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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-2-25, Page 3teol TET: i ROUSEHOLID. Notes for Housekeepers~ " Pork and beano" do not el necessity go together, Beans can be made very palm table cooked with other mote, partiouiarly corned beef. lenio' TESTieolt lazilNBZNeI•WATER ^Alxyt; writer sales that the purity of water vas be tested in no better or slmptor way than a to fill a clean pint bottle three-fourths full of water and diueolvo in it a balf•teaepeonfnl of the purest eug&I --loaf or granulated will and set it in a answer-pork'the bottle, warmlane for two days. If. in 'twenty- four or forty-eight bourn the water beoomes cloudy or milky it is unfit for use. People in auubt as to the purity of the water they are using easily decide the matter by mak- ing this simple teat, CREAM of OYSTERS,—Pat a quart of eye - flora and their Lquor in a porcelain kettle over the fire, and watohthein until they are on the veer a of boiling. Then take them off and urpito a colander over a bowl, e Cho it eters in the colander. leaving p � y the ov iters as fine as possible, and pound them well In think bowl. Now put in a saucepan a piece of butter the size of a small egg, and when it bubbles throw in a goner Dill tablespoonful of flour, etir it well with the egg -whisk so an to nook the dour with- out allowing it to color. Now pour in the oyster liquor and when well mixed over the flour, add the pounded oyster pulp and a pint of good cream. Pass this all through the sieve, neaseu it carefully with salt and cayenne pepper ; return it to the fire to heat without allowing it to boil, and just as it is about to be served add a half-oupfnlof fresh cream and to piece of butter the size of e. email pigeon's egg. Whiek it well with the egg -beater, keeping it hot, without boil frig, over the fire for a minute. Pour into a warm tureen and terve immediately. :Benet> EGGS, -Break eight egge into a well -buttered dish, season with popper and Belt, one half cup of cream, one tablespoon- ful ef butter, satin the oven and bake twen- ty minutes. Conte BREAD.—Pat two tablespoonfuls of wheat flour into a quart measure and then fill it with Indian meal. Turn this into a sieve, adding two teaspoonfuls of sugar, half a teaspoonful of salt, two teaepoonfnis cram tartar and ono teaspoonful soda. In place of the °roam tartar and soda, two heaping teaspoonfuls of baking powder may be used Sift all into a bowl and mix with one quart of milk, one egg and two teaspoon- fuls of melted butter ; beat thoroughly and pour into a medium-sized dripping pan well greased ; bake in a good even. When done cut in squares and serve hot for break- fast. CUMBERLAND PUDDING, -Two ounces of butter, four ounces sugar, three eggs, two ounces flaur, four outman breadorumbe, a gill of milk, three ounces lemon peel, three ounces dried cherries, a little essence of lemon, and some apricot jam. How to use them : Beat the butter to a cream, add the sugar, then the eggs one at a time, stir in the flour, add the breadorumbe and milk ; mix gently ogether; then add three drops of essence;rr ®mon, and the lemon -peel and 1 mixtu •e into r d fine r • pour the ohoes ()Imp r ° a well -buttered mold, twist paper over and steam one hour and a half. Dissolve a half pot of apricot jam in a tablespoonful of boiling water. When the padding in cook- ed turn into a dish and pour the jam over, Serve at once. Ill -Mannered Guests. In the matter of hours for meals, tor ris- ing and retiring, conform without :beeitation or comment to those of the hospitable householdeemet is underbred and Dollish to keep brei,P waiting, became you have overslept yourself, or dinner er tea, while you have prolonged a drive or walk unsea- sonably. If a meal is well cooked, it is in- jured by standing beyond the proper time of serving, and if our hosta' time is worth anything yon are dishonest when yon waste It is quite am selfish in want of tactful re- gard for others' feelings, if loss glaringly inconvenient, to present yourself below stairs long before the stated breakfast hour. You may not like to sit in your bed-oham- ber ; the parlors may be in perfect order for your occupancy or the library tempt you to snatoh a quiet hour for reading, but she is an exceptionally even-tempered hostess who does not flash uneasily at finding that you came down by the time the servants opened the houseand have made yourself at home in the living room ever since. The Infer- ence is that your sleeping room was uncom- fortable, or that she is indolently unmind- ful of your breakfaatless state. I have an anguishedrecollection of a long visit paid to my family by an accomplished gentleman whose every intention was pure- ly humane, yet who descended to the par. for each morning at an hour so barbarously early that he had to Iight the gas to see the piano -keys on which ho strummed until breaktaet was ready. There is a saving con- solation in the knowledge that, if he is dis- tinguishing himself in the heavenly man- sions as a player upon instruments, there is no mother with a teething baby and a head - /tithe in the room overhead. Stained Hands. Young men are sometimes deterred from pureeing a vocation to which they are In- clined by the fear that, being "unfaehion- able," it will exclude them from "society." An eminent mechanical engineer began hie life -work by filing iron in a machine -shop. At ni htr a r his Bret day's's work, he looked at hie,. • fled hands and broken fin• ger-Haile; thought; "How can I go into society wi 'iranch hands as these ? What ladies think of myer- will the y d � nails ?' Then name the temptation to abandon the shop, and become a clerk. He resisted, gave up eociety, devoted himself to his trade, and in a few years was oonstrnoting ships. He had the courage to give up society that he milt acquire skill in me ohanioe, Ampere, the great French ohenlist, though ono of the moat intellectual of soien- tiets, found that he could not bo both in ,r";eociety" and in his laboratory, He once 'Went to dine with a fashionable lady, who made a point of gathering notable persone about her. His hands were stained by a harmless drag which blilokens the skin for a few days. Ampere wrote to his wife,- " She ife,--"She declared that my hands looked un- clean, and ended by leaving the table, 'say- ing she would dine when I was a,t it dire tance. I promised not to return there be- fore any hands were white. Of course I shall hover enter the house again." Ampere became great ; the vulgar woman is unko`Evn, In Santa Clara county, California, there is a rat allied. to the ground -nest making npeo#ea, which oiimbs small trestle' and makes a tromped neat of twigs among the bronohee, something after the manner of the gray Squirrel, That Boy. ie.thohe allot mod bp syturv v T Does It ring finial street tomoci 2. Will the racket stall continue Spite of all $'our mild reproof ? Are you ottou in it flutter ? Are you sometimes thrilled witho 1 Thou I have m 1 y y grave That you have at home that boy. Are the walls and rableshumored 2 Are your nerves and ick upset 2 Wave two wo Dyna so lrrlghb and roguish Made you every Darn forget 2 Have your garden bode a prowler Who delights but to destroy ; These are well-known ind101010ns Toad you have at home that boy. . Rave you assn ilial playing t ! y roue- Viitb his head upon the moat And his heels in mid-air twirling— For hie audience, the oat ? Do yon ever stop to listen, When hie worry pranks annoy— Listen to a voice that whtspere, You were onoo jest like—thatboy 2 /rave you heard of broken windows, And with nobody to ,blame 2 Hove you seen a trousered urchin quite unaonsctoue of the saute ? Do you lavo a teasing mixture ,,,1 Of perplexity and joy 2 You may have a dozen daughters, But I know you've got—that boy THE EtiGLIS$ IN THE SOUDAN. A Shelk's Idea of England's Duty—The Enormous •$laughter oYArabs. In a recent interview hold by the oorrea• pendent of the Loudon Times with Sheik Hameln ktnrghania, a member of a religious family in a tribe dispersed throughout the Soudan, the chief of which rendered great aeeletAIIOe to General Graham's ' h e far co atSu- akim, the Sheik said :-"TbeMandi'emove- ment originated in misrule. His sumacs produced a belief among the ignorant that he possessed miraouioas powers, which be- lief oreated fanaticism. Bat this has to a great extent disappeared ; and the move- ment is now maintained by simple neceeoi;:y, Tho Soudan is reduced to the utmost mis- ery, Rich and poor alike aro starving on an allowance of two dollars monthly from the Treasury. They are advancing, and will continue to advance, northward in the mere hope of plunder. There is no possibil- ity se yet of any other negotiation than that of the sword. Yes, they were beaten at G#cies, and aro diepereed. That's nothing ; they will reassemble in greater force and be- gin again. Why should they do anything else 2 Starvation is behind them ; plenty is in front. A syatern of subsidies would do much, but not until they are thoroughly beaten, and for some years not without the presence of a certain force within etriking distance. AN IMMENSE SLAUGHTER, "I estimate their force at Girlies at 5 000. If you killed all each time, they could atilt send a similar force ten times, The nearest point at which you on hope to do anything is Dongola. There you can communicate with the different tribes. If Lord Wolseley had remained twenty days longer at Don- gola the whole movement would not have collapsed. There is no exaggeration in thia. You do not know the effect produced by the Abu Klett and Gubat victoriee where 15,000 of the rebels were killed, v ou must net tell me that it le imposeibie-I am speaking of what 1 know positively, not what 1 think or have hoard. The Madhi sent 24,000 men to meet General Stewart ; they returaed only 6,000, When the news was brought to the Matadi he sat with his hands over his eyes and said, r How can I ask wore to fight these men, when out of 24,000 only 6,000 are left ?' This I know from eye -witnesses -not one, but many. I am not exeggeretiag. I will swear that I know that number were killed. THE FUTURE. "Why did yon retire ? Tho fruit was at your feet. For the rake of twenty days you gave up everything. Aa to the future, I ray you must, must, must go to Dongola ; you will there hold tire rebels by the throat. From there you oan negotiate ; but the at- tempt is utterly impossible from any point further to the north. At every step back- ward the Mandist® will fallow you ; every stop inoreases the number who become beg- gars and therefore rebels. If the Englieh retire from Egypt they will swoop the wbole country. They have no goal -Con- stantinople, London, Paris, -they don't m know themselves. They fear two things - English soldiers and Abd-el-Kader Pasha, tee former Governor of the Soudan, new Minister of the Interior. Tho substitution of Turkish or Moslem troops would neither make thinge more easy nor more dif5eult, if they were as strong as the British. At the commencement of the ineurreotion the Turku and Chriatfane were egnally infidels ; now they would be equally men standing be- tween the rebels and plenty. A JUST GOVERNMENT REQUIRED. The neoeseities are, first, a force to go to Dongola ; second, a good government sup- ported by a force at Dongolr. ; third, money to effect a peaceable settlement after some time. As to the force, you want 5,000 Eng- lishmen, and the same number of Turks and Egyptiane for two or three years. As to the government, it moot be military, and either Christian er Moslem, provided it be just.. As to money, it too early to say, but yon want loos than you will spend otherwise." YOUNG RANDALL'S ROMANCE. He Dared Not Marry the Girl Iie Loved, and Finally Hiiled II•tnreelf. John K. Resedall, aged 32 years, the the Baltimore Marian ef # e Meroant#le Library,; died by his own hand early the other morning. Almost at the same hour his father, en inmate of the government hospital for the insane, died from old age and mental exhaustion, Nearly ten- years ago young Randall became enamored of a young lady in ,Annapolis. After a long courtship he was accepted as her affianced husband, The girl was young, beautiful, and wealthy, and Randall seemed devotedly attached to her. Not long after the em gagoment wee ennounoed the elder Randall became hopelessly Julane. It was then de- veloped that insanity was hereditary in the family, and young Randall decided to post pone his marriage. No one ever doubted his love for the girl, bat, as years rolled by, he showed a morbid fear of marrying her, and thus subjecting her .to'' the poasible efltlotion of having an inea" le husband, In vain did his friends urge his fine physical condition and freedom from 'all agile of mental dioordor, About eighteen months ago the long on. gagoment was broken off w'i the consent of beth persons, but Rendell never 'again showed the same intoresten life, Twovi'ooke ago he received invitations to the marriage of his old love with a young naval officer at ,Annapolis. This wap undoubtedly the di- rect cense of his taking his life. He diet himself through tho' heart in his boarding house. , The higher the ceiling the higher the rent, i TiMita.aja. The Hygienic Treatment of Pahronary Consumption. Dr. a ]] . B, W, Rloha deo r n has r vi e i his 4 P d, n 'Asalepald," ocrtein rules for the hygienic treatment of ooneem , which io he enun- h h dated tie far back aP 1356.. At that time they found very little favor, being regitrdod isthe ideas o a d ea r- r me hat the fatal. f t a {Isom could be .prevented generally, arid, leatad 'medially by hygleuio meaeuree. Co -day, under a revival of -tile old unimal- attar speculations as to the origin of some diseases fro d mi n 1 vi g forme, -the entltr door .'ins in a new dram,- the conception of the hygienic treatment of 'pulmonary oonsum f' haeibeeu accepted in name as well es practloe, at if it were new ie word and deed, the height of practical learning and skill, So ideas < change, and the disfavored of one generation is the favored of another, Bus it mettere not how or by whom it is borne, so long art the torchlight of truth makes its way. 1. A supply of pare air for respiration is the flrat indication in the treatment of the oonsnmptive patient. 2. Active exercise is as essential element in the treatment of consumptives. 3. A uniform elimato is an important ele- ment in the treatment of consumptives. 4. The dross of the consumptive patient should be adapted to equalize the tempera- ture of the body, and ao loose that it in - teems in no way with the animal imam done. ao- tlone. 5. The hour: of rest of the consumptive patient should be regulated mainly by the absence of the sun, 6. The ocoupetion of the consumptive pa- tient should be suspended if it is indoor or sedentary, but a certain amount of outdoor xercise may be advantageous. 7. Excessive mental exertion should be avoided by the consumptive. S. Cleanliness of body is a special point In the treatment of consump!;ivea. 9, Abstinence from all habits of groan sensual indulgence is an essential part, both in the prevention and the cure of consump- tives. 10, The dint of oonsumptive patients should be empie, and should oo:,tain a !arm er proportion of the respiratory oonetltuente of food than is required' in health. Whenever distinot evidences of phthisis have set in in an individual of either sex, the marriage 01 such a person is wrong ; while the marriage of two persons, both vie - time of the (Became, is opposed to reason and humanity. Caines of .Erysipelas, The causes which are usually said to pro- duce orysipelaa are both numerous and di- veree. Certain individuals, and even cer- tain families, appear to be more liable to suffer from the disease than others. What is the came of this special susceptibility it is impossible even to oonjecttire. Erysipelas is common in newly -horn children, but from the first to the twentieth year it is by no means common t after thio period to the fortieth year it is frequent as an out di- sease ; but in more advanced age it occurs cblefiy as a chronic end less important mal- ady. Gouty people have been found to stif- fer from it more frequently than °there. Errors in dint, and especially eating certain indigestible substances, such as shall -fish and improperly smoked, salted, or preserved meats, are said to ant as exciting causes. Violent mental emotions are also acensed of being occasionally the cause, and it is said to have been brought on by anger and fear. Sometimes no canoe can be assigned for its onset, but its oo0nrrence is promoted by all oiroametances that tend to debilitate the body -by intemperance, by previews di- sease, by Jow spirits and anxiety, by inouffi- oient nourishment, and by foul air. Form- erly, when less attention was paid to Meanie nese and ventilation, it was much more common in" hospitals, and 'infirmaries than at present. Injuries to the skin, such as abrasions, rematches, wounds, burns, or blisters, wherever they are situated, may be the starting point of the inflammation. Sometimes even the presence of gout in a pertioular joint, or the irritation caused by diseased teeth in either the upper or lower jaw, may determine the neat of onset. It le probable that the moot common cause of an attack of erysipelas' is its communication from one person to another. In erysipelas the constitutional symptoms may precede the local, or redness ef the akin may make its appearance before the fever commences, The former course is the more common. Exeroise Necessary for Aged Pepsons. M. Bouohardat, Professor of Hygiene at the Paris Faculty of Medicine, protested in strong to terma at a recent lecture against the advice given by some hygienists who re- commend almost complete rest to the aged, in the following terms : " I protest emairst the oft -repeated adage that old age is the ago of rest. This sentence baa led tie a very great error in hygiene, The regular general exercise of all the organa of nutrition and of l000motien le necessary to persons' of all ages: The grateat attention on this point is all the more necessary that the ten• denoy to rest brings on a gradual diminution of the strength. If the old man does not resist, hie strength will visibly and pro- gressively diminish, and the few days he may have to live may be transformed into just so many honre. In proof that regular daily exercise is bencfioialto the aged one has only to observe the results in some of the handsomest oldmen, who take little or no rest.` Moderate ezoroiee, particularly walking, should be the leading precept of the hygiene of the aged, without which longevity is well nigh impossible." Profes- sor Bouohardat alsor ecommende that old people should maintain their intellectual faculties, or otherwise they will get into a state of incurable torpor. This is best no aompllehed by having some steady intellect- ual pulfeuit, and by taking an active interest in the events and progress of the day. In our boyhood we remember a very old man, who told us he kept in as perfect health as an old man can be by chopping wood for an hoar or two every day. Thin he regarded as sufficient ezoroiee for him, Another old man we know findshis health very greatly benefited by sawing wood with the ordinary buck naw.--NeraW of Health, Patnain's Corn Extractor Is the boat remedy for corns extant, It note quickly, makes no sore spots and effects a radical oure. A hundred imitations prove its value. Take neither adbstitutee offered as good nor the clone imitations of the gen- ulna too often offered. The only things that lookfamiliar et sea aro the clouds, These fere'messengere from demo, and, how weary and dlaeontolate, they appear etrotohing out s,lovg the horizon, at! Id looking for a hill or inountain-top to rest upon -nothing to hold them up--- it roof without walla, a span Without pieta. One gets the fmpresaion that they are grown faint* end must presently, if they reach much further, fall into the sear=-slnisn. Ettlhalted Powers of Mewory. The followin;, Daae given by Dr. ,john Abercrombie, much abbreviated for want of ,spaeo, shows mob strikingly that me' moryisapower unll itedinitso operation teon and that in its anconeoioue workiinge it is moatvigorous and oyermastea ng where its subj oete are least cultured and nearest the condition of the enfant" world.. A git of 7earl y 1, olxtployed in tending cabtlp, Wept in an epartu ent next to one occupi- ed by ars itinerant fiddler, a Iauei ball of ooneid rarble ekill, who ire oentl �e nt the of hb In q y e performing �' 1 Or a{ n 1 ll aces f refin- ed o raiz a g a P ed description. She fell {ll, was taken care of by a lady, and eventually beorne her servant, Some years elapsed, and the irately. were often ae ' surpriaecl to hoar music during the nicht. At length the soand was traced to the Bleeping room of the girl, who, fait asleep, was warbling in a meaner c xactty resembling the sweet-, ash tones of a email violin. It was found that after being two hours in bed she be- came ratios, and began to mutter to hereelf ; then, uttering noises resembling tele tuning of a violin, she dashed off, after some prelude, into elaborate pieces of wait, which she performed in a clear and accurate manner. A year or two passed away, and she began to vary her performance by imitating ;;he stunds of an old piano in the honso, tee singing of the inmates, and farther on elle began to d#sorties 0Il a va,rit:ty of topics, The jaebraees and troth of her remarks on all aubjeote exalted the utmost astonishment In throes who were acquirleg lnturtnation. She was koovrn to conjugate correctly Latin verbs and to ,,peak several sentenc- es in Frersoh. Daring her paroxyema it was almost impossible to wake her, and when hoe eyelids were raised and a can- dle brought near the eye she seemed in- sensible to light. About 16 she began to observe those who were in the apartment end answered gaasbions pleb to her with astonishing aoutenees. This affection went ou for ton or eleven yearn• She was, when awake, a dull, awkward girl, slow in receiving any kind of instruction, without any turn for music, or apparently any recollection of what pawed in her sleep. At the age of 21 she beex.me im- moral and was dlem#ssecl. to is believed that she afterward became il;saoe. Dr, 14laffet relnbea thab after preaching a a sermon on "Eiernity" to some Africana he heard .a simple looking young man re- peat it all over sogain to a group of natives with uncommon precision, the very ges- tures befog reprouuoed. On teliieg him feint he had done more than the orlgmel preacaez could do, repeat the sermon verbatim, the Gavage touched his forehead and said, "When I hear anything great it remains there." Young Girls are at a critical period when they are about maturing and developing into women. The lack of watchiul care at this tlmo may re- sult in fixing irreguleritioe upon delicate organs and entailing a long list of " female weaknesses." All this may be avoided, and the yeung woman come through this period clothed in all the beauty and strength of a perfectly beelthy organization by the aid of Dr. Pieree'n " Favorite Prescription," pre pared eepeciaily for female troubles by one of the most eucceseful phycicians of the day. The Savannah News nays that during the cold spell in that section a wagon containing three or four persons, drawn by an ex, vase - ed through Madison, Fla., " and the occu- pants had placed a layer of earth in the body of the wagon, on which a typical Florida pine -knot fire wits brightly burning, from which they were warmed." * * * Male weakness and loss of power promptly oared. Book, 10 cents in stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main Se, Buffalo, N. Y. Harry Worman, a bright bey is Fostoria, Ohio, showed Do much interest in electrical' experiments that he became a privileged ch'eraoter at the electrlc light works, no other outsider being permitted near the dynamo, The other day he wanted to re- ceive a " good shook," and so got a pail ef water, and, touching the positive pole of a dynamo with a rod in one hand, put the other hand in the water and fell back dead, Russell Sage io a well-known operator in Wall street, who la generally coneidered as "up to snuff." Hence, it may have been quite natural that a countryman whir reads the papers recently called, at his office and asked for a package of Dr. Serge's Catarrh Remedy. He discov- ered hie mistake, but he made no mistake in tae artiolo nailed for, This Remedy, when applied with Dr. Pierce's "Nasal- Douche," will aurelyand rapidly eradicate the moat aggravated ease of catarrh, with all its un- pleaeantand dangerous aeoompaelmente. Mr. John Biddulph Martin, the husband of Victoria Woodhull, is a banker in a lead- ing London firm which dates book to the time of Elizabeth: He belongs to an old family in Herefordshire ; and is extremely well connected. His marriage is not re- garded with satisfaction by his relations and friends.' tfmperial Cough Drops will give Positive and Inatant Relief to tlloae euffering from Colde, Hoarseness, Sore. Threat, ete., and are invaluable to orators and vocalists. For sale by druggists and confectioners, R. ' & T. W A T S' 0 N, Manufacturers, Talent*. statue has been df r at rod granite dire great oovered ten miles away in the desert near Alexandria in E Et. It re resents the famous Pharaoh, who was reaponeible for all the Egyptian plagues, and on one side of it le a statue: of a little baby„ said e,o be that of the next Pharaoh, who perished in his rash attempt to drive through the Red Sea. It has been lying there 3,000 years. Catarrhal Headache, hswking and spitting up phlegm, ore., at once relieved and cured by the use of Dr. Canon's Catarrh Cure. No reason why -you should suffer another day. Many oases of Catarrh of long standing have been cured by a single bottle of Dr Carson a Catarrh Cure. Ail Druggists, $1.00 -per bottle A Scalae mountaineer has ascended the Sidelhorn in midwinter (Dec, 21), remain- ing on the summit two honre, He found the temperature rather niild, and describes the atmosphere as far clearer than in the warm weather, so that the view was glorf ons. This peak is over 9,000 foot in height. The entries for the great Colonial and Indlan Exhibition still come in from all quarters of the Domhtlon, and corporations, societies; and institutions of all iiorta, aro contributing to mike the display of the moat vnriorl ohmmeter. One of the novel featurol in the Dominion dlsplsy will be a jounce -printed in the building. This papas will be edited cad published by Canadians, printed,fsoin Canadian t3 pe, on it Canadian prose, aril from Canadian made paper. ft will be published by a liyndioate of gentle- men) under the name of the " Tradee Pub- l#ailing Co„" with dikes in Toronto and Montreal. Berlin is going to eatebiish an Anthropor logt rt a Garuen, in which females of foxes n people who are able to stand the climate are to continually reside, whelp every rnnliner ;here well. be importetione of people from aropioal and other oonntries, There is no edemas for' your Buffering any longer from Catarrh, Bronebitis, oto„ when you Dan get a ;weeny guaranteed to owe, and whioit be perfectly sat e. Dr. Ca r son's Catarrh Cure ae❑ leaa an. t end ifieettud remndy. Ask your Druggist about it. A.)e 1e8, Su}5TSWnkf7'E» FOR TIME ILESTSga,I,• trot; Patented Aralole.in0anadato.day. Send L1 cents for $arr1p10 and Agents' OT1119. 1JaLUCCn R T do 00, Guelph, r TUE-,E SuOi Di.t O •r fAYpFT iT E TifEitE:Yd r U, in or NO BETTER. Bo The Snow Drift $aklnxPaw Powder Co ,Rran f" wf (9. REEs..K'14o ECiiXln:, +I►ut and rsa i'aciklxrir for• r nrscry- T d Dealers u n _ D t xren wt $ira.aial¢Y. Leading hard kinds, in large quantitiesraised 00 900 own grounds, in lag 430, ' H H Hurd & Son REEs flatten Aurgcr t y r T PLANER EnliVEs, 6TAvg'CU7TER; ITAyE jointer, cheese box, vetoer,, bather epUtiiog ' 15nrllu fou, Uu¢. bookbinder,,, me,ukaing, tenoning, ardathsrmanhiae knivoe 01 best guallty, manufactured by P1vt 10 HAT, Galt Machine Knife Werke, Galt, Oat, ; send for price list. ol5TABL3 SAWMILL FOR BART OU1:AP: mouecod on truces; can besot down ready to run in two 'home' time; specially adapted to be driven with a threshing engine. Addraes, S. Qnatansa,"Welland, Ont, VANT1¢D-10,000 Minion and others Intereeted in machinery to send name and address for a copy of my No. 12 hlustrated catalogue ; sent free, H. W. t'ETR,E, 14facelnist and General Machine Dealer, B,ranttord, Ont. BENGOLGJI'S SHORTHAND AND BUSINESS Institute, Toronto, le the oldest, lamest, cheap. sot and heed en the continent. Business men Bola' Mie d with cISc help on the shortestposeible notice. Write for descriptive Calendar. Tnos. Bosaoou¢n, President, 0. H. Bnooas. Seo)—Treas. LLD LANDS FOR SALL-8.4 21, OONOE851ON 2, Nottawasaga, Simone County ; 100 scree; ono mile from Rayner ; will make a &rat•olaoe grain or dalryfarm ; also lot 50, 2 Voopra;'100 acres ; will be sold ()heap • aim lot s5, north boundary Stephen. Munn County; 100 mires ; will be sold cheap. Apply to T. Eve, Barrister, Toronto. RIG OFFER.—To introduce them, we will (AVEA AWAY 1,080 Self•operesting Washing Ma - (Mina. .If you want one send ua Cour name, P. 0. and ex fess office at ones. TIM NATIONAL p Aa ONA L dp„ 23 Dey Se, N Y. SILK FREE CarkyaSiyt-cwok anDd gS,tn1e0e0 Orioneat Kenefogton Silks, assorted colors, me for leo ; 3 lots 25 ors postpaid, by Persons & Co., Boston, Maes, 0000E38 AGetINST ALL PR1OTi7DIOE— willhame Eye Water nae pr' ved itself a success by all who have used it ocoording to direotioue, their eyes wore eu'ably, mu will bo seen by :he undersigned certificates. 50 Cured rue, 8 years blhld, 000uliet Palled. 0, Fortin 1r• bas cu -ed are, ucculi't would not try me, .altL+t der Ward; 6,yeare btiud, Ohas. e.miott; 4years, Eue Dufour; 33 yer, a blind mud now I sea, John Le. molt. Ask sou ;niggles for it. ivbolesa'e—Lymao, Jona "!' On„ 354 PA at St. Montreal. t q IT15L,rad BU' EI;47ESS come!^438S,Guelplr,Orri That mato only is rigntly educated who knows how to use himself, who possesses ouch practical knowledge and each manual okill as will enable him to compete soccesstull, with hie felio,ve in the busi- ness of lite, To impart such eduoation, to prepare ouch men la the dealgn and purpose of this nasally. Won. For terms, eta., call at the college or address, M. MAc0ORMICK, Prinotpel. ARSL FOR SALE — 200 .ACRES — IN EAST g{� Fremont, Senile° 0o., Michigan ; 1.76 acres cleared, and balance in down umbar land ; well drained: all well fenced with post and rail in 10 and 20 acre fields; well watered with a living spring run- ning armies ; one forty veneered homer, 20 x 42, the wing 16x22 ; atone cellar under she whole building ; two barns, one 100x26, the other 02x02 ; both 20 feet poets ; youni, orchard of 200 trees ; toil property ie well situated on two math roads, iu an excellent noighoorhood ; good school within half a mile ; near. eat church two mites; nearest market and railway station 51 miles ; 2(3 miles from Port Huron. For full partioolare address to 8stiose TueuLNoueM, Eaot Fremont P. 0., Sa111110 Co., Mich, fl OO1D STOCK AND GRAIN FARM FOR SALE G Cheap.—Lots 53, 54, 64, 05 and 60, Maitland Concession, Goderich Townehip Enron county, Don. teenier 334 acres, 0 miles from Clinton; 250 in cultivation; 84 acres In heavy hardwood timber; well watered by an arm of the Maitland river ; frame•; house and barn ereoted. Price, 321 per acro if sold" before let March, 1856. Apply to TuoMAs Tac%soN, Clinton, or to T. Eno, Barrister, Toronto. �1tiORT1LAPii) TAUGHT FREE by mail. Stu. + dente thoroughly prepared In Shorthand, Type. writing, Ponmanehlp, Bookkeeping, Arithmetic, Grammar, Classico, Matriculation, and Civil Servlet examinations, by attending our Academy. Students helped to idtnatione when proficient. Shorthand book and pooicdicale wholesale and retail. Immedi- ately addreso,.The Union Shorihanders' Commercial Academy, Arcade, Toronto. - AXLE AND MACHINE . SCREW WORKS. LINTON, LAKE .t CO., Manufacturers of all Mods of Carthage and waggon Axles, Ir. n and Steel Set and Cap Screws, Studs for cylinder Heads, Steam Chests, Pumps, &o., GALT, ONT. Bronze Medal at Industrial Exhibition, 1885. Price Liet on application. ARRIIGlia & WAGON AXUIS. Manufacturers of the celebrated I renal GUELPH IIXL,E WORKS —AfrD— nrPLBX. T. PEPPER & CO., Guelph, Ont. Our Duplex Axles are all to he had at all the principal hardware Stores in the Dominion. IOJRE FTS! When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop thorn for a time and then have them return. again I mean a radical euro. I have made the disease of FITS, EPI- LEPSY or FATJ,rNO SICKNESS a life-long study. I warrant my remedy to euro the worst cases. Because othore have failed is no re eonfor notnow receiving& cure. Send as once for °treatise ands Free Bottle of. myinfalllble remedy. Give Express and Poet °Mean,, It costaounothing for a trial and l will cuyou. t.0ddrees Da, 01.;G. ROOT, 113cure Pearl St,. New Yorld JAMES PARK; & SONS Pork Packers, Toronto. L, C. Bacon, Rolled Spine Eason, 0. 0. Boson, Olomgow Beef Hamer Sugar oared liana, Dried Beef, Br eat Bacon, Smoked Tongues, Mese Pork Plokled onguee, Cheese, Family or Navy Pork, Lard in Tuba and Pails. The Bast Brands of Bug. that, Fine Dairy Salt in Stook 'RENNIE'S SEEDS ARE THE BEST illustrated Catalogue Tor 1806 Containing description and prices of the chokaet FIELD, GARDEN Bc FLOWER SEEDS Mailed free, Every Farmer and Gardener should have a copy before .ordering seeds for the coining season, Handsomest catalogue published in Canada —CELEBRATED— Crocker CELE BRATED— rocker.. Roller Skates. One Million pe r in use in Canada and U.S. Simplest, strongest, lightest and easiest running. Send for Catalogue. Liberal Inducements to parties building rinks. Local agents wanted. 0ROCKER SKATE CO., 148 King So, W.. Toronto, Ont. liew Orleans Wood Cam Co'y —MANUPAcroasae— Winter& Patent Wood Cart,. Buggies, Carriages, Sleighs, &c. end for Catalogue. ' J. WINTERS, Manager. Galt, Ont Alan Line Royal Nail Steamships Sailing during winter from Port au' every Thursday, and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, aodi.ueummer from Quebec every ssturday to Liverpool, aallise ac Lon' douderry to land mails and pasieneere for rlantic, d and Ircl nd. AlenfromB..iti:nore, via Halifax and St,Joho's, N. F., to. Liverpool fortnight*, during tucrmer months, the et•eaocere of the Glasgow llr<rse bait durmz Wlatar to and f•om Halifax, Pere1.nd, Boston and Phdad,i. plea; and during summer between Glasgow and Mon trees, weekly, Gra+.row and Boston, weekly; and Glas. sow and Phlladeiphis, fortnightly. For freight, passage, or other info-macion apply to A. Sohumnchor & Co., Baltimore ; S Cunard & Co., Halifax; thea & to , St. John's, N. P',. Wm. Thomson & {Jo., Sc. John, N. B : Allan & Co., Ohmage; Love & Alden, New York ; Ii, Bourller, T'aronto ; Allans, Rae & Co., Quebec ; Wm. Broo!sie, Philadelphia ; ti, A, Allan, Portland, Boston, Montreal 'CO SU ::PTI0N: I have a poeitive remedy for the above disease ; by Its use thousands of cases of rho worst kind and of ling standing have boon cured. Indeed, so stronggie myfattb to its efficacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLES FRHst, together with a VALUABLETEEATISE on this dimes to any sufferer. Give express and P. 0. address. DR. T. A. SLOCUM,101 Pearl St„ Now York. FOR TEI2] !MILLION. Along the line of the Chicago and Northwester Railway art Central Dakota and Northern Nebraska. New sections are being opened up and rapidly settled in these wonderfully productive regions, and the " first comers" will have "Brei choice" of location. For full information (which will boson* yon free of charge) about the free lands and oheatr homes, apply to JOAN n. MORLEY, ?Western Canadian Paso. Agent, C. et N. W. Ry., R. S. HAIR, 9 York St., Toronto, Ont. General Pass. Agent, Chicago, Ills, . 1 0 0 0 WA FUFAORUBIN 003 ordi . .I 1.,: a G"3 r e h O 1 tea OTTIR, POP, Opium, Morphine, and Kindred habits. Valuable treatise sent free, The medicine may be given in tea or coffee, without the knowledge of the person taking it, if so desired. Send two 3o. stamps for full particulars and testimonials of those who have been cured, Address, M. V. LEMAt,N, '47eWellington Street Eaet, Toronto, Canada, Peerless Oils Are made 'only at the Queen City 031 Works, and have received during the lent throe yeare I= C*COXIM lia303rikeLX,IIM Send for sample barrel. if 1t does not prove setiefeetory wo will pay freight both ways. SAMUEL ROGERS & 00.9 811 1 Front Sts Bast Toronto, THE EAGLE FINE B1$OTS AND SHOES. tri; ADt*MAR iitEQll3ttait,C.b Wearing. esFitting, Looping IN THE MARKET', Every pair and ,every box bears this eagle AS TRADE MARK. tariirtbTAKE No OTHERS.