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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-10-14, Page 3OUSEHOLD. Stale ,Bread, A great deal of bread is thrown away by those Wile can ill afford it, from lack of knowledge how to use it. On the farm, in most instances, of course, stale broad is not wholly lost, for if wet a little it slakes good. food for the poultry, or stay' he given to the pigs, bub this is not the best way to Make use of it even by those who havo poultry olid pigs, There aro many ways to utilize stale bread. It make delicious griddle- cakes when soaked in cold water, Three shall slices with water enough to cover them should be sufiieient, when the milk and flour are added, to make two quarts of flatter. Some prefer to put in one egg, while others like them fully as well without. When the bread is soaked soft make ib kine, witht. spoon, add the milk and sufficient fig., stiffen enough se that the cakes can bi asily turned. 1"f sour milk is used add to ' e battet oneeven tablespoonfulul of soda. Frerieh toast, always a favorite wish chil- dren, can be made of thin slices cut from a stale loaf and moistened in milk and egcs-•- two eg s to a pint of milk—and then fried ou a griddle with a mixture of butter and lard or butter and beef drippings, and may be eaten with sugar or syrup, like griddle- cakes. Pieces of bread which aro not too hard can be made into a rosemblanee of fur. key dressing. Cut the bread into dice, and if you have a quantity of gravy from which fat, can be taken, left from any kind of roast—though a piece of butter will do es well—thoroughly grease the bottom of a a spider, put in the bread, with some little chunks of butter and plenty of seasoning, ; then pour enough boiling water on to mots- teu it, cover tightly, and, in a moment, it will steam through and you can stir it, and either brown a little or have it moist like dressing. It should be eaten with gravy over it, and is a good substitute for potatoes. The little dry, hard pieces and crusts which always accrunulato an bo put on a pie -tin in an oven that is just hot enough to dry and make them a light brown, then roll thein fine and put away to use in making croquettes, frying fish, otc. Even these slightly brown- ed. ornmbs make excellent griddle -cakes with the addition of one egg and a handful of flour and milk to a batter. Stale bread niay be utilized in making a custard pud- ding also. The fact is, that where economy is the rule bread will not be thrown away. Favourite Reoipes, Fo.ssitso SAUCE.—One-half cup of butter, one cup of boiling water, one cup of granu- lated sugar. Beat the butter to a cream, add the sugar and beat until it is white and foaming. Just, before serving pour on the boiling water and stir a minute. MuTE Ptr»Dtvo.—One pint of milk, one half teaspoonful of salt and one pint of flour. Boil the milk after adding the salt ; when the milk begins to rise, stir in the flour, and as soon as it is well mixed the pudding is done. It should not he made until after the sauce, as it should be eaten as soon as tua�cle. y tyOTTACE PUDDING. —Sift with one and one-half cups of flour one teaspoonful of cream tartar and one-half teaspoonful of soda. ?Six with this oue cup of sweet milk, one cup of sugar and two eggs well beaten. Bake till done in a quick oven. This is a very good pudding and should be served with a liquid sauce flavored to suit. SAUCE.—One coffee cup of sugar, one scan half cup of butter, one egg, one lepton, one-half of a small uwtnneg, three tablespoon- fuls of boiling water. Cream the butter and sugar together, add the egg, well beaten, all the juice and half the grated rind of the lemon and the nutmeg ; beat ten minutes and th4tatild the boiling, water, a tablespoonful at a time. Keep the sauce hot over steam or in the top of the tea kettle, but do not allow it to moil. SPONGE PCDDINCS.—Three eggs, once. cup of sugar, one cuppbf flour, two tablespoonfuls of water, one-half, teaspoonful of soda, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of cream -tartar. Beat the egg thoroughly; mix the cream• tartar with the flour and add the soda last,' dissolved in the cold water. Bake in a largo dripping pan ; spread the batter thinly and bake ten minutes. .When done, spread with ' currant jelly, roll while warm and lay in a clean towel. Serve cut in slices with a pud- ding sauce ; or eaten cold it is a nice cake. CocoaauT PrnDlar..—Soak three table- 9pUOnfnle tapioca lcold water over mg ht , boil one quart of milk, add the tapioca and boil five minutes; then add the yolks of four eggs, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, three tablespoonfuls of dessicated cocoanut ; boil ten minutes ; turn into a dish to cool ; boat the whites and two tablespoonfuls of sugar to a foam. Spread over the top and sprinkle over a little more cocoanut. Set In the oven to brown slightly. APPLE on PEACH MERINGUE.—Stew and sweeten ripe juicy apples. Mash smooth and season with a little nutmeg or lemon. Lino pie plates with a nice crust and bake. As soon as done fill with the apple, and spread over the top a thick meringue made by beating to a stiff froth the whites of two eggs with two tablespoonfuls of sugar and a little flavoring. Set back into the oven until the top is slightly colored. Serve cold. Peaches used instead of apples in this manner snake a very delicate fruit pie. CABBAGE PCDDINcf.—Take a large head' of cabbage, .trim it a little, and boil it five minutes, then take it off and strip off eight or ten of the outer leaves ;• put the rest back in the•pot and boil twenty minutes, '• thenidraiii and chop fine With half a pound of bacon, half a pound of fresh beef or other meat, the yolk of one egg, one onion, half a { loaf of crumbled bread, a piece of butter the size of a walnut, one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful: ofpepper—black or red as you and put into the leaves Mix well a c like.w stripped off, do in a thin cloth and boil two hours. TO PRESERVE NATURAL FLOWERS.—To preserve natural 'flowers so that they will . look natural, either single or in bouquets, dissoleo by agitation and digestiong in a elosely•stopped bottle, three-q.uartere of an ounce of clear, pale gtun copal, coarsely powdered and Infixed with an equal Weight of broken glass, in one pint of pure sul- phuric ether—ethylie ether. ]Jip the flowers in this liquid, remove quickly, ex- pose to the air ten minutes, dip again, anti expose as before, Repeat dipping and dry- ing.four or five tunes, Most flowers thus treated will remain unaltered for some time if not handled, ORANGE PUDDING.—Peel and sited half a dozen small oranges and lay in a deep dish; and scatter sugar plentifully on as if they woe to be eaten raw. Make a soft custard of one pint of milk, and tablespoonful of ride I( flewsflo, four tablespoonfuls of sugar (heaped), I and the yolks of three eggs ; cook it in a clotdele boiler, and when It luras thickened take 416 from the fire ; flavor with lemon l and pour over tho °ran;;es ; put the dish in the o'vcn and bake fifteen or twenty Min- utes, thorn draw it to tho front and put a meringue °ver the top, wade of the beaten whites of the and, a heaping teaspoon- ful oon- frl of sliver. A CHASE FOR WILD HORSES, Au Incident of the ('Pains. Tony was a plainsman who lived on the plains near the famous Saskatchewan River. One day, while following some thievish In, diarist be ditcoveretl a herd of wild horses, and planned no leas, e n undertaking than -the ca .tune of the whole herd, Ifs told his discover to unlet• of friends, Bran, wiles° lives wa itere spent in the saddle tending horses and cattle, and who all owned tough, wiry f1 bronehos," as the native horse is galled, 10 a sort of half.Mexi. can tongue, and it was agreed upon by all that an extended effort should be made to try anti seeure thein for the money they would bring in the local inerkets. The men were gotten together on a ocr- tain day at an appointed ienulezvous, and with, six o1' seven days' rations for the party, and sin equal amount of forage for their horses, in a wegon wagonthey, had hired, they started for the Blue Water, which they readied in a day's long march. Some twelve or fifteen miles south of the mouth of the Blue Water, across the Saskatchewan River, into which it emptied, was a railroad station on the Canada Pacific, and here had been constructed a large enclosure to assist the railroad hands in shipping Battle, and this en- closure enters into our story, The first day at their camp ou the stream was given to their riding horses for a good rest and to bo fed up, while with the two horses from the wagon THEY RODE. ITP TUE VALLEY to 't locate the herd," for it Was not impro- bable that the seeing of the nien might have frightened them over to some stream near the Blue Water, in which case the camp would havoo be moved there. Although houhg the horses were not seen, their fresh tracks were, and the two nien returned to camp to report the fact. Before the sun had set that day, four of the horsemen, with their blankets tied be- hind their saddles, left camp and ascended the valley to where the tracks of the wild horses were thickest in the creek bottom, which indicated where they came to drink in the ,Horning and cool of the evening, and posting one mate within sight of the spring at the -react, the others were stretched down the stream about a mile apart, but in such a position that the horse could not drink from it without being seen. In fact, the whole object was to prevent their getting a drink that evening or next morning, so that on the morrow's run they would be at a great disadvantage compared with their own horses. One of the men saw them trooping down as dusk was coming on ; letting thein get very near the water, he frightened them back ; not violently, but just enough to masa: THEM TAKE TO TILE HILLS, and watch hien carefully from the distan crest. He passed along around the next point out of their sight, and from here watched their movements. In about a half of an hour they came cautiously back, stop- ping every minute or two, and with ears pricked forward, to survey the scene, and especially that part of it where the horse- man had disappeared. Again he allowed them to get near to the water, when, mounting, lie walked towards them, and they trotted rapidly away, as before, and again ho concealed himself from their view. In a little while longer, darkness had set in, and as these animals never travel at night, it was fair to presume they had pick- 1 ed out some cosey httle grass spot at the head of the valley, and laid down for the night, but without their evening chink, a de- privation, however, to which they were not altogether unaccustomed, so many suspi- cious elements of danger dfd they observe. Having satisfied themselves where the wild horses came to drink, even to the exact spot, the scattering line of nien drew together at t his point at a cold supper theY had brought with them, picketed their horses out on the best patches of grass near by, and spread- A Considerate Bride. sloe theireblankets on the ground, went to Caller—" I am so glad to see you looking At the very first break of daylight they so well and happy. Your wedding tour was were up, their breakfast taken cold, as he. not of long duration, I notice. Very sen - fore, and their blankets rolled up and placed sible, very sensible." in a positiwn where they could readily find' Bride—' My husband was perfectly them again, again, and, with their horses saddled, ing to prolong the tour ; but I know that waited for their prey. They strung along his presence was required at his place of the stream, but not so far apart as ,before, ` business. for when the wild horses put in an appear- I Caller—" Very few brides are so consid- ance again, they wanted to be near enough cruets as that." Meteoric Terrors, n tryin • to interest you ill this subject, so remote trying the studies of mot of you, T rely upon your sense of the unity of all eel- ence, and at the same time upon the strong hold which these weird bodies have ever' had upon the imaginations of znen, In ancient times temple$ were built Over the meteorite images that fell' down frozisJupiter, and div- ine worship was paid them, end in these lat- ter days a meteorite stone that fell lest year in India beoame the object of daily anoint - tags and other ceremonial worship, In the feudal imagery of the Apocalypse the ter- rors are deepens by there falling front heaven a great star burning as a torch," and by the stars of heaven felling " unto the earth as a fig -tree cesteth her unripe rigs when she is shaken of a great winch," The great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his head seven did. deme" is presented in the form of a huge fireball. " His tail draweth the third part of the stars of heaven, and did oast thein to the earth," Records of these feared visitors, tender the name of .flying dragons, are feund all through the pages of the monkish chron- iclers of the middle ages. The Chinese ap- pointed officers to record the passage of me- teors and comets, for they were thought to have somewhat to say to the weal or woe of rulers and people. By gaining in these later days a sure place in science, these bodies have lost their ter- rors, but so much of our knowledge about thein is fragmentary, and there is still so much that is mysterious, that znen have lov- ed to speculate about their origin, their functions, and their relations to other bodies in the solar system. It has been easy, and. quite common, too, to make these bodies the cause of all kinds of things for which other causes could. not be found, They came from the noon ; they came from the earth's volcanoes ; they carne from the sun ; they came from Jupiter and the other planets ; they came from the comets ; they carne from the nebulous mass from which the solar system has grown ; they carie from the fixed stars ; they came from the depths of space. They supply the sun with• hie radiant energy; they give the moonher accelerated 'motion they break in pieces.heavenly bodies ; they threw up the Mountable on the :moon they made Iarge gifts to our geologic strata ; they cause the auroras ; they give regular and irregular changes to our weather. A comparative ge- ology has been built up from . the relations of the racks tohmeteorites te•a large list of new animal forms has been nam- ed from their concretions ; and the possible introduction of life to our planet has been credited to diem. They are satellites of the earth ; they travel in streams, and in groups, and in isolated orbits about the sun; they travel in groups and singly through stellar spaces ; it is they that reflect the zo- diacaP light ; they constitute the tails of comets ; the solar corona is due to them ; the long coronal rays are meteor -streams seen edgewise. Beal Ability. Those who thirds that industry, however assiduous, and preparation, however thor- ough, will produce as good results where talent is absentand tastes areaverse aswhen they coinoide err exceedingly. Nothing can give that living power, that keen insight, that waren enthusiasm, which vitalize en- deavour and breathe a soul into labour but a nature attuned to and in love with the work in hand. The expression, a born ar- tist, or poet, or teacher is notwithout a real meaning, though often misunderstood. It does not mean thatsuch a onecan evernise to greatness in these directions without assidu- ous effort and careful preparation, but that he has within him those qualities which, if developed, may lead to heights perhaps un- known. for action together. They had not waited Bride— Oh, I ceased to be a bride very very long early ! In less than a week Ibecame a wife." wl[EN VIE WILD HORSES CAME Caller—"Ido not understand." over the hills and down into the valley, Bridle—i1leVe had not been married a I week making for the stream with an assured walk, before he asked me to sew on a but - as if they felt certain that their annoyance t°n. of the evening before must have had au:ple -asseison`-e` time to get away, and had done so. Old gentleman (to boys)—" Aren't you Two of the men came together, and when boys rather old to be playing so childish a the horses were about to drink, showed game as mumble -the -peg !" One of the boys thenmselves, mounted, and as they tore away —" We're playing for twenty-five cents a over the hills, followed them slowly at a game." trot. The other two men, apprised of this Thomas Carlyle, start by the signals of the first two, now mounted and walked their horses to the top the great Scotch author, suffered all his life of the nearest high hill overlooking the with dyspepsia which made his own life (itis - country for miles, and there sat down to erable and caused his best and truest friends rest themselves and horses. The two horse- not a little pain because of anis fretfulness. men after the herd rode to the creat of the Dyspepsia generally arises from diseases of hills, where they had seen them disappear; the liver,: and.. as Dr. Pierce's "Golden Med- keeping up their trot, and from this point foal Discovery" cures all diseases of tlris saw them on a distant ridge, probably a mile • great gland, it follows that while all cannot away, and turned towards thein. be Carlyles, even with dyspepsia, all can be Again they were spied beyond and fol- free from the malady, while emulating his lowed at a trot, the intention being not to virtues. give them time to graze or feed theinselves. In the canton of Zurich is Switzerland This desultory and long distance chase was there is a law which requires the proprie- kept nip until the wild horses had been fol- tors of land to catch two quarts of cock - lowed some twelve or fifteen miles to the , chafers every third year, when they' are north-west, when the two horsemen, b' supposed to appear. If any proprietor fans nmalcinga detour, got around them and start- to respond he is fitted quite heavily. It cd them back: • was officially announced that 1886 was tie Now the chase was made much more en- cockchafer year. The proprietors are in de- 1 orgotic, and the whole caravan was keptat mar, for cockchafers have not put in an a good•swing. gallop, till the two horsemen, appearainco, but the law is imperative. from the'lay ofthe, country, recognised that ar they were very near the Blue Water again, "Oh, wad some power, the giftie gle us, To see ourselves, as ithers see us 1 when they passed the panting wild horses at a fast run, although not ab ofive hundred yards in the-chase,to get closer Few women want to appear sick, and yet than.four or how Many we see with pain written on every The two most tired horsemen now return;- feature, who have been suffering for months ed tocamp down this Blue Water, leaving from female weakness, and who could :easily the freshet at this alternating pursuit .; and cure themselves by the use 'of Dr. ]?ferae's thoroughly out "Favorite Prescription to be found at any when the wild horses, thorou could and famed down; couldIse driven in any di-, clrttg store, This remedy' is a specific for motion whatever, as if they were so many. wed backs, nervous or lteliralgic pains, and domesticated cattle these two started thein all that class of diseases known as "female for camp ale°, keeping them ata gait that complaints." Illustrated, large treatise on gave them no rest cliseases of woman, with most successful W1ieu tine wild horses passod the camp courses of, self-treettment, sennt,for 10 gents the other horsemen hadp exchanged their in stamps. Address, World's Dispensary animals fora completely fresh mount, and Medical Assceiation, 663 Main Street, 130 - taking them in hand, drove them into the falx, N. Y. quicksands of the Saskatchewan River, and At the seventeenth anniversary meeting across that wide stream, so fast they °gildsof) the Grand. Lodge of the Independent not drink, followed by the entire camp, Order of Good Tempters in Glasgow there wagon and all, for the fastest they could was a procession foul• miles long through the possibly maintain now was only a good dog- prinolpal streets. trot, and at 11311hight they had the satisfae. 'U �tc nailed—Dr. Sago's Catarrh Remeay. tion of driving therm into the cattle drrrai at the railroadstation, and before the suis hacl 'liie'lietly of a thenen beiitg contains ever set nest da had gotten their mono for two pounds of lime. That of a politician y g a will avarago about four pounuls when his them, hosing l�e them to a wealthy depleted t, character• has .leen thoroughly', white- man, whose l�iotsc-fold had been cleplctecl a Ifttlt while befbre by a most successful raid washoct of Sioux DuBois'.I Dont use any snore nttescous purgatives slice Ss .Pills, Salts, ,iia, when you can get in Dr. Carson's •e_ , Stomaoh titters, a tnecitrine that cloves the Bowels Corsa a bottjttets are now World in the grondlAnds aEha�b codilpueoinarl cool, t101.eatt agrin� ceiitr0 of the 1)1so10 or waist. riledlohte 50 ors. A Free light. • S. USACIE CASING$,. The great roputatlon o; li34/s' Electric Ot is suoft that Thema induced unprhnelpled ersons to adopt 1 SN �y other 1141IIe.i as near 111. It a pp) ctols of Briggs' c s possible. The proem.Nese shipment from P:nglan4, Ex. Steaulehi 1 !' Nar- et the f . Electric Oil have the name and st3'ie wanfan." Lawast pricos to the truke. 1Ve arc sale Ttlk lc> "! It tee Oil registered both In Canada and the a,ent', in Canada for itefIride's Celebrated ;rice .) Unitech ,states, and no one can flee it butt • ase v ! bu 1 es. C,tvings. tilrtteforquotatiolls, I �d "1i. r hoarkn '.9f the success of Jlriggsl Eicot le Olt have BAKING POWDER 1 voad p 1 ,, adored sEolreatric JAS. PARK & SON, TORONTO. IlETxlull, Oil," E�e,otiron 011," &v., mud aro strnvhl•� to induce THE FAVORITE!, the public to buy theta instead of •ills genuine Electric f nil, a fief MERIDEN TTAi �(snj In eat sadotarn{irted were they that the iron lit R 1,a 14� CO. yy F3 Seat at I+ax•, In tlrc High Cot;r•t of Canada, to deprive Briggs .b Sons of their right to control the saute; but Cho Courts and the Minister of ,Agrkuulture at Ottawa fully sustained their roistered trademark. Brigg:i Electric 011 aures Wieu;oatism, Neuralgia,, Sprains and Bruises, complaints arising from golds OLIO av Sore Threats, Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis and ditiloult liroathin;,, A rural contemporary writes feelingly ou cr How to Treat an p,;ditor.". A good rule is to follow the example of Col, Crookctt Hand hint the decaliter and turn your back. A !•I C��. y POR D Diiil➢1TICE NNEss, opium, morphine, chloral, tobacco, and kindred (labii.. The medicine May be given in tea or coffee without the knowledge of person taking it if so desired. Send 60 in stamps, for book and testimonials from those who have been cured. Address 12; V. Lubon, 47 Wellington St. East, Toronto, Ont. Cut this out for future reference. When writing mention this paper. Paris has a new institution that is popu- lar. It is an establishment on a main boule- vard where, by paying half a franc (10 cents), one eau wash his hands, have his boots blacked, his coat brushed, write let- ters,, read all the leading Continental and English newspapers, consult a reference li- brary, and use a telephone. New York's many hotels render such au establislunent unnecessary here. A. P. 301. 11/ �^ —THREE—and two ladies—as Canvassers— J1 ood pay, H, E, KEssanr, Toronto, Ont, REPRESENTATIVE in each county to sell "Pro• posal and Espousal "--a Book on Love, Court- ship, Matrimony and kindred themes. Write for °heelers. international Book and Bible House, Toronto, Ont. $700 80 ACRE FART—j500 ee ACRE PAR31 YY�� i1 1 :Wile from Dundalk, 100,000 acting plays, 15 cents; 100,000 5 cent music ; Instruments half-price. BUTLAND, 3j King-st. W., Toronto. �,1E1L5 LE VIGOR -WORT, THE DECOCTION 1' of one single herb, is a sure cure for female irregularities ; stamp for particulars. P. STEVENSON, 45111:ercerStreet, Toronto, Canada. AGENTS FOR NEW PARALLEL FAMILY BIBLES—large type, splendid maps, beautiful illustrations; contains 4,000 questions and answers on Bible Topics ; liberal terms. International Book and Bible House, Toronto, Ont. CROW, Teachers d: Students attention During Holidays a special course of private lessons, by highest masters, will be given School Teachers and Students, on Shorthand, Drawing er Painting. AN who ems should come. Send immedi- ately for special circulars. Tun Moos Sxoar- itasaEns' ACADEMY, 39 & 41 Adelaide St East, Up - Stairs, Toronto. CANADIAN BUSINESS UNIVERSITY, AND Shorthand Institute, Public Library Building, Toronto, Specialties : Book-keeping, Penmanship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Enter any time ; write for circulars. J. E. CAMPBELL L.L.D., THOS. BENGOCGII, Princ•ipal'Business Dept. President. REV. E. BARBER, C. 11. BROOKS, sway. Principal Shorthand Dep. AGENTS 3—FOC CANT FIND A BOOK THAT gives better satisfaction or that you can make Money faster with than " World's Wonders," Sells to all classes—Christians and Infidels, Catholics and Protestants, old and young; old agents who have not canvassed for years are going into the field with it ; C. F. Jenkins sold 123 the first week ; J. E. Brace says : "The Bret woek with "Wonders" netted 111e one hundred and sixteen dollars," A good chance for unemployed persons; outfit free to actual can- vassers; write for terns. BRADLEY, GAzrEtsos & Co., Brantford. MONEY TO Productive Town, Village sk Farm Property D. 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Executors and Trustees are authorized by law to invest In the Debentures of this Company. The Capital and Assets of the Com, pany being pledged for money this received, de- posltos are at all tinges assured of perfect safety. Advances made on Real Estate, at current rates, and on favorable conditions as to re -payment. Mort- gages and Municipal Debentures purchased. J. HERBERT 3IASON, 3Im1aghtg Director. J. B, ARMSTRONG M'F'CCO. I'D), CUELPH, CANADA. oESks‘ 4dtk. • t141 A PERMANENT BLACK POLISH ESPECJALLYADAPTED FOR tAD1ES8&CHiLDRENS FINESHOES. FARMERS AND THRESHERS CAPTrot WANDER Use on your Machinery only the Well-known 04 Sw MACBINE: C� ..a Gri1NG8N MOM \\ ENGINE PeerlessOil SIX COLD MEDALS have been awarded it during the last three years. Try also our PEERLESS A.CLE GREASE for your \taggons and Howe Powens. Manufactured at QUEEN:CITY OIL WORKS, by SAMUEL ROGERS & CO., Toronto, SAW MILLS. ENCIN.E Heavy and Portabel. 3000 to 100,000 ft. per day and up. Portable and Stationary. from 6 H.P. to 200 U.P. Several new designs. .:F , EPO,{ Feu • - t'da¢WENOwaw �' . =_= ti• tiy� Iu1�B`,iNii'II �A.�,.. BOILERS: I�``•nfy3 :i ' !flint 3)urnq p ....i611�1 itl. .L't��iJ RFAI�it7l¶'TMi+N11�1f!141�11YILI r I '�' dpid7ln U ih d.! t4 ill nuTiPS If Gfi;mIS¢51><!ielia( Stationary, Locomobive, Return tubular fire box. Shingle Mills, Lath MiIls,Water Wheels, Planers and Matchers, Saws, Saw Tools, Belting, Ewart Chain, Chopping blips. SEND POR NEW Cxacui aR. EASTERN OPFICES-154 Ids-..rremes Se., Dloneireai; 3U St. Punt St.. Quebec. WATEROUS ENGINE WORKS CO. Brantford and Winnipeg. FAMOUS DIAMOND. iann i" nm n18'MIat11'MI pll I' T'1 "l" I' e" 1h IN 1 fl ;� r�-�t,^n�,/�ri'i-n And Largest Training School In ' Canada. Send feu calendar. Allan Line Royal Nail Steamship& Salting during winter from Portland every Thursday and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in snnl- STEEL Quebec M every Saturday to Liverpool, calling STEEL DOME HOT-AIR FURNACES. at Londonderry to land mails and passengers for Scotland and Ireland: also from Baltimore, via Hall - tarn and St. John's, N. F., to Liverpool fortnightly durin" summer months. The steamers of the Wes- tern lines sail during winter to and front Halifax, Portland, Boston and Philadelphia ; and during sunt- nnerbetween Glasgow and Montreal weekly; Glasgow and Boston weekly, and Glasgow and Philadelphia f THE LEADING WOOD COOK. In 6 Styles and 2 sizes. . Don't Buy till you see it. The Toronto Stove &M'f'g Co , (Lt'd), TJRNEYS' NEW HARRIS ASVD MAMMOTH 0 fortnightly. For freight, passage, or other Information apply to A. Schumacher Si Co., Baitinrore; 8. Cunard & Co.,' Rather Shea& Co;, Si. John's, Nfid.; Wnn. Thomp- son & Co., St. John, N.B.; Allen & Co., Chicago, Love & Alden, New York; H, Bourlier, Toronto; Allais, Rae & Co., Quebec; Wm, Brookie, Philadel- phia ; Il. 1, alio;i'ortlatd, Boston, Montreal. LATEST IMPROVEMENT IN FIRE ARMS. Bickel -man IinunncrIess Automatic Safety Single Barrel Shet Gun for tragi shooting, ehokedgitaranteed pattern with each gun, showing its shootingrinallttes i2.b,ire, price itisl•.00. Agent for alt the best the annus in England and the United States, SV, C. Sten' &Sox, B R4'M,11r RlcflArins & Co:, SV,W,Cnessta Pn rt,siteAMINOl>., W'nraiksi1lNSRnr Braille. W. lVl9. COOPER, ca 5,.y 8t.,toronto, 0 The Mot Elllecttire, flletw, tlhralble and Economical Boater to the Market fO.;• , wader and ventiiattrg °hereho!, Scheele, Pubilo Buildings, Stores and Private Residences. Stmplo In Centimme. Ekon And easily =raged, capable of [(Vitae mote hest with lees ooasumplion of fuel than Any ether heating Appiratueh tV'Absolutely bias Tight.14 Eight sizes "Harris" and tour dreg "MAntitieth" are Made and ole be tot either In Brlok or Portable form. Correspondence sellolted. Pcir Cataloguer! fwd Mute* information *Admit Thu 116 & OU11 Y 00. (Limited), MARL