sot down t busk Bill. Brown kept
eyein' Jane, but she,
lrhough quite demure, I wuz quite sure,
kep' lookin' straight at me
With essoli ared smile
e a z'd make a mile seem
like a
Ef you cud gib one jest ez fit by wadin'
through the snow.
After the donee I got a chance 1' make my
fancy known,
But 'twan't at me she looked, .you see. Nes'
day she married Brown I
Waldron in Judge.
BACKGROUNDS.
fibs sat before an easel, with her head tipp-
ed lightly—so,
r3/4 paint brush in her fingers idly trailing to
and fro.
X stood quite close beside her,witie a wildly
beating heart,
And praised with reckless ardor her pro-
fioieney in art.
bw sweet she was, and dainty 1 Now I
loved her 1 1 declare
If seehmedd ttoo mal no other girl could be one -
21.e. she sat there, leaning forward in the
gracefulesb of poses,
And deftly put the background in a plaque
of yellow roses.
Ah, that was many years ago. Dear girl, 1
love her stili.
Z love her smiles and dimples, and admire
the wondrous skill
PI her dainty, snowy fingers. I've been.
watching them to -night
MDTo to and fro above the work she's hold-
ing to the light,
'And, thinking of that other day, X doze a
bit, perchance,
Air, she deftly puts a background in Jim-
mie's other " pants:'
ala Itnpe;is11,11ity.
Tom--Didou hear that Slip] had a
fit of d i x this mornieg 9.
e ilioNo, Where ? g.
Tana- In GIOse'e tailor sleep.
Dick—I. Tont believe it, 'A' Man
couldn't hitve it fit there,' el any )find..
1Soseleaf.
t The pickerel had h large 'ittoitth:, but
tee!: latege enough to sea'allOW salve of the
etoi`ies :that etre tgld about eine
to eeeilltee action -Making ehatlge.
', wheel of iortuLie—The Ferrell Wheel.
It's hay, hist' 1 tweet time, •
-
AMATEUR PAPERING
Row to Choose Suitable Paper
and Hang it
TO SECURE ARTISTIC EFFECTS.'
Situs ct 111 esign-Combiixing Colors --Oust
and Neatness—t1ow.to drake the Y'aste—
Applying Friezes.
Wali papers form a large element in
artistic furnishings To such an extent.
is this true that the most exquisitely
furnished house whose walls are badly
hung, or not hung at all, or otherwise
deeorated,ted,will producepoora
end
bare
effect.
Not only can any taste be suited, but
if one will go to a large paper house to
make selections it is almost impossible
to choose a paper that is not artistic
in design and effect. Of course the
judgment of the purchaser must prevent
him from hanging a paper suitable only
fora bedroom in his parlor of dining -
room, and vice versa. One of the spec-
ial features of the newest papers is the
SIZE OF Tele. DESIGN,
Some . of them being six feet in length.
There are Louis XVI. effects, Marie. An-
toinette and Pompadour wreaths and
scrollsGothic
and Venetian, French and G s h
designs. As to color, sage green, old
pink, indigo blue and Boston yellow pre-
dominate, many of the patterns being
enriched with mica.
A favorite design is a Grecian honey-
suckle, utilized in the form of a scroll
stencilled on a ground of dull, old pink.
Another shows a beautiful Louis XVI.
pattern in silver mica on an old green
ground. A colonial wreath in dark
brown on a light tan ground is exgtii-'
site, and the same plan with the Loses
of the wreaths in reds and pinks out-
lined with gold. on an old green ground
is extremely rich.
Three beautiful
COMBINATIONS OF COLOR.
Are deep old red and cream, dark tan
and cream, and old green and deep old
red. This also is in a colonial pattern
of wreaths. Friezes for these papers re-
present cupids, in dark brown on tan
grounds or in old red on lustrine
grounds, holding the harps and garlands.
There are also Dresden china designs
with flowers and buds strewn over var-
iously colored mica grounds or over dull
grounds resembling the surface of china.
Nosegays of flowers printed in the colors
of nature on tan or Boston yellow
grounds are charming. The floral
sprays, on French gray grounds with rus-
tic effects in white scrolls, in self -tones.
of blue with similar scrolls for the Gre-
cian, paper -honeysuckle s`tencillings on
terra cotta, deep ecru, old green and
drab grounds, are suitable for bedrooms.
NOT COSTLY PAPERS.
Nor are all of these necessarily expen-
sive papers only, for while it is true
that wall papers are every year increas-
ing in delicacy of coloring and beauty
of design, it is as true, and to many of
us a more interesting fact, that they
are also becoming less and less expen-
sive. Manufacturers employ the same
skilled artists to design motives for the
paper at 10 cents a roll that they do for
that at many dollars a rolls
When ten rolls of paper are sufficient
to cover the walls of an ordinary -sized
room and when they can be purchased
for one dollar, no one need be without
daintily furnished walls, especially if
they will learn how to hang the paper
themselves. One of the
FRESHEST AND NEATEST
rooms I know was 'lately papered by a
home artisan. ,.The side walls show pop-
pies in dull red on a cream ground, the
leaves of faint olives. The flowers have
long, graceful stems, and droop as if
wind -tossed. The freeze is of cartridge
paper in faint old pink, and is separated
from the side wall by a picture rail of
pine -stained oak before it was put up.
Cheap papers rarely have friezes to
match, although I have seen them of
most beautiful designs matching paper
at ten cents a roll.
Another bedroom has the woodwork in
cream, a dado of cretonne showing yel-
low roses on a light cream ground, a side
wall covered with pale bine cartridge
paper and a frieze of pale cream with
huge conventionalized roses in deep yel-
low. The ceiling paper is pale yellow
and white. .The curtains and bedspread
are of cretonne and the furniture is cov-
ered with the same, while the floor has
a carpet in soft tones of blue, showing
no particular design but an interming-
ling of the shades in scrolls that is
VERY PLEASING.
A" friend has just hung her nursery
with a tan paper showing wreaths of
tiny flowers in soft yellows, browns and
olives, falling perpendicularly down the
breadths of the paper with here and
there the cutest little kitten tangling
itself in the flowers. The frieze is
twenty inches deep and has almost life-
size Kate Greenaway figures, while the
°ailing has a cloudy, gray ground full
of tiny gold stars. All of this, except
the ceiling paper, was put up by one
small woman with the aid of her one
servant, for one person alone can hardly
manage the long breadths.
If you will carefully follow the rules
given 'below you will have no trouble,
in hanging a new paper. I
SPEAK FROM EXPERIENCE..
In the first place; if there is an old paper
to be removed, wet it thoroughly with
a large sponge tied to a stick and dip-
ped in warm water ; after allowing it
to soak, scrape off with a broad -bladed
knife such portions as you cannot pnlll,
off. Meanwhile prepare the " sizing."
Soak: half aapound of Nos i glue in cold
water for an hour, then set it over the
fire and pour over boiling water until
you have a mixture of thin consistency.
If it sticks and scales off when pressed
between thumb and finger, • it is too
stiff and more water must be added.
This quantity is sufficient for a room
15 x 15, containing two doors and two
windows. Use an old, clean whitewash
brush to apply i*y with. Cheap workmen
frequently fail to apply, this sizing, and
consequently the walls which are porous
absorb the paste and the paper lemmas.
If the wall has not been papered, but
is whitewashed, wash it first with equal
Tarts 01 vinegar and water, or the "siz-
ing"
iz-ing" will not stick.
NEXT MAKE THE EASTE.
One pound (11 wheat flour and a quarter
of a pound of powdered alum wet with
cold watet and boiling water added un-
til It is of the right thickneos will hang
fro. m110slew to 12 rolls of paper. Seep it
ire (a small kerosene -oil
stove in the room will answer), ati it
must be applied warms.
Few }muses own a table long enough
on which to work, but paper., hangers
improvise one by' placing boards across
WO empty barrels. Cut the first length
of paper, and apply the paste smoothly,
and evenly, using a Immo painter e
brueh; fold the two ends over Until they
tweet in the middle, leaving the pasta in
gide, and with a long. thin, sharp ,pair
of scissors trim off the selvedge edges
if thesehave been made to exactly meet,
you will have no trouble. Do not trust
to a chair or a foot -stool: but mount a
steady step -ladder ; loosen one end of
the paper, and, holding it. right aisle
toward you, fasten the top to the wall,
being very careful to
START STRAIGHT
with the first piece when you will have
no trouble afterwards. With ,a new
whitewash brush take long, even strokes,
brushing the paper smoothly to the wall.
If it wrinkles raise the two lower cor-
ners as far as the wrinkle, and try again.
In fitting the next breadth be sureto
havethe figures match and if this neoes-
sitetee, as it almostsurely will, the cut-
ting away of some of the paper these
pieces may come in for use over the tops
of doors and windows.
11 will be difficult at first to put on a,.
wide frieze, unless you cut it in such
lengths as you can manage and join it
neatly. A handsome frieze, while it adds
greatly to the appearance of a room,
adds considerable also to the expense..
A plain cartridge paper of a color har-
enonizing with the side wall, cut in two,
giving a fifteen -inch frieze has a very
rich effect and makes the
CHEAPEST KIND OF FRIEZE
Where one cannot afford to repaper
often, a cartridge paper is to be recom-
mended, as one does not so easily tire of
it as of the pattern papers which weary
you oftentimes with their endless repeti
tion. A parlor in a most tasteful New
York house has the walls covered with a
soft, greenish -gray cartridge paper with
a frieze in pale old rose showing a scroll
design in deeper tints of the same color..
The dining room adjoining has a . rich
warm terra-cotta paper with a frieze in
creams and gold.
-Another house has the big bay -window-
ed parlor, which has only a western ex-
posure, papered in warm terra-cotta
with a frieze showing conventionalized
'tropical -leaved plants in deep ol?,d red
on a rich cream ground. The small re-
ception room is papered en a sunny tan,
with the frieze in shades of cream and
brown on a light tan ground.
It has become somewhat the fashion to
sigh for the " good old times," but I
think some of us who can, remember the
" best rooms " of long ago can hardly
be honest if we wish to recall them for
anything besides the, dear old associa-
tions.
APRIL PROVERBS.
A cold April the barn will till.
Snow in April is manure.
April snow breeds grass.
April ooid and wet fills barn and barrel.
A cold and moist April fills the cellar,
and fattens the cow.
A dry April not the farmer's will ; rain
in April is what be wills.
When April blows his horn,
'Ti. good for hay and eorn.
April borrows three days from March, and
they are ill.
Whatever March doer not want, April
brings along.
When April makes much noise we will
have plenty of rye and hay.
Thunder storms in April Is the end of
hoar frost.
Atter to wet April follows a dry June.
When on the 24th rye has grown so high
es to hide a Grow a good harvest :may be
expected.
Argil and May are the keys of the year.
Wide awake people
buy Wide Awake Soap
because it is the best
and cheapest they can
get. Try it.
THE DIFFERENCE.
" Marriage," remarked the professor,
" was a rite practiced by the ancients
" And bachelorhood," interrupted a
maiden of 40, " is a wrong practiced
by the moderns."—Harper'w Bazar.
Wide Awake Soap is a
mammoth bar of pure
soap. Try it.
AND SHE BELIEVED HiM.
Angelica—That was a lovely engage-
ment ring you gave me last night, dear ;
but what do those initials '" E. C.'"
mean' on the inside 7
Edwin—Why—er—that is—don't you
know that's the new way of stamping
18 carats ?—Judge.
Niflard's Liniment Cares Diphtheria.
. A NEW METHOD OF TORTURE.
A new musical instrument is the out-
come of many years of hard thinking by
a Swedish electrician and musician.
There is;,a frame and on it are hung a
score of tuned bell., a eerie' of steel bare
struck by metallic hammers, a Tow of
steel strings of necessary tension', a xylo-
phone and a fraudulent bagpipe, made
out of a bar of steel, and an: electric
current.
1 say, Tom, my wife
got a bar of Wide Awake
Soap last week; • she
says it is the best she
ever used for washing.
1 tried it in my bath on
Saturday night and 1 tell
you it beats them all for
a toilet soap. You just
try it.
TEA GOWNS Oil' THE TIME.
Matinees of linen lawn and dotted Swiss
are puffed, ruffled and edged• with pleat -
Inge of Valenolennee.
The dotted lawns and serpentine areper
are finished with yards and yards of Igoe
or Swles needlework.
" You—you will not do anything raiae
Mr: Harkalong, will y'ou 7" exclaimed the:
young woman in a trembling voice:, The
rejected lover, pale but resolute, rose
illowly ter his feet "Henrietta Plun-
kett!" he answered through his Net
teeth: " 1 will 1 Jut as surely as you
stand there, proud, heartless beauty that
you are, I shall be in the South Sea Di -
lands six months from now, the, happy,
hnsbttlzd of fourteen wive'!"
" When we first came here," said a
Dakota man to hisisitor from the east,
"our nearest neighbor was twelve miles
away." " The land euz I" tried she.
" Who'd ye border from ?"
Young Tuttcr—'that's a eplendid big
dog you have, Miss ,I.'inkerly. Is lie
affectionate ? Miss Pinkerly-'Oh, Tay.
Come hero, hover, and shot. Mr. Totter
hew 10 kiss iAs!
eA'reettod D4 silel[i`LINIENTli.
Dulytet Sown by the Blriri to Their Prete'
Notebooks.
Certain society girls, says the New
York Times, have carried with them Con-
stantly this season pretty little. ivory -
covered notebooks with gold pencils at -
tubed by means of fine gold chains; At
any of the faeliiOnable gatherings of the
winter they would be, occasionally dis-
covered in all ports of out-of-the-way
places hurriedly jotting down items that
excited much curiosity as to their natures
Such secrecy was observed, however, that
only recently have the true facts, leaked
out. Each book contains 865 ages—
one for every day in the year—and under
the proper date is neatly recorded every
complimentary speeech from the opposite
sex received by the owner. If the girls
compare notes they will undoudtedly
discover many duplicates, and many gale
lents will be at a loss to account for a
pudden coolness on the part of some of
their lady friends„
AMUSING BIT OP EULOGY. •
A Welsh paper, the Soren Cymru, has
been composing an eulogy upon Mr.
Gladstone which is noteworthy as an in-
stance of what Mill might have called
" unueeessary truth." After stating
that "the rouge of his reading was
wider than Spurgeon's (which no one
Will be inclined to dispute), the "Cym-
ric " enthusiast proceeds to the follow-
ing remarkable piece of frankness
"-As an orator ho has been to England
what drunkenness was to Athens." Does
the writer mean, asks the Pall Mall
Gazette, that the ex -Premier has been
intoxicating everyone else, as wellas'
himself, with the exuberance of his own
verbosity ? Or should we, for " drunken-
ness," read "Demosthenes"?" Printers
have ere now tripped up writers and
plunged .them against their will into
truth.
MODEST REQUEST.
There are some disadvantages which
attach themselves to persons who have
become famous. These, however, often
have their ludicrous side.
It is said that at one 'time Henry Clay
was travelling in the west, and stopped
over night in a little log cabin 'inhabi-
ted by an old man and his wife. 'After
breakfast the next morning his old host,
who had been in a flutter of excitement
ever since he learned who his ninon
guiahed guest was, said he would like to
make one slight request before the visi-
tor departed.
" Couldn't ye,"' 'he' said, with evident
anxiety, " couldn't ye jest make my wife
an' me a little speech before leavin' no 7"
Farina.
A young woman noted for her delicate
farina moulds gives this receipt : To one
quart of milk add four tablespoonfuls of
farina and a pinch of sugar. Boil in
a double boiler until slightly thickened,
and immediately upon taking from the
stove stir in the stiffly -beaten whites of
three eggs, after which mould.
Wide Awake Soap is a
solid bar of pure soap
that will not vanish like
snow in hot water.
Try it.
THIMBLE FINGER SORENESS.
Persons who sew & great deal often suf-
fer from soreness in the thimble finger.
Silver or ,plated thimbles are . the best,
and next to these a highly burnished
steel thimble should be used. Swelling
of the finger and very serious inflamma-
tion are often caused by cheap thimble..
llinard's Liniment Cares Gaetrglin Cows.
INTERFERED WITH THEIR COMFORT.
A seaman was fined at Birmingham,.
England, for interfering with the com-
fort of railway passengers. He stepped
out of an express train while it was
travelling fifty miles an hour and wan-
dered along 'the 'footboard. One lady,
who stopped the train, was greatly
alarmed at seeing hi. face appear before
the window of her carriage.
linard's Liniment Cares Distemper.
Thoughteo—Smith is quite an ardent
fisherman, isn't he ? Nuso—Well—yes ;
he always taken some of the ardent with
him.
THIS COUPON WITH
Your name, address and thirty cents en-
closed to ns will secure a box of Dr.
Howard's Electric Pills by return mail.
This offer is openbut a short time to
introduce the Electric Pills at lees than
wholesale cost to you. These pills are
the best and only perfect Blood Builder
and Nerve Restorer. They cure all
weakness, restore men and regulate,
women, develop children. Regular price,
50c. Dr. Howard Medicine Compaq,*
Brockville, Ont.
Mamie—I believe in woman's rights.
Gertie-Then you think every woman
should have a vote ? Mamie—No; but
1 think every woman should have a voter.
If you ere interested In church windows,
or art glass for dwellings of the plainest
or moat elaborate oharaoter., lb will cer-
tainly repay yon to communicate with Mo-
Causland & Son, 78 ging St. West, Tor-
onto.
World's Fair judges reported se follow. :
The specimens of memorial stained glass
windows, and art glass for doors and win-
dows of dwellings, exhibited by Jos. Mo-
Causland & Son, are of the highest order,
of merit and pones■ strikingly olever and
original features.
Seven hundred live larks 'constituted
the queer present lately sent by the
Sing of Italy to 'the German Emperors
linard's Liniment Cares Colds, etc.
Powerful air -brakes are how being
constructed foreuseen freight trains of
100 care; -
Beggar (who hue just received a nickel)
—Thanks, kind sir. I'll do my best for
you. Mr. Bountiful—What can yon do
for me 1 Beggar—I'll recommend you
to my friends:
At a juvenile ball—He eetvitli nascent
down on upper lip)—Ha've you often
wished you were a man 7 She (sweet
(sixteen)—Ah ! yes—and ;on 7•
"I must say our union men work like
lightning,"
said the jocose general man-
ager. How is. that 1" asked the pro-
prieter. ",They, rarer strike twice lit
Wee. Suoeny, who died at Catasauslaa,
Pa., the oilier day's at the age of 107
years, had used tobacco since he was a
boy, but bad abstained from 'liquor and
from tea and coffee:
Luxury has been defined as something
that someofie glee always poasesse11.
Delia—'dee ; and while: tee were abroad
we visited what they called a gambling
heli. Celia --Did you,? Tell me what it
is like? Delisa I Illiought it ;true just
beavenly,
For Horses and Cattle
Use Die k'snBl�ood PPurifier
, Moutreal.
eseaseessasesesseeseeessosesesseeseepeasimeasaismaes
EL"0 T1UOAL NAIli ULEAISINaI.
The Shade 0Sthe Ireas es Can Se Accurately
Regulated.
Noting the novel uses to which elec-
tricity has recently been applied, the
Electric Review says : Another enter-
prising .individual, this time as dyer of
human hair, has projected the following
method ; advicep, however, do not state
that Ise has been entirely successful:
The process le ingenious, and for this
reason alone it is worthy .of mentions
The subject, who is generally of the
weaker, and shall we add ` vainer,
sex, seats herself in the operat-
ing chair which it somewhat similar to a
dentist's chair, and rests the back of her
neck on a metal plate, which is the nega-
tive . terminal of a rather strong battery,
the current from which, is sufficient to
exert a moderate decomposing action on
isolations of salts containing a bleach-
ing agent such as ehiorine, The waving
tresses are allowed to fall back of the
chair, and are dampened with a solution
of what the inventor terms his secret;
A brush composed of metallic bristles,
whit h have been gildedor platinised
and which are electrically connected to,
the source of current, thus forming the
positive pole of the battery, is slowly
;and steadily drawn through the hairs A
slight decomposition of the salt hold in
solutiontakes place, the bleaching agent
is liberated and the coloring matter in
the hair is lightened: The discoverer de-
clares that the color given to the darkest
hair may be varied at pleasure, and
may also be carefully regulated ; further-
more, he states that the color does not
resemble that of ordinary " bleached "
hair, but is more natural and in every
way able to deceive the moat expert in
such matters. While the idea is one
which is attractive from an experimental
ptandpoint,, the object attained, if his
statements are, true, is one which should
be pushed into obscurity, by a minimum
amount of praise:
Tho Popularity of
p Y
iiuurd's Liniment.
C. C, RICHARDS & CO.—
Ship April 1st 120 Gross Minard's
Liniment, value $2,000.00, and draw
as usual.
F. J. BARNES,
St. John's;
A DUSTLESS SKY WOULD BE BLACK.
If there wasno dust haze above us the
sky would be black. That is, we would
be looking into the blackness of a limit-
Iess space. When in fine, clear weather
we have a deep, rich bine above us it
is caused by a daze. The particles in
the hale of the heavens correspond' with
those of the tube in the koniscope, and
the bine color is caused by the light shill-
ing.through a depth tef fine hale.
Good morning, Mrs
Smith.; 1 have just fin-
ished my washing, using
Wide Awake Soap ; it is
the best soap 1 ever
used, it washed so easily,
making the clothes far
cleaner than 1 ever had
them before and it lasts
twiviceaslongas anyother
soap 1 ever used ; and
Just feel how nice and
soft my hands are.
71IAKINOE CODFISH BALLS.
Soak the fish till soft and pick into
fine shreds; have a quantity of cold
mashed potatoes or cold boiled rice.
Mix the Iish thoroughly with either, using
half the quantity of fish that you do of
potatoes or rice, and make out into little
round flat cakes. Dip( them into beaten
egg, and roll in flour, sifted meal or fine-
ly powdered cracker crumbs, and fry in
hot batter or drippings.
The lady had implied 0 doubt as to
the statement bf the dairyman. "Mad-
am,"
Mad-am,' he said, indignantly, " my, reputa-
tion rests upon my butter." " Well," she
replied, testily, " yon needn't get ugly
about it. The foundation i* strong
enough to keep it up forever,"
Chambray and mull tea gowns are quite
u lovely as those of silk. Pink, blue and
heliotrope mull. are made with double ruf-
fles embroidered in blank, which are very
effective.
TAKE
ISSUE NO 17 1894
1#OT'X
replying, to is of t . ti Otgotifl'i1Ia
melte, please mention shit Lgriter.
up.wo...rwa-�e..m�wwuu.+vwww.ww.�ua.wiryM,W,wm'yrM!1?cw,p a
Scofuia
is Disease Germs living 1
time Blood. and feeding upmot
its Life. Overcome Mesa
;germs with
A
ties
1
the Cream of Cod-IF1'er Otis
and make your blood Tr altk
skin pure and system.strorfg.
Physicians, the world over,,.
endorse it.
Don't be deceived by Subs] *c
kott k Doane. Etaltoviita.111i Drnggiats. m,. Mkt..
® '
.� Bd,d'; &28Sy th, �!~e®t
?t�•' farsalob rsrrEa1try
aarataassaswouoranaginstusau.s. 1c DULIITfr RLrrlCtsi0
COHBANT in Minnesota. Bend for hLipe and Gressel
tars. They will be sunt to you
;14".' �' m
Address HHOPEWi LL CLAR E,
Land Comminioner, Bt. Pani: nsisui
ORT ERN PACIFIC
CTS is
JEL. and
FREEGOBERNMEN
ACRES in Minnesota,
T a, L A
North Dakota, Mon-
tana.Idaho, Washington. and Oregon. PULiana
TIONS, with Maps, deaoribtngfne farms,
hop, grazing and timber lands Mailed 1
P. B. GROAT.General En.lzration• Agent
N. N. IL It, tit. Pmol, btLea:,
FARM FOR SALE
11The "neat and best sit, aced farm rix biwfs
Township of Sombre, and County of Lambtena
Oh the.banks of the Sydenham River; lin acted
100 acres cleared. Pine orchard and god
buildings.
Terms easy.: Apply to
JOHN McCOY, ilaraiitois., tom';
BOTTLED ELECTRICITY for Catarrh axil
Pain, Want agts, Maynard di @e.Ciacinnaetsg
1
'ANTED, EVERY BOY AND GIRL TO
sand 100. silver for a solid gold 110*0
18v..
811. initial scarf pin. Only one to each person,.
King Supply House, Truly, Montana.
''ANTED AGENTS TO SELL wonta751
Fair admission tickets. Bestsop:mal{s,
in the world. These tickets were left on! hand.
when the Fair closed. Send 25 cents for sets:
6 and terms to agents. M. G. Darting. HS
Dearborn street, Chicago, IIl,
SILKS S Beautiful remnants for exams
triangle shapereadyoto sew. Largelipackagei
assorted colors, very pretty pieces, by mail 1.0a.
3 for 25c., 16 for $1. Handsome makasina 6
months on trial 1Oe4National Agency B Cavia.,
N. Y.
"IDEAL" SPRAYING PIMPS]
are unexcelled. Prices ri hb. Agents
wanted on unoccupied territory..
STEEL WIND -MILLS for pumping and power:.
Hundreds of delighted customers who ,Weir-
der how they did without them. Remake:
Iron Pumps, Tanks, eta.
BEE -KEEPERS' SUPPLIES—Hives, founds -
tion, polished sections, queen bees, emokera,.
etc. The best. Prices right.
Write for circulars, bee catalogue and sampler
copy "Canadian Bee Journal." Mention
this paper.
GooLw, SaerrEY 8c MUM ao.py Brantford,Gans
POSTAGE 'TARDA,
'WANTED, ALL KINDS OF CANAMAK,
T V Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, PritmoRdia
want Island British Columbia, Newfoundland
and United States Postage Stamps used before
1870. Manyo! these are valuable and I will par
prompt cash for all sent, if is good ceder:,
Stamps are more acceptable when left on ode -
nal letter or cover. Do not cut off. Ib will pay;
you to look up your old lettere. Comma
stamps now in use not wanted. Old collections
bought. W. J. Grant 137 East avenue south,
Hamilton, Onb.
NIARRv no -pleasure Or you wawamto eerge wreit6e.ayenit Ser".
atrafTadiuf
and gents et wealtai T,000' fa-
aeriptlona maned SR.EM. Catalogue of booth, moot..
Lica, rubber goods, eta., dor anent stsma .
d. W. GUNNELS. TOLSOOs
LOST
MAN HOOD,
Mayotte DenILrre, Eanons os' Ye/trete
etc., positively and permanently aureate!'
I. ane s Specific Remedy, Price, $1,00 peer,
Row, or Six for OA, fremanDruggl'akeelr
by ail. Particulars free.
LANE MEDICINE 00.. MOSTREAL. ika3Ei'
MRS. VINSLOW'S s aria'""
FOR CHILDREN TEETHING:
�„ -• Fro. saloby a It Dangyieio. 25floutoshelt e.
eresT
Wets.,
SOcts. and
111.00 Bottle.
One cent a do
7t is Bald. on a guarantee by all loan{.
gla
gists.haepethe besfCones end Doeiedent wie.
SURE CURE
Manhood Restored
Loss of Manhood, Lsnisslons
Spermatorrhoea, SI oy,
WeakMemory, Si osseeae,
Sexual Weakness and Nervous Deb tie
tively cured by Dr. DAY'S VITA TABLETS
Price,1 6 boxes lir. Address F. McCresst,
Box 701, Salt, Ont, Sole Agent for Canada.
GANANOQUE
DRY EARTH CLOSET
Endorsed by doctors and solontistis, Eel
hoimo should have one. Price 151. Maantao
tared by GAN. GEAR 004, Gfameneque. Onb,
THE WONDER QF THE AGE
AT ACTS LIKE A 05(0.0118,
Yell With 51110 e0 Fli11Of 17 dF3 * Ding,
It makes your Hands Soft Whiatee
Giver a healthy appssraree lit the eada
Eby's Eieetrle 2,a:ltve
Has no equal for curing gale Abair s
01d Sorge, perotulous jJieaor, Oars
Eye., Skin Biesases, Pimple*
chapped Maids Corny Axons,
rns
Bu, Pifer Ibroe* Mee,
"'rein Cate, Sane Nippier.
Ask your Druggist far Shyers J*lraet .
trio Salvo, Price 4!dea per Box
on't Lose,a,o
PLANT, kERILlt's SEEDS
this year., and make up ibrlost time.
Derry's geed Ann Nisafories#witt6.
give you many valuable hints
about what to rats and secs to
lir raise 11. Itconwind informa-
tion to be badiront no other
A,.
soptce: Free to [ails
D. Id. perry & i.a
WOnt�' A a,
Pisa'e Remedy for Catarrh is the
Best, Easiest to tis;, and tlieapeet.
0r
1514 br IN'ttggists or coat by'snail
Z'.1Is0lateen. Wl,treo, d'%„