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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-4-8, Page 3Tam + rcous4aoLD Practical Recipes. SAusAGEs,—I# fried, it must he long and ut the a gently, b y re much better if baked in the oven with a little teeter. This eteamt and thoroughly gooks them; they should be baked until uieely browned ane they will not be as dry as when fried. Serve with potatoes, older apple sauce, plain stewed apples without sugar or eour pickles, Cooxius —One cup of powdered sugar, one•hulf cup of butter, one egg, ono half cup of Hour milli, one-half teaspoonful of soda sifted throe time though two dupe of flour ; one half of a small nutmeg and a handful of raisins. Rub the butter and sugar to a Dream, then add the egg, milk and epioe and last the flour, Roll thin, out into round cakes and bake in a quick oven, proseing one raisin into the centre of each cooky, Roll PUDDING -w-Rub a piece of butter the ;size of au eggo one quart of flour iu which has ben ted two teaapoonfala of cream•tarter and one teaepoontul of soda, Mix with sufffio-roat sweet milk to make a dough that can be rolled out. After rolling it out into a sheet, spread' with any kind of fruit, fresh panned cr preserved and then roll up, being careful to fold the ends so that the fruit will not ran out. Steam one hour and eat with a Bance. SoF'r MUFFINS—One quart of milk, three eggs, one teaspoonful of salt, a piece of but- ter the size of an egg, four tablespoonfuls of yeast, and Lifted flour to make a atiff batter. Warm the milk and butter together, and add the salt ; beat the eggs very light and stir them into tho milk and hatter ; then stir In the yeast and last the fiour, Cover the mixture and set it to rise for three hours or until light in a warm place. Bake In muffin rings or heated gem irons until a light brown, May be mixed at night and ueed for breakfast, POCKETBOOK ROLLS.—Take at noon one pint of morning's milk, a piece of butter half ae large as an egg, ono tablespoonful of sugar and a little salt ; boil all together and when 000l add one-half cup of yeast (or one- half of a yeast cake diseolved in one-half cup of water) and two quarts of flour ; knead as you would bread and set in a warm place to rise. It will be light by six o'olcok In the evening ; then knead it again. At nine o'clock knead it down again, using as little flour as possible. In the morning roll out without kneading about half an inch thick, cut out, apread very thin with butter, fold over, put in a buttered pan and after letting them rise a few minutes bake, Household Hints, A delicately made salad is hardly out of place anywhere, It may be served with roasts of every description, if we except game, and is even acceptable with boiled or fried fish. Paper hags In which many articles are sent from the grooery stores should be saved for uao when blacking a stove. Yon can Blip the hand into one of these and handle the brush just au well and the hand will not be soiled at*mend when through with them they el�In 'be dropped into the stove, being muoh preferable to the cloth bag or mitten, which requires frequent washing. The tiny red ants which are such a nui- sance in many pantries may be easily driven away if kerosene Is freely used. Thoee who have been troubled by them know that they always come in lines, ooming through some crevice in the wall or floor, and following one after the other in regular order until they reaoh the shelf above. If kerosene t1turned the entire 'length of this line also on the place where they Dome in, the floor, etq.,they will soon depart. You may need to' teat this a few times, but it is an easy and ,effectual method of getting rid of them. Leave the door and windows open awhile and the spent of kerosene will soon be gone. The proper way to prepare beef tea for a sick person is to out a good, tender, juicy steak in small bits, broil slightly on a hot griddle, and squeeze the juice by the use of a lemon squeezer In a cup previenaly heated ; season with a pinch of [salt and pepper, and administer at once in teaspoon doses. This is the pure blood of the beef, and without doubt is both food and strength for the patient. It should always bo Equeersd into a coffee or tea cup or previously heated, as, it is allowed to cool and then Is heated, it becomes curdled and is unfit for use. In this way, properly seasoned to snit the patient's taste, it is very palatable and rare- ly ever nauseates. Having had a great deal of experience hi sink, I have found more good results follow from the use of beef blood so prepared than by the use of all the beef teas ever made. A Hopeful Electrical Invention. It is a remarkable fact that while almost every month new uses are discovered for yet,as a matter of fact,for ale Yr ctrloit eixty yearn there has been no new means in- vented to produce the electrical current it- self. We have to depend upon the zinc plate immersed in a bath of acid chemicals, or on friction for which a steam-engine must be used. Bat the deatructlon of the zinc in the one case, and the use of the steam in the other, involves a waste of power which In all,save a few particulars, makes electricity to costly to use either as an illuminant or a motive power, An electrical light is very powerful, but gas or oil is very much cheaper. A train of cars was run by elect- ricity thirty years ago, and coot four times as much as steam. But now comes to the front Henry B, Ford, who claims to hem) dilioovered the secret of the cheap predate. dem eetricity.. If he has succeeded, it will n ke the greatest revolution known to the h' aiery of industry. This new process discards the steam•°agine, zine, and the colds, and roles upon carbon in its cheapest and most accessible forms, Mr. 1i'ord claims that with distillery slops, the debris of a gas house, the muck from a swamp, he can pro. ducts -an electric current suffiolently power- ful to replace steam and produce light. Common salt or ocean water is all he needs with the carbonized materials, to induce the -e n a what he claims current, If his invention i torte for it, a stelmehip can go to sea with some waste carbon, one-tenth the volume cf the coal which is new indiepensabie, and a mo- tive can be doveloped which will cost but a trifle, and yet will be powerful enough to propel the heaviest and largest steamers from continent to continent, If there le anything in this invention, Its possibilities are simply incalculable. The Rights of Labor. BY THE BEV, E. A. STAF1f0RDI A, 11, 'The domande of labor appear to be pressed to the front by means of utrikes and other itrong imethode with inn easip g frequency Y a,Id poi tivenees. To those who read between nes, or by etxaWe are willing to detect the leuree of the wind, thin fact will be regarded as but the beginning of a stragglo which is destined to stretch its length over a pretty long period of time, and to force many things tato prominenue whioh do not appear as essential parts of the question at issue. The coal problem which is in solution is that which has up to the present bellied every economist. How shall the wealth which is created upon the earth bo distributed so as to give something like equal oomforts and advantages to tsoue who Pre equally deserv- ing The world will not see the end of the difficulties between laborers and their ern, p.oyers until tide problem receives a nolo tion more is accord with the epirlt of Chris- tianity than any yet offered. Tho throes of thio conflict aro but the birth pangs of a new Beale upon which the rights of all mon wilt be adjueted more evenly than aver before, One principle which is euro to he recogniz• ed as tee outcome of these disturbances is that no man can hold wealth as a possession for his exclusive advantage. A good many already recognize this principle and aot upon it. Of what they receive, bo it =oh or little, they hold theureolvee responsibly to distribute some portion for the good of others, Tha amount which they no use must bear some definite proportion to their total income, and they distribute according to the best of their wisdom among the yam lone obj eats which they believe to be worthy. Bat this cannot be said to be the rule among those who have been most highly favored by the gifts of Providence. Went men can get into their posseesiou, by fair means or foul, so long as they oan hold it legally, they claim for themselves and their familien without any thought that the rest o mankind have a right to be partners with them in the eujoymout which wealth affords, Not only is this true, but the vast multithde have no idea but that it is right that it should be so. The )ate Mr, Vanderbilt was praised after his death by his own paster tor having given at one time $10,000, and at another $50,000 toward certain objects aim- ed at by his own church. On such a basis he has been commended as a very liberal man. Now any ono who can praise such gifts from one with the oountleaa treasures possessed by this mon shows that he has not outgrown the thoroughly selfish conception of the possession and use of property. Ho knows nothing about the bread, New Tes- tament ccnoeption of an owner of property an a steward for God in behalf of humanity. Yet that is where most men are to day. The greatest millionaire Canada has had was conspicuous while living for the small- est ideas cf his responsibility to any but his own flesh and blood ; and when he died his will was found to be planned upon the same narrow conceptions. He knew no one bat his own family. Snell facts show that the world le yet rot, in any adequate degree, awakened to any sense of duty in connection with the posses- sion of wealth, beyond simply the building up of a family in exceptional selfishness and outward splendour, Now this condition of things cannot pre- vail. The human race is no more created to submit to this atate of thought and action forever, than it was to submit to the tyranny of absolute monarchs forever. It is certain to rise up in some manner and throw off the garment Wench ideas sooner or later. This is not saying that there is no differ- ence in the business capacity of different man, nor dose it imply that wealth always gees by accident, Esther statement would be far enough from the truth. But some - Mmes it goes by accident ; and through methods of epeculation that are perfectly respectable, but all the same the offspring of the enemy of the human race, wealth very often falls into the hands of the most un- worthy. Altogether there is so much irregu- larity In its coarse and distribution teat ;nen would be unworthy of the name if they would allow it to go on distributiag its favors as it has done in the pest. When then the high tumult of this strife shall have finally subsided, mon everywhere will have learned, not only what mony of the most wealthy are aeginning to learn, that beyond certain limited amount, money cannot increase the happiness of a man or his family ; but also that endowments of wealth are not designed in the providence of God for eelfiah enjoyment, or to promote the vain consequence of a man or his family ' bat to be used on broad and liberal princi- ples, which will make the benefits as nearly as possible common to humanity. Men in general know little or nothing of this yet. This will not bo generally recognized now as any part of the problem to be solved, yet is is one of the most considerable elements in it. "When wc turn morea directlyto the Issue that appear upon the surface of this strug- gle we find involved in it tho rights cf sev- eral classes of society. As it is thrust upon the attention by the demands of a strong or- ganiz'atnon of laboring men, it is proper to recognize the rights of labor at once. Of course a good many absurdities are set up along this line, When men say that labor alone creates all wealth, they aro going baok to a state of civilization about as old as Adam, In his day labor did create all wealth. If a man wanted fruit he picked it. If loo wanted meat ho killed it. About the only difference between wealth and poverty, then, in the time of that happy family, was when one had fend and another had not because he had not prepared it. "Then, in that sense, labor along made wealth, But thorn has been no time aline, wh n thought, and the power to organize, and skill to direct, have not counted for something In creating wealth. This Is seen in the organization of the 1 .nights of Labor itself. Soruo brain has given its bast thought to this object, and that brain has really done more than all else to make the organization compaot and powerful. . But there is room to allow to labor a pretty large claim, and yet retain nit the rights of the organizer and directorr of many hands, Mill's summary of the rights of the labor- er appears about as sound as any theoretic scheme that can now be constructed, SeVen Years Of suffering relieved in as many days.e. Clams 0au80 in the aggregate as much suffering as any single eieoase, It is the magic solvent potter of Putnam's Corti Extractor that inakea it speedily eueoessfut in removing corns. Take no substltato, however highly recommended. Pittnam'e Painless Corn Et- traettr is the best. Sure, safe, and pain. less. The huge, drastic, griping, eiokenIua pills are fast being superseded by Dr, Pierce's at Purgative Pellets,' Sold by druggists. 1, The laborer has a right to regular or steady employment. Manufactarera recog- nize this when they keep their factories open during mesons when it cermet possibly pay them to keep running. They recognize the principle that working mon have a right to a toady employment, 2, He has a right to ouch wages as will feed, and clothe, and house, and educate reasonably his family, This be a pretty °lea - tie etatement, but its application in pram tics would always be regulated by public opinion among laborers themteivee. Tiheee two claims adapt themselves to oaeh other, If, in the nature of the case an occupation dopa not afford constant employment,then while the work continuos the wage moat be proportionately higher, so ail on the whole to equal the minimum wage at COW stint employment. 3, He kas a Tright to bo made sere of hie. pay, end that regularly, This is already. recognized q Was which make wages a first claim urn Pn .estato, It may oDur at any time that em -tye s °unuct grant all this, but when tufa to the oaee there are come disturbing elements at work, Our civilization is not aocomplieh- ing all that may roascnehly be demanded of it. Poselbly unreasoning epeonlation has allowed well earned wealth to pour in upon a few flet millionairee, who held the specula - dye markets under their control, and sweep tato their own Ilanda with unerring prect bon all that is ventured by small operators.. Thin is, more largely than any other cause, to blame for depriving the taborer of his rights. Under normal conditions any fac- tory that to worth carrying on will yield these three claims to the laborers that work In It, and yet allow to o,pital its fair divi- dend. Bat these disturbing elements are an important part of the problem, and they will be considered in another paper. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Prince Henry of Bettenberg, the bus - bend of the Princesa' Beatrice, la not to be made a Captain of the First Life Guards as reported. Mr. W. E. Forster, once Chief Secre- tary for Ireland, and who was aupposed to be dying, le now rapidly regaining strength. Lady Florence DIxie has emergod from her seclusion by the pnbllcation of a vol• ominous paem on `t Irish Freedom' in Mr. Parnell's journal. The first stone which was recently laid by the Prince of Wales in the Anglo. Gothic chapel at Cannes, bore the follow- ing iooscription : "To the glory of God, and in loving memory of Leopold, Doke of Albany, this stone was laid by Al. bert Eiwacd, Prince of Wait. A. D. MD000LXXX.VI." Mr. Charles Crocker, the San Francisco miliionlare, who competed recently with Mr. Donald A. Smith, of Montreal, for the rt Communicente" at the Morgan art sale in New York, is said to be ambitious to make a finer collection of paintings than that gathered by the late Mr. Wil- liam H. Vanderbilt. Despite his name, he has no taste for the sublime crockery which bringa over $1,000 an inch at ano- tion. Wonderful man of ninety, bar a few days, as the Emperor William is, and obstinately as he persists in doing every- thing as he used to do it twenty years ago, save go riding, it is stated that he is hi an extremely precarious condition, and that any day the candle may go cut. The once broad, full cheat has quite fallen in. His vAce has become so weak, and comes from so far back in the throat, thst' it is very difficult to catch up hie utter- ances, and he is very, vary tottery on his legs. King Humbert of Italy dislikes Court balls, and royal fetes, and when he has to attend them he looks painfully bored. His Majesty prefers to remain to private apartments playing, billiards with his aides and ordnance officers, or talking about horses and hunting through dense clouds of tobacco smoke. He went to the theatre once during the first year of his reign, bub could never be persuaded to go since. Qe y leen Margaret is ver fond of the thea- tre and always goes tothe Apollo when there is something attractive presented. When Her Majesty appears in her loge the artists stop end the orchestra strikes up the Riyal March. The artists do not like this, but they gracefully yield to the custom. Oa the marriage of Prinecsa Beatrice the women of Briatol resolved to make a present to Her Royal Highness, and it was decided that the article should be such as might represent the art of life in the manufactures of the city, and should consist of a marriage cheat, and a piece of embroidery. The gift is now ready for presentation. The panels of the cheat represent the return of Queen Elizabeth from an entertainment in Bristol in 1574; a carved representation of Henry VII. presenting his sword to the Mayor of Bristol ; the departure of Sebastian Cabot from Bristol ou'hls voyage of discovery, and the initials of B satrice and Battenborg. The chest le, three feet four inches long, two feet two inches broad, and three feet four inches high, and is the work of Mr. Trapnell, who designed and manufactured the beautiful wedding casket presented to the Princess of Wales •23 years ago. .1110. An Asiatic mob, according to a recent writer, differs from the ordinary one. All over Asia from Conetantinoplo to Shanghai, vast mobs continually assemble for worship, for jollification, for •curiosity, and nobody interferes, The kings do not apprehend re- volt from them, the police do not look for riot, the people do not fear accident. In India, Burinab, Ceylon, Arabia, and China immense crowds continually assemble with. out disturbance of any kind, without endan- goring public peace and with out digester, save when, owing to the breach of sanitary laws, some deviating epedomic is oc0xsionally generated. A true "mob" of 100,000 per - eons is a constant phonon -mann in India, and is as little regarded by the magistr stns as a crowd of 100 would be in London. A religious tract, called "Put Not Your Trust in Prince:'," wee thrown into the pa- kten of a simple old German. Ho read the title and soliloqulzod : f0 Veil, I don't put some druat in princes. Day must pay der same as vite mans." "The light that Ilea, In woman's eyes,' Is a ray of heavens own brightness ; b ut 1 is, alas I often dimmed or quenohed by some wearing disease, perhaps silently borne, but taking all comfort and enjoyment meat out of lila. That light of the household oan be re- kindled and made to glow with its natural brightness, Dr. R. V, Piorce's" Favorite Prescription" is a potent specific frit moat of tho chronic weakn Issas and diseases pecul- iar to women, • When capitalists oonibtne, what does this i syndicate 2 , Young or middle-aged mon sub- fering from nervous debility or other deli- cate diseases, however induced, speedily and parmanently eared, A$ dre8s, WD ile n Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, tI.AY, $1,000 hearse just procured by a undertaker, is deaoribed as a gorgeous affair, its prinolpal•'feature being rc a speak- iug)tube leading from tho driver's seat to the intetbon" Nothing more ingenious and convenient otuld be conceited. When a corpse wishes to halt aprocosaion it oan do eo without unduly alarming the. remainder of the cortege, Do not talcs Pills or Panniers, containing Calomel, fore at this time of the part too lrov sal c may be eerions. If sou rewire .a do.e of physic take IJr. Garaon'e Stour zee. and Con- atIpation Bite, e ; it ac's gently on the Bowels, purities the Blood, improves the c roulatit.n atilllulates the Liver and Kidneys, F end s sed• tip puree P.11iousnoss Headache, Dyspepsia, Indisr'ation, Search the Drug acorea from on end of Canada to the other, and you ottnnot find a remedy equal to it, Try it endure it in your families. Sold everywheoe in largo bottles at 60 (Qat9, An old man who was discharged from the regular army a few weeks ago, after having been in the aerviee twenty years, has since been marries. His army experience made it Impossible for him to lead a quiet life, That's why he married, Imperial Cough Drops will giv+. Positive and !natant Relief to those enfferiug from Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, etc., and are invaluable to eratore and vooaliats, For sale by druggists and confeotioners, R. & T. W A '1 S O H, htsnufaoturerr, 'Ommoute. • A.P.s.74 50 ACILE FAltst FQS SlL7—ClIEAt' Only 8100 required down ; balanus at 6 per cent. Address. M. 0, KENy London, Ont, 30 Ilidtfen Naure anti New Verse Curds, 10o ; Samp;s Book, 5 ', Gold Rloga, Albums, etc , forclubs. CTAP IMRD 00, Knowlton, P,Q. $3 5fin Acre Farm—$2,0001131: Acre f 4 Farm -100,000 aottDvplays,15 pante 100 000 5 cent music; Inetrumente halt -peke. BUD LAND, Toronto. BAND SAW MA011[NEa—ALLSikk,1—LATE9T Improvemeute; bracket band esae for attach Ing to posts; neat, cheap and durable ; send for olroulata. JOHN GILLIES 8t CO., Carleton Plane, Oat, ABIG OF1''Ett.—To fotroduce them, we will GIVE AWAY 1,000 Self-operating Washing Ma. chines. If you want one send us your name, P. 0. and express office at once. THE NATIONAL CO., 23 Dey St, N.Y. ALT—ONE THOU3AND TONS COARSE SALT —bulk and sacks; oleo all other grades salt ; eneoial freight rates and lowest paioee. Correepor'. donee eolioited. Address, WILLIAM CAMPBELL, Goderlch, 500 Engines, Boilers, Iron, Wood, and mleceilan- eons machines for sale For particulars addreee H. W. PE VRIE, Brantford,.Ont, YOUR MEN only ; Something you all want; a Delay 40 cent Sample by Mail for15 ole. (silver) Agte wanted. Donaldson & Co , Richmond Flt., Loudon, Ont. .NN, PLANER KNIVES, STAVE CUTTER, STAVE jointer, chews box, veneer, leather splitting bookbinders, moulding, tenoning, and other maehlne knives of beat quality, manufactured by Perna HAY, Galt Machin Knife Werke, Galt, Oat. ; send for price net A. IIAN Olt A WORIAN WANTED IN EVERY township. to sell Dr. Talmage's new book, "Live Coats " The keoncet and moat vigorous epedmen of oratory ever written ; nearly 700 pages ; only $2; full particulars of tele and other new hooka Fa.E1t. Schuyler Smith & Co., Publlehere, London, Ont F011 SALE Cl/MAP BY PRIVATE TREATY : 16 Head Thoroughbred Durham Cattle, with that-olaee pedigrees; 6 head Thoroughbred Ayrshire Cattle, with nrst-otaae pedigrees; 8 head High Grade Cett'e; 61 head Thrroughbred Leioeoter Sheep. For perticnlars address d. GLAZEBR00E, Slmcoe, Norfolk Co., Ont. Lt PECI lL ATTENTION.—Something every - 5.71 body eh,uld have, a "Wirt" fouateia pen; the cheapest and meet durable ever invented; every pen guaranteed to give eatiefaotloa ; agents wanted for all parts of Canada ; Largs commission and no capital required; send for deeoripteve circulars and special inducements to agents. 0, 11. Brooks, Sole Canadian Asent, Toronto. bIIIOILTIIAND THOROUGHLY TAUGHT BY 471 Mall ; oe students attending our Academy will be thoroughly prepared by highest Masters in Short - band, Typewriting, Bookkeeping, and Buaineae Train - Ing. Advanced students helped to (situations. Im- mediately address, The Union Shorthander'e Com. menial Academy, Arcade, Toronto. NELSON,t CO., MILLWRIGHTS ,5 ENGINEERS, l� Berlin, Oat—theemanuf.clurerelo Canada cf autometio engines from 2 to 15 h. p' ; au5omatio en- gines for printine o03eee ; high speed automatic en- gines for electric lighting; automatic engines for cheese, butter, and sausage factories, or any other purpose ahem a light and cheap power is required. For price list and other particulars add rase as above. 4GI_IA GRAND ROOK. EROES OF VIE BIBLE. BIBLE LANDS AND TSE Wen IN T113 SOUDAN." This remarkab'e book ie f alb from the preee with 750mgeeof reedine mat- ter of thrilling interest and etertling truths. Over 50 pages of beautifal steel and wood engravings and maps. It is bold only by Bllbxrtption; a repreeoata Live wanted in every district; Ifbaral pay will be given ; full information will bo given free of charge by the Bole pueliehera in OaneSa. International Book d Bible House, 56 and 95 Front St, E , Toronto. WMWM. EVANS, . vv 89 to 93 McGill Street, Montreal. Field, Garden, and Flower Seeds, Seed Grata, Clover and Timothy- Seed, oto. Nursery Steck, Fruit and Ornamental Trees, Small Fruits, .+bombe Roses, etc , Greenhouse and Bedding Plante, Send for catalogues. Vegetable Plante, eto. WILLIAMS,Pelt Slate Roofer, 1ltanufueturer and dealer In Tarred Felt, Renting Pitch, Building papers, Carpet 'and Deafening Felt. Ready Roofing, etc. For low prices address H. WILLIAMS, -4 Adelaide St. E., Toronto. WAGON AXLES. AIB, t4 Gil; & . Manuteaturere of the Cetebr.ted Anchor GUELPH aid WORKS ){rand DUPLEX. T. PEPPER & Co., Guelph, Ont. Our Duplex Axles are all to be had at all the priuolpal Hardware Stores in the Dominion. 5' —CELEBRATED— Crocker Roller Skates. p Snu use nilda One Mlllt ❑ a r e C and U.S. Million Simplest, etro❑geet, lightest and eaeleet running. Send for Catalogue. Liberal inducements to partial building rink& Local agents wanted. CROCIKER SKATE CO., 198 King St. W.. Toronto. 001, The Billing Out and Packing for Nursery REas amen anti Dealers 8 et,'i{alt .T Leading hardy kinds, In large quantitlea, raleed on our awn grounds, in lat, 430, H, Hr Hurd & Son, -TREES Halton Nursery, Burlington,. • 0011. a Allan Line itoyal fall Steamahipsr Sailing dtiriog winter from Portland every Thurs- day and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and In summer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, calling et Londonderryo Y to land Melte arid ppase en era for Scotland and troland ; also Iron{ Baltimore , via Halifax and St Jobn'e, N,F.,toLiverpool/ ertnlghtly duan summer menthe. The steamers of Its 01a8 gow llnee sail during winter to and from Halifax, Portland, Beaton and Philadelphia ; and duriag sum - mor between Glasgow and Montreal weekly ; C:as• gew and Boston weekly, and Glasgow and Phlladel phis t etniaahily, For freight, passage, or other Intone atie �dapp o to A Schumacher & Co., Saltimote 1 S. Cuda & o, Halling ; Shea & Ob., St, John'? N.r. ; Wm Thomp- son & Go. St, John, N. B, ; Mem & ICo , Chicago ; Love ee A{don. Now York ; 11. Bonnier, Toronto,. Allan?, Rao &, Co„ Quebec ; Wrn. Brook e, P ode Ode; LI, A, Allen, Portland, Boston, Montreal. Snow Drift I FLOFITE 'i1ERE IS P NO BETTER. R Bakingowei E. 7 The Snow Drift Baking Powder Oo., Beantierd, Ont FREE FLOWERING PLANTS BY MAIL, 13 for $1l 00 I ALL Ftin'r Quemrr, and with every 1, " 50 1 polio order, an amaryllis, a Ohryre 3 " 25 ( anthemum or Monthly Roth, FI¢EE. The {fest Strawberry Plants, 25 pts. a Doeet. I guarantee Plante to please, and to, arrive in good order 00 any po*t ctiieo in the Dominion. Large ;hats ty freight or exprree. 3. P. Cockburn. Florist, (Stamps taken) GaAVEGGIUaeT, Onr. LINTON, LIKE & CO., Galt, Ont. AXLE AND 51A• CHINE ScFtaw WORIre, Cor- dage ee Wagon Axles. Iron and Steel Set ,1 Oap Serewe, 041. List on eeppiloation. B RANTFrr` -RD COLD WATER' �rCR STA.1CB, NEVER FAILS. JAMES PARK & SON Pork Packers, Toronto. L. 0. Bacon, Rolled Spice Bacon, 0. 0. Zsooxi Glasgow, Beef Hama, Sugar Cured Ham, Dr1ed Beef, Br ast Bacon, Smoked Tonguee, Mom Pork Pickled onguee, Cheese, .Family or Navy Peek Lard In Tube and Palle, The Beet Brands of Eng. flee !Tine Dei ae salt 1n Rt...,t ARMSTRONG'S Patent Tempered Steel Baggy & Carriage Gears. Our "Jump Seet" Body on Eclipse Gear meets with a ready ante, and makes a 'felt, haudeome, durable and useful conveyaeoe. Rtdee easy with one or four paeeengere, and chanced from a eiogte buggy to a double carriage quickly .ar d converlently. Ask your c arriage maker toe partfoulare. Catalogue mania on application to J. S. ARMSTRONG Mfg. Co. (1Ld)., GUELPH, CANADA IOUYEFITS! When L say cure I do t of mean inorely to atop them for a time and then have them return again. I mean a radical care. I have made the disease or PITS, EPILEPSY orFALL- ING SIOIONE Se life-long study, I warrant my remedy to cure the worst casco, Because others 11000 failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my Infallible remedy. Give Express and Post Office. It costs, you nothing for a tyle, ,ad I will cure you. ,Address DB.. n. 0.1200T, Branch Office, 37 Yonne St1, Toronto, ONTARIO PUMP CO Y (Limited.) Toronto - Cont. Seventeen Sizes GLARED WINDMILLS, From 1 to 40 h. p.. for Pumping Water. running Grain Orusherr, Straw Out - tore, Root Pulvere, 0 any other maehinory up bo a 40 h. p. Grist Mil] - HAYING TOOLS. A Full Linc of It=v THE };EST. I X L I'11110 ATILT, guaranteed to grind from 10 to 20 bushola por hour, aoonrdieg to .siaa. These Mille are the meet durable, perfect and cheapest iron Feed M111 yet invented. L. Irl TANKS, Front Are smallest nlr to 2,855 bids. PIPE AND Pipe Fittings. In fact a fell Line of Water Supply Material. rump' WINDMILLS frig From 8 to 30 feet diameter. %i 1 PUMPS. Icon and Wood, Force or Lift. DEEP WELL PUMPS A Specialty. Send ue your eddrese on a poet card sad we will nd you 1'4 -page illustrated oatalogue free. New Orleans Road Cart Co'y, —Y ureer sae— Ala oIt Winters' a Patent Road Cart Buggies, Carriages, Sleighs, tize, mad for Cetelegue. J. WINTEEES, Manager. Galt, Ont. ft, i' : y it ll ' it Q,.TIORI.. 4i'a I00,oq ro,Itivurometly or 1 and vedisease 03 el0 anden thousands or eases or Clio worst kind and of long stalanne owLnawe eay, oVtep aafwdi.LE1W0004Td le1'drAyPs0o 3300ow0i0!se Fmaty Efttohtgfontshehayb. sufferer. Give express and a 0, address, Da. '1'. A. 01.000400 Branch Office, 37 Siortge St,,'I'oronto FOR THEI MILLION. Along the Ilse of the Chicago and Northwester. Railway In Central Dakota and Northern Nebraska. New eectione are being opened up and rapidly settled in these wonderfully predacity* regions, and the " first oomere" will have Drs) choice " of location, For full information (which will he sent you free of oharge) about the free !arida and cheap homes, apply to JOIIIN II, ILO>sLEY, Western Oanedlan Paee, Agent, 0. ee N. W. Ry., R. 8, HAIR, 9 York St., Toronto, Oaf, General Pass, Agent, Chicago, Ille. 0 0 CONROY'S CIRRIAGE TOPS Are the Beet and Oheapest in the Market. Order one trona your Barriage Maker. Take no other kind. Send for 0atalorue-407 King St. W., Toaoxro. BIG B EDUCTION WAf5HES 'A combination among manufacturers le now being organized for the purpose of advancing prices; tele organization fe thoro ieh andombranes manufacturers of watches and watch cases in the United States and the Dominion. To the uninitiated this may appear orange and improbable, that whilst the Farmer can positively got no protection, Manufacturers the world over are combining for the purpaae of forcing prioee up. Aoy retail Jeweller (it he. io willing to poet you) will endorse cur etatement, that the watch trade of thlo•Coatinentle to -day (though quite recently or- ganized) one of the etrongeot oombinatione ever known, their cemb!❑ed capital repreeenting over twenty mailers, and extends from Maine to Oregon and Newfoundland to Btitieh Colombia. Previous to the completion of this Huge Combina- tion. we oocured SEVERAL VERY LARGE PAR- CELS, which we propose to dfetrionte amongst our thoueande of Tatiana At Nearly 25 per Cent. Less Than Old Prices. For the NEXT 60 DAYS We will Sell at the following Reduced Prices : Appleton, Tracy a$ Co. $24 50 1'. S. Bartlett • le 60 Peerless Chicago, a new brand, Jewelled same as P. S. Bartlett - 9 00 Dentin -Ion. Jewelled same as Y. B. Bartlett - • • • 9 00 ' AU the above are in Solid Coin Silver Cases, Men's Size, Key Wind. Peerless Chicago or Dominion, in silverine caves 6 00 P. S. Be: Nett, In sllve"hoe cases • 10 00 This new metal is guaranteed to hold it, color, and is in fieleh, appearance and all respects, (except in- erlorie value) the equal of coin sliver, and being vary hard retains its finish ae no other metal can. Men's bite, key wind. These prioee positively cannot be repeated after date mentaoeed. Certlfleote of guarantee accom- anies eap ch watch. Postage aid to anyart of the Dominion. and safe delivery guaranteep Our 120 -page Catalogue Sent Free, contains over 1,O110 ltluatrar1oue of Gold and Silver Jewelry, oto„ mainly cf our own manufacture. CA. STARK Wholeeale and Retail Denier, Importer and Menu. lecturer, 52 Church St., Toronto. trasmorislingonemsnammmemwelicemum O POR 1 Valuable tre sent ee The !Opium, lAlolCplli)ac, anal Mindred.Hlabits. V atrce en free. medicine may bo 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 thea° who have been cured, Address, ammesemegammilmanaussommuswimmesasameassusummin ' Pile V. alAitt, 47 Welliegton Street East, Toronto, Val Canada, tinatixt MANUFACTURERS AND' MILLERS WILL SAVE MONEY BY USINGCl3 p IVEachino Try it onoo find pen will neo no other — — Every Barrel Guaranteed. We are the Sole Mannfacturerrs of the Genuine I;ardiuo. Jar Also Cylinder, 'Engine, IVool and {fairness Ofls.' IVIcCOLL BEDS. & 00.1 TORONTO. Coal it ''SL7NJ LGEI ' grand, Finest in the Tiy Our Canadian Ln Oil, Market.