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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1885-11-19, Page 4Ti E HOUSEHOLD A GL.B '[AN SUNDAY. OWE. Moth* do not eat through paper. Hot wood aches applied to a stove when it is oeld will remoee grease, Tea shored never be made in a tin t. The tannin k o oree works s n the tin and makes a Iloiaon,. Glass kept wet with camphor dissolved in spirits of turpentine may be outwith metallic tools. Ccokleg utensils, after being washed, ebonite' be rioted in clear,, water ,std. wiped Out with a Glean, dry cloth. Water that has stood in a lead pipe over night ie unfit far cooking or drinking per - poses. Let it ran for two or three minute* before beim used,. In cleaning paint obstinate spots that .will not wash oft with soap and water will often yield to a gentle rubbing with a damp cloth dipped in soda. Vinegar and yeast are kept beat in glass Tea:ele. If placed intone crocks or jugs t'lelr acid attacks the glazing, which le con. eidered, poisonous, India clabber bands slipped over the body of bottles thatare to be packed in cars for transportation m1l prevent ant breaks a and save considerable in packing materia Melee Recipes- Oeeelif .Dot:Giievrs.-.One egg, a cap and a belt of sugar, ore oup of thick 'merman; half a cup of sweet milk, a pinch of salt, twoethirds teaspoonful of soda; mix with num), dour,, flavarwlth lemon, and fry in very hot lard. Pew the Germans iu Cerausny Spend their Sabbath. A Sunday or so ago I cams around corner suddenly into the old market place and found myself in a throng of people, High in air on a rope stretched from the roof of the houses, Mademoiselle acme body or ether, "in tights," was dancing and walking, to dteplay t erself and her science. Clowns were scattered around below taking up collections and amusing tbe people with the casual entice and wretched jokes, All this to theaeoonplishmeut of a desperately noisy drum and, brassy cornet, Everybody eeenaied perfectly delighted and contented —quite fulfilling,, their " being's end . and aim. Those who :rave san ,:thing higher drink their beer in the parks, while a, band. givee selections fromSohubert, Bach,Strauss or other wothiee. 'But amidst everything ales the churches -neat not be forgotten, although amuse- ments play a more prominent part in the German's Sunday than his church. We are accustomed to speak of '" Protestant Ger- many," and so primps overt<.ok that the. body of Jews ie large, and the Raman Cath - olive more than a third of the entire popu- lation. They are the people, of the Blaine and ivaris, with of c o naso a Scattering in g throughthe r v` hro . all ince o s remainder . Talo gP is dubbed Protestant because not Jews. or Roman Catholics,u a but probably Their regard for Luther is more for hie services to liter- ature than hia struggle against. the Pope. Naturally when everybody is fn search. of amnusementall such places as operas and theatres are in full blast. Public; festivals and jubilees, toe, are relegated to. Sundays to ensure good displays. Toe great event C.ar€:.;.OWER.—Trim off the outside of the season is the illumination of the leavesaawl put into salted bofin water. castle, and thiosalways on Sunday, ThisW en Chior fare out cars€ulllyy aria ay orAmmer there have been three,ill a them � diad. Pour over It canoe n3sde thus : Stir as tteaie fat land si bt; a . ry g a any iounpse to into ewe tableepOtifula melt.d butter in are likely to get into that region. The ssatiespan, a heaping tablespoonful. of Hour, castle is ideally eitnated for an illumine - stir t r ttil the flour is well socked, then add time, Allarouud liathial3 groves of trees milk or cream, till the gravy is thin as bat- as a dark background. Far away below ter, season with pepper and Bait, and pour the Neckar tumbles along, andboats decked Cver the cauliflower; with Chineee lanterns heat poet with bands and voices chiming "Old Heidelberg," At a given signal rockets fly from the towers, audio an instant the castle stands out In a flood of adman light The whole la like =wire and like t dream it Wee a slowly away lute the darkness. From the river, there is a perfect cannonade of rockets, and from every buttress of the bridge showers a gaider, rain. Oa the opposito bank of the Neckar and up the eidea of the hill people are collected in crowde. Strangers have been attracted by the views and from the adjacent towns come exouref+'ttlat,i. Such Seiudayeare Ileidelberg'e "red letter days.,, The coins bear the motto Gott telt ons" (God with us), but with about the same nig. nifalcaance, as the "Liberty, Equality, Free tornity,' on tiro French. Tte;,Pcotestauts neem tete divided into twaprineip l.graup;f, the ortlhcdax, who abide fast by the old landmarks and interpretatieee, and those more liberal in their Awe, united only as Protestant, differing in their ritual, and eervice, and ways of thiuking. In. Heidel- berg both varieties are found, the latter vasty in the majority. In the oldest church here, and iu many throughout Ger- teeny, there is a earfone arraug-nhent by which one side is occupied by the Protest - Ante and Roman Catholics, and the parties dwell together without broils or biekcringe. The one preaching curiae of the day is et eine or ten In the morning, and then follow va i r onsminaserv' a o tau but all in curb. fore evening. to give people an opportunity of going to the theatre I As I have said, the attendance is usually sparse. Often the woman end children form almost the entire congregation ; the men gat along somehow with less attendance. The old custom of separating the men and women is still ad- hered to. If a family come, the wife take, the girlsand goes to one place, and. the Haan Tomos° PICnLE. Take a gallon ot green with the boys to another. Add to this that tomatoes and six large onions ; out them in all the peasant women spier ar with bare thin slices and stand them la salt and water heads, and it is at once seen how strange alt night,in the morning pour oft the brine an appearance a Garman congregation pre - and pit them into a preserving pan, with sent*, The minister wears a Week gown four to leepoonfuls of sugar, four of mustard not unlike a lawyer's, His sermon is of -two toaiapooafule of ground cloves, two of the average lengtb, and if I may judge by cinnamon, one of cayenne pepper and one of the specimens x have hoard, hung on a text of many verses, and containing illustrations drawn from the Franco-German war. Tho service is all according to s prayer -book ; the people stand to pray, and sit while singles. Many of the tunes are weird Bort of melodies, with a solemn ring caused by the general slow singing and by having the last two notes of a line the same. The churches are fairly like many old country churches, good, but with those straight box -like Beate intended to add a littiepeunace to the wor- ship. It is noticeable, too, that the Pro- testants have crucifixes and pictures scatter- ed around the walls ; but a liking for such things seems to be inbred in the people; all through the country by the roadside one finds terrible -looking crucifixes, enough to make the passer-by shudder. .lal.vice Pete n -E —Select the best quinces for preserving, tbe others reserve for mar- entilade. Pare, coxa, and gmlartor the guineas, or after coring, out in ringe. Aliow three- nuartere of a pound of sugar to a pound of Inuit. Boil the quinces In just water enough to cover thein till they are teuder. Drain them from this water' and put them into boiling syrup made by putting, One pint of water to two pomade of sugar. Bail five minutes and put into jars. Cam= i A S IAP.—Take items tender pul leta«, fry theirs ha the eaucepeu or roast them, When cold out then, up, Shill=awl ing a trimming then, neatly. Put the pieces in a tureen with souse all, pepper, oil, vinegar, acme sprigs of parsley, and ail out= out into aures. Mix Ali well together, cover, tied let Qui=d for some hours. Then, just before serving. drain the salad, taking care to re- move all bits of onion, ete., and Orme it tastefully en lettuce leaves, with the hearts of the lettuce on top, and cover with a lata. yonnaise dresefug.. Peen J.zl:.Y.--Tile pears must be a juicy tort, Cut the Into uarterawithout par- ing or coring. Put eight pounds in a pt with one quart of water and boil an a slow fare to a pulp, then throw them into a jelly bag, made of coarse glass cloth, and let them ret.tail all night to drain. Next morning thlueeze any renaming juice out of the bag, and to each pound of juice add half a pound oftump auger and arery little lemon juice 'to ilapor. Boil hen a quick fire till it comes to a jelly. Great care must be taken not to let this burn. It takes about two hourss to hull to a jelly, but is more eaeily done in email ities. Coarse, juicy pears are the Some New Pickles the best onrry powder. Simmer for one hour and when cool, pour into pickle jars. Cnow Cecow.—Take two heads of cabbage, Ur* beads of cauliflower, one quart of dwarf onions, two quarto of amail tomatoes, one doeen cucumbers and six roots of oelea y ; out into mall pieces and boll each kind of vegetable separately until tender, then strain and take two gallons of vinegar, quarter of a pound of mustard, quarter of a pound of mustard seed, one pot of French mustard, one ounce of cloves and two ounces of tam- eric ; put the vinegar and spices Into a pan and let them come to the boil, then mix the vegetables and pour the liquor over. TO PICKLE SMALL YELLOW TomATOEe— Let them lie in salt and water for three or four days, changing the brine if a scum rises then rinse them witholear water and let them lie for night in weak vinegar, or say half vinegar and half water. The next day prepare thus : To one peck of tomatoes allow half an ounce of whole cloves, a quar- ter of a pound of ground mustard, half an ounce of whole block pepper and six good- sized onions, cut in slices. Pat the tomatoes in a jar, putting a layer of onions and spice between the layers of tomatoes till the jars are full. Cover the whole with cold vinegar of good strength. In a week or ten. days the pickles will be ready for the table, APPLE PICKLB.—Core nix good-sized cook- ing apples and six russet apples ; slice them, but do not pare them. The cooking apples will form the soft part of the chntnee, and the slices of russet apples should look like mangoes. Put them into a pint of vinegar, add a pound of moist sugar and ounces of sultana raisins ; boil together i1 the apples are soft. Have two ounces nione ready, chopped finely, four ounces salt, two ounces eaoh of mustard and cued ginger, mixed am-othly with a little egar ; stir these ingredients into the ple, sugar and vinegar while hot; add f an ounoa of cayenne pepper, or for some ices a quarter of an ounce is . sufficient ; r the chutnee well, and then bottle when Id. The following is the reply given by one of nr prominent scholars : Toaoher—"What are metamorphic rooks?" 'Pupil— "Meta- orphic rooks are rocks pontainine meta. her," A. fashion authority states that "low- ecked dresses will be dropped at the opera his season.,, The time me is.fest ;approaching hen the opera will he no place tor respect. ble people to frequent. ,r • "I went to hea- Archdeapon Farrar lecture 'eon Dante," remarked the mueic teacher, 'and I was greatly disappointed: He talk- ed nearly two hours about -Dante, and never aald a word about his sister Ann." Pearl Desmond writes a touching poem en- titled, "A Broken Link." Well, the next time Peart goes to market she, will carry her sausages home in a basket, a- d not try to carry them by the handle or lead them with a string. A Sootcll Farmer's Wife. A correspondent of the Scottish Agricul- tural Gazette, in giving an account of hie fanning, remarks : "My wife and 1 (we have only a girl in the house) rear a dozen or so calves every year. • • For my success with thein I am greatly indebted to a care- ful wife. A distant relation of my own, and bearing my own surname, she is a jewel to her husband indeed. She brought me a Iittie money, but .she is a fortune in herself. She is well educated, can speak French fairly well, as I discovered on the honeymoon trip, and is a capital musician; but since three children have crowned our wedded blissthe sewing , machine is oftener heard than the piano She rears and sells about 100 chickens every year, besides keep- ing up herstock, and many a comfort in addition to groceries does the egg basket procure. She Pays her pigs pay an d I be- lieve her, though what with her hens and pigs the corn heap suffers. It is not, how- ever, much felt by me, and the loss is am ply repeal. She is not at all given to finery, yet I can always look upon her with pride as the most tastefully and becomingly dress- ed woman in the district. ' Then as to disposition. There never was such a thing as a jar known in our family. Forbearance and toving respecttowards old age—eon- sideration and confidence towards youth- have been the rule. In the case of my wife and I, the warmest and most devoted affeo- tion, tempered by the sincerest mutual re- spect, have influenced us, I may safely say, all our lives, Any one passing my house and seeing the roses blooming over the walls, and " Ned," the old collie dog, frisk ing about with the children :busy feeding their rabbits and pigeons in the open air,. could not fail to, be assured that hap- piness and contentment reigned within the home. "Whew I" exclaimed Crimeonbeak, aur-' prised on entering his sleeping apartment to findhis wife waiting for him the other morn- ing at 2 o'clock, "those stairs utmost take my breath away." "Well, .I wish they woman," replied his diFpleapedwife, catch- ing the odor of the club man's evening bev- erase. A `TALE OF THE, DfiA. our ordinary dietary we salt get the neoeeaary A Attached 'by Aasat heat -forming lnaterials from other eouroes, loran. Att sfas, iumpi but we . also get et tins Some time from these Overbot rd and Swims li'Race to Shore. Oiler' wines:es dieeale•dlroduci#g, impurities -The Superior Comet of New York will sooa. be called upon to 'sten to a story of the most pronounced Jules Verne order, and when the case of William Doherty against —fat pork, for instence, and otuer n• ole? ons aubetanoes s0 common on oar table. The conclusion is therefore as plain as it is Logi- cal that during the eeasong of Autumn, Lha Pacihc Mail Ste msltipColupany la call- Winter and Sp ing in these latitudes coney aahotiff will aetontah the court by a to the very best toed of Ota obese which we ed the oa P can get- tet there be less ork butter and w dertnl tale of hairbreadth' escapes sad � P ' narrow victory with life after many close chances with death. The story es told. by William Doherty in the affidavits already put on file ie that on May 5:h of last year the plaintiff, who was in Panama, finked for and was appointed to the position of assist- ant engineer cn the Paoifiu Mail Steamship Company a steamer Honduras, bound from that port for various etoppiog places down ;he Western South American coast, The crew waea mixed one of Sraniards, Maxi cans and *loll. Among the coutpany was a Portuguese known aa Ramon, who, as en poaif oiler,ioa regardetakend hiubytaeDohlfertyay,thane d hale to the hated the' newcomer as an interloper. The steamer had on'y been five days from port when Doherty says he overheard a conversation between this Ramon and a Spsniah penmen - ger, in which it was determined that the Northerner ez he 'd >r bedirket u and then thrown overboard. From that time Doherty dared not sleep in his berth at nigot lest the treaeherone Portuguese thrust the dagger into hie breast, IIs osugbt sleep as he could standing at his post, and several tines he thought he de- teeted his foea crawling upon bine in the darkuea. Ile says he wire compelled to lit- erally dodge for his life every time his enemy or eat mice came ne ar, forbad' Ramon and the psaen ger were watching When he could endure it no longer Doherty appealed to Alfred, Pardee, the chief eutfrieer, and wan greeted with a round of laughter, enol he wae advliled to jah;hp into the water if he didn't care to remain abaord sblp. Ne made such provielona ea he could to die lighting, wrote several let. ten to wife and friends, which he directed slid left aboard abip, only to learn subsea quently that they had been thrown ever - o erd, and then waited with enroll fortitude as he could aununon for the attack of the a' - aerobe, it Dame on the night of May 21, when the ship lay eight miles off the Fort of San J Se de Guatemala, and Doherty wits on the deck watch, The night was densely black anal the hooted engineer felt that the cccasien fitted for the blot cly work his footed determined upon. He soya be hearda light tread near bun as he stood watching and then came the rash cf the two niurderera, Doherty drew hie own knife .old fought with deeper- etion for bier life, but the odds were alar. mouldy against him, and when he was forc- ed to the veeael'a side he auddenly turned andplungedoverheard, to take thofeiut dick• erota ebarceby awiinuting tothe ohm. The water there Is crowded with sharks, and the faint engineer was la no condition for each a long awun. What gave him nerve and vigor was the thought of wife and babies away off in:iow York waiting and praying for hie notoria. Be'slipped out of =eh of ]iiat cloth a as hedrifted d u ed l; ` the v .eselhl side ids and thea started shorewards. AU night long he alternately braided the long awed end Hosted rusting and panting on hie bask. Daylight one ane he was still in the water, bat the shore a little over a mile away gave high encouragement, and he soon was able to stagger, half unconscious, up the gaudy beach c on1r to dropina faint above ovo hi h•water mak, Davao not until noon that he awake and looked for aid. He took em• pioythont with farmers, and when a measure of bit strength had returned struck out for a long tramp of nearly two hundred miles across the republic to a small seaport named Livingston, whence he worked his way homeward, and then when, in. March last, he reached New York It wet only to find that hie wife, relying upon the reports that he had jumped overboard, .had married again, asked for some sort of recompense from the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, but was confronted with hie own death oer. tificate as proof that he had no claim, and then, broken down in health by hie suffer- ing; uffer-ing,,.' he listened to tbe advice of friends and instituted a nuit for $30,000, claiming that when be entered the service of the company he want entitled to protection, which, when he applied to the chief engi- neer, was not given him. Honey. IlYALLIIN PRI:i0LE. Why people should freely eat honey can be put briefly in one sentence, to wit : Be- cause honey iawholeaome,palatable, and com- paratively cheap food. Thie fact in itself ought to be aufloient to insure its general use, and no doubt will when the fact is gen- orally known. en-erallyknown. O wing mainly, perhaps, to the faotthat honey yields each exquisite pleas- ure to the human palate it is for the mostpart. regarded as a more luxury, and its valuable qualities as a food and even a medicine are generally overlooked.. Now, corn meal por- ridge is a wholeaome and cheap food, but it is not sufficiently palatable to patch many mouths watering for it. There are many excellent articles of diet that are quite neg. lected simply because they do not commend themselves to our perverted taste, every- body, however, admitting their wholesome- ness. But because honey is so superlatively pleasant to all tastes—both normal and ab- normal—the hasty conclusion is forthwith reached that it is merely a luxury to please the palate. having no special value as a reg- ular article of diet. This popular concep- tion is very erroneous. and must be corrected before this rich product of nature can take De proper place on the tables of all classes of people as a common article of diet True, occasionally a person is'foun t wh oa nnot eat honey.It disagrees withe ofw.or,ae they put it " acts almost as'uoison" to them. But this fact no more proves that honey per teieearentially injuriousthanthe fact that po- tatoes "act like poison" to some people proves that potatoes are essentially unwholesome. The fault is not in the honey or potatoes but in the subject himself.' In some peculiarity of constitution or abnormal condition of the system may always be found the true cause of the diffculty., The dietetic elements .which honey con- tains are quite indispensable to first-rate health in this and more northerly climates— indeed to all outside the Torrid Zone. The carbonaceous, no less than the nitrogenous, elements of food are required by the human system in these zones ; and as we go north from the of tropicn pCancer more imperatively required than the latter. Now, as honey furnishes these indispensable, heat produc- ing elements in greater purity than almost every other article,; of. human' diet, it there- fore stands at the very head of the carbon- aceous ingesta. If, the animal heat of the system is produced and maintained by the oombuation in the blood of the oxygen of the air taken in by the lungs and certain ele- ments of the food, aa the most eminent. au- thoritiesmaintain, then itisabeolutely certain tbat for x or eight monthsof the year in this climate there is no more wholesome or necessary food than pure honey. True, in the dirty unwholesomesyrups used be the families of onr land and more rammer, and the certain result will be the greatly improved health of thepeop'e. Sfckneasand the sem. mon ailmelta of life will, be greatly dimin lobed, considering the relative wholesome - nese, purity, and nutritive properties, pure, extractoci honey at 10 to,12j eta. per pound ie Much cheaper as a regular article of diet than pork or the average "Quality of market butter at the sauce price. In nature's ntxterici medica honey has also valuable pro. perties as a curative agent. In pulmonary complaints, common colds, sore throat:, and Meat class of diseases, honey ham frequently proved moat efacacioue, hreey instances are recorded ot remarkable craws by bogey in such oases when other medicamente had utterly failed. That hooeyposeesses reatar- ative and remedial properties of an import- ant character it already well known by the beekeeping deuizene of country places;, ants their neighbors who frequently calf upon them for honey in cases of sore throats, colds, croup, etc. ; while the bee -keeper know well that every druggist in every Country town as well as in the city lay* is1 a stook every year for medicinal purposes. We may alto lay honey under tribute in. the production of one of the moot whole- some beverages in exietenee; to supersede tea and coffee on the family table. Wp give the formula and process and advise all to try it: Takethree quarts of good, clean, wheat bran and halo in the oven tik it beetinleti quite brown. Then add one quart of liquid ou k o t►la eat honey and stir thor9uglily; put it back in the oven to bake still more,air- ring it frequently until it gets dry, gnaw - fated, ante very brown-ei little scorching will not hurt it. Drew it the Seine a8 coffee and ase with milk and honey or milk and auger to suit testa, This makes a perfectly wholesome and palatable drink and the sooner it takes the piece of tea In every family the Sooner the puddle health will improve. In the writer's family this whelcaome and really palatable beverage has been on his table for yearn with the beet results ; and were a ton of tea and coffee unloaded at the door gratia we would say, "no, thank you," so far aa drinking either is coneerned. The buckwheat bouey ie preferable to the clover in nlakfug this beverage for the double reason of its brown color and more reagent taste. AMng the Eareur, when a bridegroom reaches home hie clothing is taken from him. It would stem from this that woman, even in her uncivilized atete, understands that the only p aoeful marriages are those where' the wife aiFccts the unmentionables, and she takes the earliest weal= to make. the traria for; Ji Cabal; FOR, DAM ie.FiA':s',1f,r9*--Opftinl, morphine and kindred babita. Valuable treatise sent free, The medicine may be given in tea or coffee, without the know- ledge of the person takiggit, if so dcelrod. Send two Se, stamp* for full particular* and testimonial* of these who have bean Moro a Mired. A dress M. V. Luban, agency, 74 Wellington street east, Toronto, Canada, iseato ytbe�medical verten.Whatterrilremodiet they. do get nowadays, Tun "3lyrtle Nary" tobacco is not bur- dened with the usual poste which ;welt the price of most artioles to the oonaumer ; the firm employs no travellers whatever, their orders come to them instead of being sought by them. The merchant does notrequire to keep a largo stock on hand swelling its price with interest, for the factory is an immedi- ate souroo of supply to hint, at the cost of a poatal cardor at most a telegram. He loses nothing, therefore, from being over- atooked, The article is a staple one, for which there ie as constant a demand as for wheat or flour, and the merchant oat there- fore sell it et a minimum rate of profit. A private in the Eighth U. S, Cavalry hare fallen heir to $30,000. £I00,000,000 w TIER BRtTISII COURT of CHANcnRY I—A Large part of this vast sum belongs to the people of America. Cox & Co., 41, Southampton Buildings, Holborn, London, Eng., have justpublished a LIST of the heirsto this enormous wealth. Reader, send a dollar and they will forward you thin valuable LIST ; and if you find by It that you are entitled to any money or property, claim your own. Cox & Co. will show you the way One of the most remarkable instances of the reconciliation of science and faith is found in the case of the Rutgers College. seismologist, who noted at New Brunswick the shock of the Flood Rook explosion just one minute after the appointed . time, and just fifteen minutes before the explosion ao- tnslly osonrred. Josh Billings, according to an acquaint- ance, was the only man who wanted to thrash a compositor for correcting his bad spelling. Imperial Cough Drops will give Positive and Instant Relief to those suffering from Colds,Hoarseneee, Sore Throat, etc., end are invaluable to orators and vocalists. For sale by druggiets and confectioners. R. & T. WATSON, Manufacturers, Tqronto, Ontario. All medium, shades of dark and pale green are fashionable—reseda, sage, Dress, Chart- reuse, olive, Russian or bottle or invisible green, bronze, and even pea green. A.P.., 0 54 'venom TILE—FIRST•CLe8s. Apply to WM. �J 00o o W, Freeman P. 0., Ont. "vont NAME, ADDRESS AND TEN CENTS. mailed Bengoughs Shorthand am Business Institute, Toronto, will bring copy Cosmopolitan Shorthaader, best journal in America. Price, 81,00. Send for Calendar. j\/](AOi3INE1LY FOB BALE—ENGINES eNll ltol Boilers, Saw and Shingle Mills, Planing Fac. tory Outfits, Stave and Heading Machines, wate wheels, Chopping Mille, etc. Sendfor descriptive catalogue and mention what you want. '(Mention this paper). H. w. PETRIE, Brantford, Ont. BIG OFFER To introduce chem. we will GIVE AWAY LON Self - Operating Washing Maohlree. If you want one oc u. your urine, I'. 0 and cxprees odic3at once THE NATIONAL 00., 20 Der 5,,, N. Y. ASUCOESti AGAINST ALL PREJUDICE Williams' Eye Water has proved itself a sums, by all ,rho h.ve used it . 000rding to directions, if their roes were curable, as wi l be eon by the undersigned eertiliostes. It cured me, 8 years blind, °oculist failed 0. Forton ; it he, ou ed nae, ocoulist would not try me Alexander Wand ; 6 fears blind, ( has, Amiott; e yea e, Elie Dufour; 33 years blind and now I see, John I+eormx. Ask our druggists for it. wholesale -Ly. man Sone h Co., 584 Itt.' 8 and 6t. Manrrea,T. JAMES PARK & BON Pork Packers, Toronto. L. 0. Bacon, Rolled Spice Bacon; O. C. Bacon Glasgow Beef Barge, Sugar Cured Ham, Drier Beef, Breakfast Bacon, Smoked Tongues, bless Port Pickled Tongues, Cheese, Fenally or Navy Pork Lard in. Tubs and Pails. .Tho Beet Brands of Eng eh Pine Dairy Salt in Stook. 1<iG(EAT BARGAIN —VALUABLE nunAND'' Brick Mansion for sale, on the banks of the St. Lawrence, one mile above ereacott, opposite the City of Ogdensburg, N. Y., 110 sores in all sixty-tiva agree good elo°gh land, twentyfivo aures choice wood laud, sugar bush of one ih''uaand eros, balance good ,eiure, soil clay lxtm, seen fenced and watered, pp mansion built six years, ago. under ,npervi,f0a of celebrated American .Architect, modern improve. Went,, Boat house and wharf, .Carriage Rouse and, Barns, all new. Orchard of three huedred Fruit Trees, all bearing, will Nell mamelon, outbulk000 and ten or twenty acres :operate; one of. the .most beautiful location, on the 8t Lawrence ; ver- cheap and terms. R JAMS$ goui.4, Prescott, Ont.. The Eagle .bee,.. washer Ie the dui. Waahing Machine in Tented tt gweulth woman or Karat, yam elk tri thou thenen of wash baud, on with ea. wash 60 to 10eptore la ono hour. A,,.... waatod au •ver CO:. rtaltm4ter,(to ode. Ssmpleaez t. ry siren. Ladies make g9wtageata;no wear w l90»ee. and oree71Wr will bag actor trying 1t; warrsuie, .3 wag caeca In LIFO minutes. teiton Dgoddsiw tri, bedelu'b. .0, Or Se sail. Addters. FERRIS ie CQ.,iiatactoei and ate, '.et,areta,7$Jarvis $t.... wutourO.Canada Christmas Cards S Y MA�4t At 1eea than wholesale prices. All well asecrted, No two alike, Postage prepait BIRTHDAY ()ARDS may be included, Nor Fxisoan, rmeme- 25 CARDS, good valve, for 0 20012 600 very fine, " 103 8 25 INAWOIdem may be proportI3nstely mitred. Cash to accompany order, Address, Matthews Bros,& 0o.,Toz ontto- f'ree Lands'andGhea H e.. I 1l Q� S FOR PRE fi1J,1ON Along the rine of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway to Ienirai 1)a*Calp. Diad !karate= Nebrw.k0. Naw raga one nee being oprmto tip toe raotdl 1, nettled ettiedtn these wanderfkUl- prO,lactatte re„lont, and the ""Cres eunure"" will hate --fire: ohm* •' of location. For flab information (which will basalt yon free of charge) about the tree utile and cheap botnes, apply to eaten' if. MARL Ey Weeiern Canadian t'a w. Abient i .at N. W. 9 rota 8.., Torzate, Qat, IL S. R&M. General Pea, age** Chicago, Iles. eia lag Q tea 04 11. so it r 04 1 - PIN era W.{ Impd ONL $15. "SUN" TYPE -WRIER Tote Is not rubber:awa p. but a genuine metal type reanitoldhig ina^hinc. Just the tang Carekzgy. rsen, Webers, bottoms risen and other; having limit. lana purls i, I agree aa a guarantee lowlthe i a albs. la G . m G a a tbrl tprice I al din exchange for the Cele - basted Remlos^ta ortrxtei2jp;•Irltgr. 4IEORGEBENc.o2'4311. Sale Anent, 31 Mug Street East. Toronto. '19 JA1018 ST SOUTH, HAMIGTLRJ FOR PLISARAATT' iSEWW --Ria kA11iasi,en, Cla erton s Spool Cotton Wmrdrnted Irma. Lensfh, and to ma MOO* oa as rowing machine. See *nit Oiasrssxois name le on tae riMrlotrale Naini rt%ooispeatent. Allan tne loyal Nall oteanutipoo 0.444 duttang winterAum 10 rifaad even Tend , and MIS seers '14510147 to Idrerpool, and in as Mom Quebec every Saturday 6Olitverpoal. califi.a N rah* anderr't0.And mails rod mowers fpr aoceiene sa a. areiand.Aiwtrooi Dalitororo ,fat[atiltucauarNwJoaa,'r lr: Y. to IdverPool fortnighut ,tog atcmtaee =ocean The steamers of the Mown, Leer nail d.' what* 10 and from iiel#ar,Po d, Bcibrm and , p�ihtta, aHyl dnring.unemai betwaea (ILaagow ands Dana. regal-ws04.10lleiiowandBQIloo,woekilised wow, 'o ri Q ok ria a edofight . nr other tpPl7 too A. Sohum 00..*1Iin,oe Ilia O� peer in f'vo , Baliima'e= fi. ihtnaard d4PO., geatas; $hen: & 00.8!. John. d.li'.; Wm, Thomson ik -00., 85, John, Pi. i; Mian a 004 Chloa:ro;' Love. Eli Alden, Kano York ; H. Botirlter, Tomato .Ali Rse t Ova, t�nnebeo WM, Brockte,•Philadel ; 11. ,4n auto,. i. roprletor Baetan Montreal. CAUTION EACH. PLUGOF THE RTLENay- Iirr' A�'I_ARI.�D 1 N BRONZE LETTERS B44 None Other CUT THIS OUT! The New Co.OPerative —IS THE -- WWI' , _BW I' 114 TEM MABZBTe'. NEW STAND 2 NNW acnitis! Latest Improved Attachments Agents prlee far Ogler macre Ft Our price only 125 eaaclia typos send as "MusD foe.&oar spina* astthe et *eying, gaarsukeafoe ktir,erosts ata each ata An lad wanito a mashies will do well to suit•. to THE 0O'OP9CRAT, Sewiug lladiiiie Co; BOOT & SHOE YVIANUFACTURERS' OF:MONTREAL. Whereas the reports of the epidermic in Montrealhave, for obvious real:„ been greatly exaggerated, we, the underalgned Boot and Shoe Manufacturers of Mo tree!, beg to inform the trade and the public generally* that our manniactar - establishments are entirely outside and far removed from what is known as the footed Distriot ; that the extraordinary preoantions taken by ns render it extremely improbable that contagion oan'be carried in our goods; that every employee in o - eatabllshment has been vaccinated and revvoolnated (their Wales alto being vac citrated), and that a thorough examination 6f the homes of our operatives has b - - made by competent physicians ; and that lb la aoknowledged by the Medical Facnit that the combination of chemicals need in the tanning, colouring, and finishing o the leather used in Boots and Shoos is in itself a potent disinfectant. Wo have also complied with every requitement of the ONTARIO BOARD 0 REAT,TH, and after close examinations of our factories by Dr. Covoruton, their Chie Inspector, we have resolved hie certificates, (Signed, AM]gS, 8OLDEN of CO , JAMES LISTON & CO , JAMES PO PHAM & CO. JAMES WRITEAM & Co., GEO. T. SLATER. i SHARPE et MA.CKINNON, JAMES MoOREADY & CO., R. McORE&DY & CO,. COCHRANE, CASSILS & CO., G. BOIVIN. 1O Reward for the Conviction Of Dealers who ot-Mnn nn s ferior Oil ot Cath• fer and Sell In- M V o �, �,r. Manufacture for LARDINEP WEAL40.ieL. Dam o x z a lanreka,'Cvlindor' Bolt For sale by all leadin dealers. McColl Bros. & Cutting & Wool Oils. I g Toronto. GOLD MEDAL JUST AWARDED AT THE TORONTO EXHIBITIONFOR PEERLESS AND OTHER MACHINE OILS. Six Gold Medals have been Awarded this Oil; during the last Th Years. Be Sure to get PEERLESS, no other genuine. WE WILL PAY FREIGHT BOTH WAYS IF NOT ENTIRELY SATISFAOTO Queen City Oil Wroks Samuel Ro era& C MERIDEN BRITANNIA COMPANY FINEST &l&oro Plate CA TIO Goods stamped 111 den Silver Plate are not our make. you want reliable gc insist: on getting t made by the MERIDDEN BRIT NIA 00,, Hen reeo ee re pl tb fll sit de ta: Jai tai mf col rho A ter he the a,n it i mo Sigr the firr enc mid wit 800' at 1i coli dial w fu1 , leaf don Fiona hav, ther A it w, ever liner whit with pills ioldi Ai see 0 is