HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-1-14, Page 3THE H01:7 sbaoLD.
Tested Reoeiptii.
A Coeneete Plummet is a oke with a
eauee to it, and it is made ae a sup cake,
with a oup of sweet milk, three egga, beef
cup of butter beaten, ant to a cream, with
sup of sugar, and three cup e of flour into
which has been put two teampoonfule of
cream of tartar aud one 'of sod•
a The
,flavoriog is lemon, and hot fruir Balm
'Mould be provided with it.
M l °TS= PIE is a rdce luncheon or
sicie.clish at this 'mason, and is easily made
from freele or canned oystera. Fill a pudding
dieli with oyster, small Split crackers,
cream, more oysters, pepper, spa, and but-
ter, neat them otend on the tap of the demo
until boiling; then cover the top of the
<Holt with a rich crust qutte thick, and bake
-until the cruet is browned delicately. Serve
hot. This Is a good dnila to aocompany any
kind of fowl or gasmen'
Try the foflowingx oeipt for one superior
lemon pie: Four 37'1 9 and two whitea of
eggs, four .drenn f sof sugar to each
°I4g. "'Iuof butte •e size's mini wahiut,
and t
ter o lemone. train the juice -ten, both
i grate the rind -of one, which strniel.
with the juice, Beat all together, and bake
quickly in a rioh under-orust. The two re-
maining whites may be treed with four des-
sertamoonfuls of powdered sugar, and the
grated rind of one lemon to make a meringue
for the top.
ROAST CHICKEN are a delicacy. if the
chickens are of good quality. Obtain, if
possible, chickens with a whole bread -bone,
truss them neatly, and let them be careful-
ly singed ; put celery dressing inside each
chicken; tie a piece of buttered paper or a
slice of bacon over the breast, and roast in
a moderate oven basting frequently. Time
of roasting, about an hour. About ten min-
utes before they are done remove the paper
or bacon, and sprinkle them freely with salt.
Serve with plain gravy in a boat, not in the
dish; garnish with thin slices of broiled
bacon rolled up.
Tneecee (Momisses) PUDDING. -Half a
pound of flour, quarter of a pound of suet,
half a tea -spoonful of carbonate of soda, salt,
one teseepeonful of ground ginger, tea -cup-
ful of treacle, quarter of a pint of milk, one
egg. Chop the suet as finely as possible,
and put it into a begin with the flour; car-
bonate of soda and ginger. Beat up the
egg, mix the treacle and milk with it and
stir this into the mixture in the ballet., add
more milk if required to make the pudding
motet. Grease a basin thoroughly, put the
ridding mixture into it, cover with a greas-
ed paper. Have enough boiling water to
come half -way up the basin in a eauoepan,
and steam for two hours.
BAKED CHICKEN PIE. -Prepare two or
three plump chickens, by cannel,. drawing,
Bingeing, cleaning, and cutting off necks,,
wings and drumsticks. Joint the breasts,
sides, and back -bones, and put them in an
earthen stew -pot, into which has been pre-
viouly plaoed three alines of sweet, fat, salt
pork. Simmer till tender. Take out the
chicken, stain off the liquor and lay the
chicken In layen in a deep dish, alternating
with oyeters, a few biar, of oraoker, butter
and neatening to tee,..lii Over the whole
pour the etrained atoonand cover with a
rich paste half an inch tick before baking
pi
.
Make incisions in the form of leaves and
bake slowly one hour. The remainder of a
chicken will make a fine soup, with stook
in which a veal -bone has been cooked for a
ioaee, and celery root for an ingredient.
Cneeneurae are a winter luxury;
stewed, amen eaten ith granulated oatmeal
. -if& 'breakfast ever orning, they will make
. a new liver, or at least make over an old
one, so that it is as good as new. Flir sauce,
-
pick over one quartoni und fruit, to this
put two ,gills of wane ' over and let them
simmer till the cranberrt2.a are tender, then
add a good half-pfund of granulaied sugar,
and stir all together till the sauce is a rich
mass, and serve In anqiinber glass dish. A
famous housekeeper gives the following as
an excellent formula for cranberries: To
two quarts of cranberries allow two and:a
half cups of sugar. First boil the cran-
berries in a pint of water for a few moment%
mash them ageinst the sides of the kettle,
then add the sugar; stir continually until
they boil up twice, then • pour them out to
cool.
BEEPETEAK PUDDING.- ( '`Cheshire Cheese"
receipt. )-Make a crust of chopped and sift-
ed kidney inlet, in the proportion of a half
of a pound of suet, freed from skin, to a
pound of flour, prepared by mixing with it
a small saltepoon of salt and teaspoonful of
Royal Baking Powder -mix thoroughly,
wet with cold water, roll out with as little
fleur as possible, and line a pudding -mold
which has been well butteeed. Take two or
three pounds of jucy rump -steak, two or
three Iamb's kidneys, and a small can of
of mushrooms ; cut up the steak, and put a
.- thick layer in the mold. Season to taste,
' adding a tablespoonful, of walnut oateun.
Add next a layer of mushrooms, then a lay-
( er of kidney, then beef, then muahrooms
again, which will fill the mold. Season, add.
I pa
dug another table -spoonful of the catsup, ifreferred, nd cover with paste, wetting the
• edge, so that it will close tight, and allow.
ing a little room for the swelling of the
pastry. Tie In a cloth which has been dip-
ped in boiling water and floured, and 'steam
two hours; or boil gently for the same time,,
keeping the pot replenished with boiling
water. Oysters may be employed in place
of mushrooms, but elb will not then be
"Cheshire Cheese" Beefsteak Pudding;
though it may be very good.
PLUM PUDDING, -000 half pound of kid-
ney suet, half pounenof 'raisins (Smyrna and
Malaga mixed), half atpo end of fresb bread
mambo, one r tablespoo ul of flour, six
ounces brown sugar, r mimeo orange
eel and citron n x , a dittle salt, one -
earth of a grated ri tmeg, a pifroh of pul-
! verized ginger, half d aen eggs, a small oup
of sweet cream, and one of currant jelly,
This is suffisient for a good sized pudding,
Stone the ream, and seek them in the
melted currant jelly. Now trim the beef
kidney -fat and chop it very fine, with one
spoonful of flour, mix it well with the
erumbieof bread, brown sugar, and the eggs;
then add the the raisins, the peel, the salt
nutmeg, ginger, and last of all, and after it
Is all well mixed, add the cream. Spread
all this in a napkin, well buttered, fold up
the oordere of the napkin and tie to the level
of the pudding, so as to Make it round..
then plunge the pudding into a eaneepan of
boiling water, and let it boil at least four
hours-conetant boiling. Take out and let
• drain in a sieve; eutlt from the top se as
to keep on a level, then turn it out oe a
diah, removing the napkin carefully, oo 218
not to disturb the line part of the pudding.
Sprinkle with a little alcohol. You may
apply a "witch to the pudding when it is en
the table. Serve the mum eeparate. This
pudding may be cooked in a mould, the
• Mould well butiered, end the pudding tied
in a napkin, also well buttered. Boil four
n home.
The well-known pugilist Charles Mitehell
attributes much of hie (mecums to the fact
that he °Anna raise a beard, or eVell
Mouetaelia,
At LiMestene Ridge.
A Fenian, writing to the New:York Sun,
thus demoribes Ridgeway extol in surround -
large -
Ninnen year ago lad June I armompani-
ed the Feniane in their attempted invasion of
Canada, I was only one -and -twenty years
old then, but I had served two years in the
Northern army during the rebellion. I liv-
ed in the hope of some day seeing "the green
above the red," a fooling in which nearly all
the Rich soldiers shared. We used to talk
about ina around the oamp fires, and think of
it on picket until relief ermined us from our
reveries. In a boyish way I ofteu fancied
that I was on duty, pacing my boat, on a
gieen hillside in Ireland, and that the rebel
camp fires which flickered in the distance
were surrounded by men who wore Englandti
eruct red. There wee a sullen joy in that
boyieh dream, as I used to picture axiy na
tree vale of Glenmaluse guarded by boys in
green, with Ili/glandes union j eine fluttering on
one side, and the harp, without the aro erre
flying over the heads of an army of ex -Irish-
.
merman soldiers on the other,
The war ceded, and the Irieh inen of am
tion made Canada" their cry. I drifted
into the Roberts wing, and in June, 1866,
found myself scrambling through the cluster -
Zoe -vineyards around this Cenadian village,
rifle eininaed, one of theFenians who invad-
ed the Dominion: From where I write I
can see the Meg. eoad along which we
marched while birds war -liked in the buehes,
whichnpark like here hedge the highway,
with their closely matted sides, while blos-
soms gave a fragrance to the air of this gar-
den of the Canadian oonfederation. Fields
of clover, with bursting pods, waved in
poaches before the refreshing breezie which
blew across the road that day in Jane, and
(natio of a superier breed wander about the
rich fields which dotted the country. The
large and comfortable homesteads, the spa-
cious barns, the well -kept fences, the exten-
sive orchards, the sleek and well-fed cattle,
the latest agricultural machines for farming,
and the air of comfort, thrift, and neatness
which we passed on our way, bore evidence
of a people who were well-to-do. These
rural sitint's of peace and proeperity might
have had a peaceful effect were it not for the
union jack which fluttered from the flagstaff
on the Town Hall at Ridgeway.
I could stand at the door of my hotel and
see the ledge of limestone, the eloping ridge
crowned with wood, and old Bertie Station,
which was one of our objective points, and
to capture which we formed in open order,
like a ladder, and moved forward for such
cover as the nature of the ground afforded
r long, thin line. There is the old brick
use of Farmer Athol behind which I, with
s ne others, took cover, and on which can
still be seen the marks of the bullets fired
from Englieirrifles. Behind it ie the orchard
from which our men kept firing at the dark
uniforms of Toronto's /pack corps'the
Queen's own militia. I am told that the
very loge we used to form a breastwork
across the road are now a part of the out-
houses. There is the fence behind which
the Canadians open fire at our ekirmish line.
_here is where we crowded along the orchard,
and began threatening their flame. 'beta -
how well I remenber it-oomee their bugle
call -'and soon their scattered line e were
forming square into which we -poured a rak-
Marra, under which we could see men fall
dead and wonnded.
Signal Revenge
Thinly -81x years ago occurred the eattle of
Chillianwallah , at which the Euglieh ran
an appallingly narrow chance of being do -
feted by the courageous Sikliteopposed to
them. Ihnugh England did gain the day,
it was only by an enormous, extenditure of
brave men's lives. A commemoration
is erected to their meiseary, in the garden of
theChola Vomits'. \e,
Thneme battle however one of the severest ever
fou iM by the British en the nein of India,
is also noteworthy beoause of the shadow of
misfortune and diagram) overhanging it. The
fourteenth regiment of dragoons, in the
midst of the engagement, suddenly turned
in retreat, and nearly caused a panic in the
army. Its commander, Capt. King, over-
come by shame afterward a committed sui-
cide.
Previous to his death he repeatedly de -
blared that he gave no order for retreat, and
knew no reason why his troops should have
fled. But the order was heard by many of -
Been and men, and the captain'word was
not believed. Public opinion gave a verdict
of cowardice against him.
The circumstances of the battle have, how-
ever, been recently revived, and new evi-
dence has come in, which, if true frees both
officer and men from the worst charge which
can be prefegred against soldiers.
In the regiment, says this exonerating
voice, was a private who, forieome reason,
bore a grndge against his colonel. Though
he had sought for ate opportunity of taking
revenge, none had presented itself. But the
manlwas a ventriloquist 1 and at last his
ohanoe mime. .
On the day of the battle, at the critical
moment, Widen it was infamy to take one
ba ckward step, the ventriloquist threw his
voice close to the colonel and called,-
" Threes ahout 1"
It was theedmnal for retreat
The regiment wait' a model of discipline,
and had always obeyed as one man. It did
rio now with fatal ,pronaptitude, and in the
*eke pf the battle -field, its retreat was soon
Converted into helter-skelter flight, The
moldier had avenged hie wrong at the ex-
pense of his comrade's honor, and at the
risk of defeat to his country.
A silver quarter was found in the intest-
ines of a four -pound trout which was being
dressed for the table at Virginia City, Nev.,
a ahorttime ago. It was covered with a black
(mating nearly an eighth of an inch thick,
and had evidently been in the trout's
otomach for a long time. The coin was
probably dropped by some fizherman, and
the fish, Booing the glittering coin, darted
at and swallowed it.
In the Chineoe maritime reports it is stat-
ed that the Arnie savages of Soath Formosa
"harden their children" by bathing. The
infant is thrown Into a tub of cold water on
the clay of his birth, and a monthiaftersvard
le taken to the river or sea and allowed to
struggle until tired out, The Antis children
Can trwim long before they are able to walla
It is 'laid that the "hardened" ones become
strong because they were born so ; the
treatment knocks out the weak ones.
Qaeen Victoria has a great financial ad-
vantage over her heir apparent in the air.
ciumetance that, whether times are good or
bad, her Majesty'a snug little revenue of
over 7,000 a week is paid jest the same,
while it is well known that the Pence hail
for years prat been obliged to MAO heevy
abatements in his duchy of Cornwall proper-
ty -not 40 much, porlaapri, in the duohy
proper' as in its outlying estates In other
emotion, His allowance from Parliament
of n4000 a year is jilet what the Queen re-
oeivea from her duchy of Lancaster 210 21 little
extra pooket money, in addition to her
E1,000 a day. The Prince, moreover, has
no tionntry Seat kept up tor him, while the
Queen ha ti half a dozen besides her own
house,
RERS OW L .
-,---
King Thebaw is not a fulliblooded
mese. Hie inether Wet0 a Shp.
May Agnes Flemieg, the nevelist, is a
Canaciien by birth, although elle hue lived In
the United ntates for many year.
The Halifax Critic, Xova Sootian literary
paper, is mimed, isy Prof. 0, .t`. Fraser, the
blind principal of the NOY°, Scotia echool
for the blind.
Rev. A. J. Townsend, recently chaplain
at the Hanna garristn, and brother-in-law
of Mr. John F. Stairs, M, P,, has been
appointed garrison chaplaie of Dublin.
Mr. Oliver King, who has just won the
prize offend or a piano concerto by
Metiers, Brimmed & Sone of Lotidon, Eng„
was piamiet to the Princess Louise while
she was in Canada. .
IPrincess Luis e and the Marquis ef Lorne
are preparing for Good Words an article on
"Our Railway to the Pacific" the Princeee
contributing tte pictures and Lord Lome
the letter prees.
Widespread regret is expreseed in Lon-
don at the departure of Masutus Pasha,
who has repreeented the Porte there for
thirty-four years. The eminent Christian
statesmen is now 78 years old.
British Columbia has given women the
franchiee in municipal and civic elections
on the same qualifications as men ; but no
woman is allowed to be a member of a muni-
cipal council.
Rev. Henry Ward Beecher delivered a
lecture tit Galt, Ont., the other evening
for which he was paid $350, and the Galt
Reporter estimatee that he received f oar
&elan for every minute that he spoke.
Q mien Natalie of Servia recently pur-
chased forty sewing machines and set
seanastresses at work on them in the palace
at Belgrade, making garments for the troops,
which ehe cut out with her own fair hands.
The Winnipeg News says Sir A. T. Galt
will represent Winnipeg in the next Parlia-
ment of Canada, and that another Cabinet
will be made in ordto give him a port-
folio. Sir Alexen r Campbell probably
retiring.
Mr. John Antrim, who resides near Leba-
non, Ohio, chines to be a great grand ne-
phew of George Washington. His grand-
mother, on the mother's sule, married Col.
Scott, who was the son of Washington's
oldest sister.
HERE AND THERE.
Barr The Yuma, Indiana dispose ef their dead
by oremetion,
Helena, Montana, taxes Chineee laundries
$600 a year.
The song "Nancy LW" was offered to
elude publiehers for $25, It ultimately
paid ita composer e25,000.
Japan hes been mapped out Into six di-
ViStOnS, and a medical college is to be eetala
Hailed in each divieion.
In some parts of Mexico preeioue woode
are so plentiful that the natives build pig
styes of rosewood logs.
It is said that President Grevy is very
doh and very miserly. He eats plain food
because he L too stingy to buy dainties. He
le worth naillione, and he is saving money
all the time out of his salary.
The ocean fieheries of France and Algeria,
according te the last Government report,
employ over 87,000 persons and 24,000 yea- 1
eels, while the value of the gsh taken is be-
tween elxteen and seventeen millions of
doliars.
Major-General Laurie, of Nova Scotia,
who commanded at Swift Current during
the North-West rebellion, is now on the
Servo -Bulgarian frontier serving as com-
missioner tor the national society of Eng-
land for furnishing aid to wounded soldiers.
Mr. Chas.Canniff James, B. A., olaesioal
master of the Cobourg collegiate institute,
has been appointed professor of chemistry
and geology in the Guelph Agricultural
College, Mr. James took honors in soience
in Victoria University, having been the
gold medalist of this year.
The fine statue of Queen Victoria, which
• has been placed in a niche on the west
front of Lichfield Cathedral, is the work of
the Princess Louise. It represents Her
Majesty clad In medimval costume, wearing
diadene and veil thrown back, and holding
in her right hand a' scepter and in her left
a globe.
A Michigan girl outdid her companions
in a craze for autograph albuiesigete having
about one hundred letters from the same
number of meet bound in a volume for her
parlor table.Asthe missives represented
her exteneive and unusually sentimental
correspondence since she had arrived at the
age of chirography, the collection proved
very interesting to callers.
ewfik Pasha, the Turkish Minister at
shington, seems to be fully alive to the
fact that hie country will shortly need more
guns. He oame on from Washington last
week to inspect Lieutenant Zalinski's new
dynamite cartridgee, and insisted upon
every detail of the manufacture being ex-
plained to him. He expressed his witisfac-
tion and a wish to order some for Turkey,
should his Government consent.
William E. Cramet, editor of the Mil -
Waukee Wisconsin, is one of the most re-
markable journalists of the Northwest. He
has been deaf since boyhood and is totally
blind, yet bons one of the hardest workers and
most thoroughly posted men in the profee-
don. He has been in harness nearly fifty
years, and his office hours are as regular
as When he was young. • He knows the city
thoroughly, and can without difficulty go
alone to any point orihouse he may desire
to visit.
The riohest woman in South Amerioa ia
Isadore Cousin°, of Santiago, Chili, The
people call her the Countess of Monte
Cristo, and she tracee her ancestry beck to
the days of the Conquest. She inherited
front her husbands millions of acres, millions,
of money, &aka and herds, coal, copper
and silver mines, a fleet of iron steamshipe,
emelting works and a railroad, all yielding
herian income of several millions a•year,
From her coal mines alone she has an in-
come of $804000 per month. The holm in
which she lives cost $1,000,000, and the
grounds are a marvel of beauty and magnifi-
oence,
-11
• "Gat" Howard Slandered.
A Montrose newapaper published the other
day, in what purported to be a special from
Toronto, a charge against Howard, the Gat -
ling man of havhig scalped a dead Indian
at Fish man,
That this story in an false as
many others which have been spitefully cir-
culated about Captain Howard will be borne
out by any who were at Fish Creek. The
writer happened to be there with Captain
Howard, and In fact was one of those who
conducted him and Colonels Straubenzie and
Willie= over the acene of the engagement,
It should be remembered here that the fight
occurred on the twenty-fourth of April, and
Captaini Howard, who reached the camp at
Fish Creek on the "Northcote' " did not
arrive until the fifth of May. The bodies
of the two Indians, which had been left
upon the field, had been interred by Gen.
Middleton's ordera the same day as the
bodies of poor Cook of "A" Battery and
Wheeler of the 90tii were recovered, end an
officer was detailed to see that the fatigue
party did its duty. When Capt, Howard
firse visited the spot the writer pointed oht
the spot where the Indians had been buried
to either hitn or some others of the party.
Howard returned to 011U11:1 with the rest. of
the peaty, and a couple of days afterwerds
the force set oat for Batoche, Aa the writ-
er was palming the battle field with •the col-
umn he remarked the Indian graves again
and they had not been dieturbed, and Capt.
Howard has not been at Fish Croak since,
Then is a rumour in the air to the effect
that it is intended to strengthen the fortifi-
options of Quebec, and leek for Imperial
•troops for tho garrieion, We don't believe
that tte Governitient contemplate anything
BO absurd. As the late outbreak howed,
In time of turn:toil we have acme enough of
oar soil to oupproom tutnnit, and vivified°
the lavn Why in a time di 'Made ahorild We
weed Imperial Soldiers, and the strengthen
ing of fortifications 2
Aobestos is so well known as a non-core
ductor of heat that the advantage of ite
use for hat -linings is obvloue Such Heins
are being widely introduced, especially in
the head -gear fer warm olimates and Emma
mer weather.
The most serious incident during the Brit
ish eleotion wan the savage attempt on thelife
of the great landowner, Sir Watkin Wynn,
is noted, and not without satisfaotion, that
tin legal element will not be too numerous
in the new House of Commons.
The House of Commons has sent many a
valuable man to a premature grave, Lord
Lanedovvnen brother, Lord E. Fitztnaurice,
had for an indefinite time to abandon polit-
ical life, and Lord Dalhousie and Sir A. Ot-
way have since been warned by doctors to
keep away from Westminster.
The Duke of Somerset, whe died lately,
lef t no son, but had adopted the illegitimate
son and daughter of his eldest son, who had
formed a lasting attachment to a woman of
very respectable connections, to whom he
was attracted by her extraordinary resem-
blance to a lady whom he had wooed in
vain.
The new statues of Beaconsfield and Glad-
stone, by which the architect designed to
mark the era of the erection of the new gate-
way at Magdalen College, Oxford, were mu-
tilated during the recent election. That of
Lord Reaconefield was firat defaced, and
then, by way of retaliation, Mr. Gladetone's
was decapitated "by certain undergraduates
and other roughs," nye an Oxford paper.
When Spain held despotic sway over
South America, from Panama to Cape Horn,
some of her ablest viceroys and bravest and
meet brilliant soldiers were of Irish blood,
the men or their descendants who, after the
disastrous Cromwellian and Williamite
wars disdained to take eervice under the
conquerors, and went in thousanda to swell
the armies of Spain,
Didn't Wish ta be Taken for a Bride
"Now remember, Charley, we are to do
nothing bridal," said a somewhat elderly
bride to her husband, as they boarded the
train. "1 should die of mortification if I
should be taken for a bride. Te, he 1"
"All right," said Charley. "I'll be
careful."
Later on Charley wanted to smoke, and
he entered the smoking car for that purpose.
In the seat immediately hack of the
couple sat an inquieitive old lady.
"Going far ?'' she inquired, tckling the
bride's ear with hersbreath.
V To Montreal. To, he 1" simpered the
bride.
" Travelin' for pleasure ?"
_ "Yes, ma'am. , Te, he V
"Is that man,,Who has gone to emoke,
your husband ?"
" Yes. Te, he 1"
"Leave the children to home ?"
"What's that ?" demanded the bride.
"Didn't you bring the children ?
"We have no children, ma'am."
"No children ?'' repeated the old lady,
compassionately. " le'reips they are dead ?''
"Er -we've never had-er-any child-
ren," the bride answered, beginning to get
a little mad,
"Never had no children ? I've had seven,
an' they re all growed up an married. Child-
ren is a great comfort when they're well
brought up. But some people is unfortun-
ate 'bout havin' children. There's my sister
Jane Ann, for instance, she's been married
as long at' you or me, an' she ain't never had
no children, an'-"
Just here the husband returned from the
emoking oar, and, as he took his seat, the
bride laid her head convulsively on his
shoulder and whispered :
"1 guess it's no 'me, Charley ; I'm sure
everybody w ill take us for a bride' couple,
no matter what we do." And during the
rest of their wedding journey the bride took
precious care that everybody did.
The Moon's Influence
Upon the weather is accepted by some as
real, by others It is aisputed. The moon
never attracts corns from the tender, ach-
ing spot. Putriam's Painless Corn Ex-
tractor removes the most painful corns in
three days. This great remedy makes no
sore spots, doesn'tgo foolingaround a man's
foot, but gets to busInesti at once, and of -
Foote a OMB. Don't be imposed upon by
substientes and imitations. Get "Pit -
nam s," and no other.
A wife can generally hide any smell
object from her husband by putting it in
his Bible.
The man who will not execute his resolu-
tions when they are fresh upon him can
have no hope of them afterwards; they
will be dissipated, lost, and perieh in the
hurry of the world) or in the slough of in-
dolence,
A gigantic engineering scheme is to con-
nect the Caspian Sea with the Persian Gulf
by way of the valley of tho Euphrates. This
would make Aida an island, and would
ohange the tidos of travel and business
throughout the Eastern world.
A lady of fashion, while pining by a
orowd coming from the Opera Howie had
her bustle ptished from its proper position,
which made the wearer look ricliculoute A
gallant young tar seeing the misfortune
calmly acidreened her thus: "Please, mho
Anti, aer darn whetyomay-callift is a -till
adrift on the starboard tido I"
Dnring the long rreaolt war two old
ladioa in Scotland were going to the kirk.
The one said to the other, "Was it no a
wonderfte thing that tho Breetish wore aye
vie °rime over the French in the battle 2"
"Not a bit," said the other lady; " dinna
you ken the 13teetieh aye say their prowl
bof to gain into battle 1" The other replied,
"But mane, the Prettehisay their prayers as
wool " The reply was most characteristic.
"Hoot 1 Sid labberite :bodies( ; wha could
tinderstan' them 2'
Din' t Hawk, Spit, Cough,
uffer dizzinoes, .indigestIon, inflammation
or the eyes, heedaohe, laesitude, inability to
perform mental work and inclispoeition for
bodily labor, and tummy and dieguet your
Mende awl acquaintances with your nasal
twang and offeusive breath and constant ef-
forts to °leen your nage and threet, esrhen
Dr. Sago's " Cetarrh Remedy" tvill proinpt-
ly relieve you of discomfort and suffering,
and your friendo of the disgusting and need.
less mflictions of your loathesome disease ?
"Plenty of room at the top," remarked a
dealer as he opened an apple barrel and
found it only half -full.
"1 would not live alway." No ; rot if
disease is to make my life a daily berden.
But it need not, good friend, and wil:nct
if e w e in Hine. How many o
GALT, ONT.
Bronze bleclal at Lidu9trial hichibition, 1885.
Price List on Application,
ptome of diseaee that lurked within were
our loved ones are mouldering in the due
who might have been spared for tit ars, The
alight cough wae unheeded, the many sym
BRIT I; A ME RI"CA N
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sl 00,14.4POR, ,asa040,yoNoz
In every department. Toeohere pilehing and ono'.
getie, and know whet they teach. gudorsed by the
leading businesa men of Ontario; its graduate8 WM,
ing positions 0 trust in every 0111Y, 'WWI and village 121
Canada. Send for new °hauler, O. OVRA, *unitary-
'• •
0091) STOOK AND GB AIN FARM POE 84,14
'‘,3r OneaP.-Lote 53. 54, 54, 65 and Idaitland
Conmealah, G:derich eowtsuip. riuron °mute. con-
tolning 384 aO'es, 6 MINS from Clinton; 250 in
cultivation ; 84 aorta in heavy eardword timber;
well watered by an arm of the Maitland river; frame
house and barn erected. Price, 123 per sore if sold
bsfore Lit M nob, 1850. Apply to THOMAS Jaoasobr,
Milton, or to T. Ens Barrister, Toronto.
Axle and Machine Screw Works.
—:0;—
LIN9CON, CO.,
rainutacturen of all kinds of Carriage and Waggon
Axl.s. Iron and Steel Sat and Cap Screws, StUde
X' for Cylinder Heath, Steam Obests, Pampa, etc.,
h
eath Caine, Dr. Pierces
"Golden Medical Discovery" cannot recall
the dead though it has switched nutnbers
from the verge of the grave, and will cure
consumption in in earlier titegem
Knowledge mutt be made Oen In the
heart before it can blossom into conduot, and
the continual paseing of right feeling into
orhigahrtaota:..tion alone can form a worthy
Young or middle-aged !nen suffering from
nervous debility, loss of memory, premature
old age as the result of bad habits should
send 10 cants in stamps for large ihustrated
treatise, Address, WORLD'S DISPENSARY
MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 663 Main Street,
Buffalo, N. Y.
.All doctors agree that to enjoy good
health the mind must he kept in a cheerful
condition. But no doctor can give a man
points that will make him joyous when his
collar don't fit.
Imperial Cough Drops will give
Positive and Tenant Relief to those suffering
from Colds,Hoarsenese, Sore Throat,eto.,and
are invaluable to orators and vocalists. For
mile by druggists and confectioner, R. &
T. WATSON, Manufacturera, Toronto,
Ontario,
Wild coffee, whieh proved to be of good
quality when routed and made up, has been
Sound growing in Butte county, Cal.
The other day there left Dublin for Gal-
way by the Midland Railroad a sooial phe-
nomenon, viz. : a respectable young man
who could not speak or understand one word
of English, having never spoken any other
language than Mali. He had been a fort-
night in Dublin, and during that time re-
quired in the capital of his native country
to be accompanied everywhere by an inter-
preter. The young man is a native of the
Island of Boffin, off the Connemara coast,
whore ont of some six or seven hundred in-
habitants, only nine epeak English. On
this island they poesees a rich treasure of
traditional folk lore, old poems &o. Fifty
iyleah.
ars ago on a large estate in *est Galway
there was not one tenant who spoke Eng-
A.P. 262,
ATOUR, NAME, ADDRESS AND TEN RENTS,
1 retailed Bengough's Shorthand and Business
Institute, Toronto, will bring copy Cosmopolitan
Shorthander, beet Journal in America. Price, 11.00.
Send for Calendar.
AGENTS WANTED VOR THE BEST SELL
ssiG Patented Article in Canada to -day. Semi
25 cents for Sample and .Agents' Tams. IhiboOCHS
& Co., Guelph.
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brated Neuralgia Powders. Sample mailed twenty -
Jive cents. Chapman, Chemist, Loudon, Ont.
BENGOUGIES SHORTHAND AND BUSINESS
Institute, Toronto, is the oldest, largest, cheap.
est and best on tee continent. Business men elm -
plied with office help on the shortest possible notice.
Write for descriptive calendar. Taos. BBNOOUG/I,
President, C. H. BROORS. Fe. 0.y-TreaS.
cit.) WASS Attle.L14S1 ALL FISEEJ MACE
1+:sil who have used It according to directions , If the!!
Wlllinms' Eve Water han proved its elf • sumer'
eyes were curable, as will be sten be the undersigned
oerti Beaten It cured me, 8 yeers blind, °oculist failed,
0. F °rho ; 0 boo owed me, °oculist would not try me
Alexander Went, 6 years blind, Ghats. Arefott ; 4 Yrsra,
Elie Dufour; 33 xus blind and now 1 see, Jobe
Leer oix, Ask your drupgists for it. Wholesale—Ls
man Sons & On., 384 St, Paul St.. TInr.real
GUELPH BUSINESS COLLEGE,Guelph,Ont
That man only is rightly educated who knows
how to use himself, who possesses such practise'
knowledge and ;such manual skill as will enable hlm
to compete successfully with his fellows in the busi-
ness of life. To impart such education, to prepare
suoh men is the design and purpose of this institu-
tion. For terms, eto., call at the college or address,
M. MAcCORMICK, PrIneiPaL
CONSUMPTI ON
•
I have a positive remedy for the above disease; by its
use thonselBile of cases of the wont kind and of long
standing have boon cured. Indeed, ,050roogl, my fol th
In Ite enTicacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLES MEE,
together with a VA Ll1ABLE TREATISE on Ws disease
10 any sufferer. Ciro express on d P0. address.
»B. T. A.. SLOCUM, kit Pearl St., New York.
FOB TILE
Along*the line of the Chicago and Northwest,crit
Hallway in Central Dakota and Northern
Nebraska. New seotions are being opened up and
rapidly settled In these wondertully productive
regions, and the "first comers" will have " (boll
choice " of location.
For full information (which will be sent you free of
charge) about the free lands arid cheap homes, apply
to JOBIN II, HOWLEY,
Western Canadian Pass. Agent, O. gi N. W. Ry.,
11. S. HAIM, 9 York Eir., Toronto, Ont.
General Pass. Agent, Chicago, Db.
JAMES PARK & SON,
Pork Pa,elters, Toronto.
I.. CI. Bacon, Rolled Spice Bacon, C. C. Booms,
Glasgow Beef Hams, Sugar Cured Ham, Dried
Beef, Breakfast Bacon, Smoked Tongues, Mete Pori,
Plekled Tongues, Cheese, Family or Navy Foot,
Laid In Tubs and Palle. The Beat Brandt of Eng.
oh Fine Dairy Salt In Stook.
1 CUREsFITS!
When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop theme
for a time and then have them return again, I mean a
radical cure. I have made the disease of FITS, EPI-
LEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long study.
warrant my remedy to euro the worst cases. Because.
others have failed lno reasonfor not now recelvingst
cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Freellottle el
my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post Office.
It costs .vou nothing for a trial, and I will cure you.
Address Dn. II. G. R003,133 Pearl St., New York.
Allan Line Royal Mail Steamships.
Sailing during winter from Portland every Thurs-
day and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in,
summer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool,
calling at Londonderry to land mails and passengers
for Scotland and Ireland. Also from Beitmore,
Halifax and St. John's, N.F.„ to Liverpool fortnightly
during summer months. The steamers of the Glas.
gow lines sail during winter to and from Halifax,
Portland, Boston and Philadelphia; and during SUM.
mer between Glasgow and Montreal, weekly; Ghee
gow and Boston weekly, and Glasgow ;and Philaciel-
phia rtnightly.
For freight, passage, or other information apply to
A. Schumacher gr Co.. Baltimore; s. Genera ez co.,
Halifax; Shea & Co., St. John's, NF.; Wm. Thomp-
son & Co., St. John, N 2.; Allan & Co., Chicago ;
Love & Alden, Now York; H. Bourller, Toronto ;
Aliens, Rae er Co., Quebec; Wm. Brookie, Phila.
datable; H. A. Allan, Portland, Boston, montreve.
CUT THIS OUT
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X"NtCOMMIC WIEEXI
BOOT &SHOE MANUFACTURERS
OF MONTREAL.
Whereas the reports of the epidemic in Montreal have, for obi':
vlous reasons, been greatly exaggerated, we, the undersigned Boot
and Shoe Manufacturers ofMontreal, beg to inform the trade and
the public generally that our manufacturing establishments
entirely outside and far removed from what is known as the Infected
District ,• that the extraordinary precautions taken by us render it
extremely improbable that contagion can be carried in our goods;
that every employee in our establishment has been vaccinated and
re -vaccinated (their families also being vaccinated), and that a
thorough examination of the bonies of our operatives has been made
by competent physicians ; and that it is acknowledged by the Medical
Faculty that the combination of enemicals used in the tannbig,
colouring, and finishing of the leather used in Boots and Shoes is in
itself a potent disinfectant.
We have alSo complied with 'every requirement of the ONTARIO BOARD OF
IlEATTII, and alter Close examinations of our 1 actories by Dr Covernton, their Cider
Inspector, we have received his certificates.
(Signed.)
AMES. HOLDEN & CO.,
JAMES LINTON & co.,
JAMES POPHAM & 4)0..
JAMES WHITHAM & CO.,
GEO. T.. SLATER.
SHARPE ..Sz MACKINNON,
JAMES McCREADY & CO.,
McCREADY & CO.,
COCHRANE, CASSILS & CO:.
Gg
MERIDEN
.•••••••
Goods stamped Masi
den Silver Plate Clo.,
ate not our make.
yoti want reliable goods
Insist on getting tho-1t
Mild° by the
MERIbli.131 MITA/4 1.
NIA CO,/
atilLTOS . 014