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The Exeter Times, 1887-8-18, Page 3HOUSEHOLD. by putting in e little spinach juice to white cerrant jolly, or any light jolly. Cmineon jelly, made by using a Itttle coehineal pow, Tim Development of Boys, der. Eaoh layer or ribbon of jelly muet be very hard, or frozen before the other is pour, ed in. After it la frozen it is Q116 in slices - It emu be tamed out of the mold whole on a fine stand, to Show the different ribbons, with eny trouble, great or plan* and you and cut on the table. will eave him from committing follies which Whole fruits sueli as strewberries cur he will regret forever. When e mother soya rants, slices of Pineapples, oranges, etc., can be frozen in layers of jelly. Turn it upside down upon a stand and terve. It seems to me that the key to the wise development of boys is their coofidence ; win that and hold it, and you hold your boy. Let a boy once feel that he can come to you to her boy, " 1 want to know your worst and your Wee," and is discreet iu her coune sets, she will not only protect him but strengthen him. A, great deal of mischief is done by neking mountains out of melehills. if a boy is so unfortunate as to be without a mother, let him seek the counsel of some wise and motherly woman. lf a boy has a weak and selfish mother, It him respect her for all. she has suffered and shelter her with his love. of fatal accidents ; it yearly prodnces A great many of the trends with bop arise Wi, deepread infant mortality ; to it is due from improperm diet. The next refor tl most abject and the most degraded sho d be teble reform. Food is a moral in ag nt. Hot spices end overmith food are km ants, and growing boys and girls are ofte corrected for seine display of temper which is directly traceable to the table. The growing body respires an immense amount of fuel ; it shoulibbe varied, simple and nutritious. Don't lecture your boy when he is fretful. Don't esiteperate him ; win him, and, hold hint by your lei e end pa- tience. Make his interests your intereete, and share your troubles with him. Nothing does boys more good than a sense of respon- sibility ; they like to be trusted, and that is the way to make them worthy of trust. Archdeacon Farrar on DrunkenneSs. This is how archdeacon Farrar describes the hideous character and deadly wide- spread ravages of intoxicating drink ;— " It causes, tens of thousands of premature deaths, it is the moat prolific parent of all kinds a disease; it is the commonest cause peupprisin. In the words of the late Duke of Albany, it is the only deadly enemy England has to fear. It is the curse of the poorest; the curse of the most miserable of of our youths; the ourae of every house of which it takes hold ; the curse of our young colonists all over the globe; the curse of eVory nation and race with which we come in contact; the cure of univereal Christendom ; the curse which more powerfully than any other impedes the progress of Christianity ; the curse which dogs from land to land and from clime to clime the course of European civi- lization. The reiterated proofs of these fillets are petent for every one to sets. We do - Our Boys. not invent them ; we only point to them. The tired mother, when nightfall comes, No one 0015 enema from his share in the reepousibility for this bad state of things, cannothelp drawing a long sigh at the sight by the chomp, stele and irrelevant assertion of her boys' torn ,jacket and trousers and that temperance reformers use such intern - her aching head may whirl as with gleeful grate language, for we refer them not to shouts they come trooping into the room in anything which we have said, but to the rough.ancl-tumble fashion. But with what loving tendsrness does she not only endure all the noise, but sympathize in the sport, if she be a true mother 1 Somewhat such feel- ings as thee, which are put into verse, she bears in her heart: " • Boys will be boys'—but not or long. Ah, could we bear about us This thought—how very so .15 our boys Will learn to do without us. "How soon but tall and deep -voiced men Will bravely call u8 ' Mother' ; Or we be stretching empty hands From this world to the other 1 "More gently we should chide the noise, And when night quells the racket, Stitch in but living thoughts and prayers While mending pants and jacket." niutral annals of the past, to the careful pages of, contemporary history, to the col- orless records of justice, to the statistical testimony of unbiassed and official witnesaes, to the b lue hooka of the Legislature to the reports of convo- cation, to the narratives of all classes of travellers, to the often unwilling admissions of traders and physicians. And yet, in spite of all this black and damning eisidence, the conscience of men of the world, the conscience even of professing Christians is not only callous, but hard as the nether millstone to the guilt and na- tional disgrace which these facts involve. The idle, the indifferent, and the interested seem to think that God can be mocked by decrepit jests and immoral sophisms." All true, only if possible no e put m sufficiently A Word for Romping Girtii. strong lights, or in words that to th fulle Most women have a dread of them. Moth- (give the idea of this mighty agent of demor- ers would rather their little daughters were alization and death, yet in the great major - called anything ekes than romps. They say ity of cases all seems to go for nothing. to them: "Be very quiet now, my dears.1 It is taken as a matter of course that myri- Don't run or jump, a.nd be little ladies." ads upon myriads aregoing to perdition, As if a healthy child could be still; as if f and the only response which good-natured it could take time to walk or step over what selfishness and self-seeking can find is, mane in its way; as if it could fold its hands " Ah, well, let them go. The world will in its lap when its little heart is brimful of rah along well enough after all." flea. It is absurd and wrong, because it is unnatural. ten, girls as well as boys, need exem How to see the Mountains on the Moon, cise; indeed they must have it to be kept in Of course, the first thing the observer a healthy condition. They need to expand will wish to see will be the mountains of their chests, strengthen their muscles, tone the moon, for everybody has heard of them, their nerves, develop themselves generally. se and. the most sluggish imagination is stirred And this exercise must be out-of-doors too. by the thought that one can look off into It is not enough to have calisthenics in the sky and behold "the eternal hills" of the nursery or parlor; they need to be out another planet as solid and substantial all in the sunshine, out in the wind, out in our own. Bat the chinces are that, if left the grass, out in the woods, out-of-doors to their own guidance, ninety-nine persons somewhere, if,it be no bigger than the city yard. out of a hundred would choose exactly the Suppose they do tan out pretty faces— wrong time to see these mountains. At better be brown as a berry, and have the any rate, this is my experience with people who have come to look at the moon through pu e quick and strong, than white as a lily, my telescope. Unless warned beforehand, Ith..9 an e inplain of cold feet and headache. theyinvariably wait until full moon when the Sup. ose they do tear their clothes, suppose p they do wear out their shoes, it does nob try flood of sunshine poured erpendicularly a mother's patience half so much to mend upon the face of our satellite conceals its as it does to watch night atter night a rugd been drawn over them. Begin your features as effectually as if a veil querulous, sick child; and it does not dram ha observations with the appearance of the a father's Pocket half as uick to buy shoes as it does to pay doctors' ils. j narrowest crescent of the new inoon, and. l follow it as it gradually fills, and then you will see how beautifully the advancing line of lunar sunrise reveals the mountains over whose slops and peaks it is climbing, by its raggedand sinuous outline..The ()b- alked into hot butter, add salt and pepper must kee in mind the fact that he when fried enough, add a little cream, then server rllstraight d th t of s looking own upon e ops serve. LILY CAKE.—Two cups f sugar, two „„ the lunar mountains. It is like a view from c`"?' ' a, balloon, only at a vastly greeter height of flour, one cup of cornstarch, one cup of than any balloon has ever attained. Even butter'whites of five eggs, one teaspoon of with a powerful telescope the observer sees crearn tartar and one-fourth of a teaspoon of the moon at an apparent distance of several soda. , hundred miles'while with a field -glass CORN STARCH CtISTARDS.—Pat it pint of i magnifying six diameters, thegnoon appears milk in a, frying pan, let it dome to the boil- as if forty thousand miles off. The appal-- ing point, then acid a pinch of salt and two ent distance with Galileo's telescope was tablespoonfuls of corn starch. Serve with eight thousand miles. Recollect how when sugar and cream. seen from a great height the rugosities of 13m-cam—One quart of flour with two the earth's surface flatten out and disappear large teaspoonfuls of baking powder mixed and then try to imagine how the highest into it, add a tablespooRful of lard or butter, mountains on the earth would look if you a little salt and water enough to make thewere suspended forty thousand miles above dough. Bake in a hot oven twenty minutes. tlienuit, tahreidlyaeotu teivlaillt th , pemoon's ltei , ,rahetntrwaohln; i Gerroeu Sermes.—Boil slowly for fifteen , der minutes two cups of incelasses ; addeme-lialf can be seen at all. cup of butter, cool and add two spoonfuls of cold water, one heaping teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful of ginger and flour to, moil.Eight years before Columbus discovered Fiume ONeoets.--Have frying pan hot, put America an old Portuguese sailor named in a good sized piece of butter (or meat fry- Diego Cam went cruising down the coast of ings after frying meat), Put in the onions West Africa until he eame to a great river sliced; sprinkle with popper and salt, and on whose south bank he set up a big white pour in jint a little hot water, cover closely, stone and carved an inscription upon it oele- let cook twenty minutes; add a teaspoonful brating his discovery. It was the mighty of flour in a little milk end when it boils it Cone°, and for many years the famoas 'is ready to serve. 1 Pedro. Padrao stood on the shore bearing Cnoconeen CusTAnns.—One fourth of a silent witness to the old sailor's acbeivement. cake of chocolate, one pint of boiling water, Years later when all eyes were turned to the six eggs, one quart of milk, one-half cup of ,new world, the Congo was almost forgotten white sugar, two teaspoons of vanilla. Dia- and when it next attracted notice the Rocha solve the chocolate in a very little milk, stir Padrao had disappeared. The spot where ' into the boiling water and boil three min- it stood has for centuries been known as sites. When nearly cold add the beaten Padrao Point. eggs, stir into the milk, flavor and pour in Three or four months agoBaron von Schwe- in cups, set in boiliug water and belso rin, the Swedish traveller, heard from softie Cnorrice PASTE.—One quart of flour natives of a large fetich stone hidden in the two cups of butter, one tablespoonful oi tall jungle grass at some distance from the sugar end oue-half tablespoonful of salt; do beamh. It was only after long palavers with the chiefs that he obtained permission to not wash the butter ; put all together in a chopping tray and chop until thoroughly visit the revered object. He found, to his mixed; then add cold water (or feed water) delight, the veritable Pedra Padrao, its well known inscription only partially, effaced, to make a stiff paste, which will take less This famous monument of a great discovelir than a cup of water; roll out once and , ,will doubtless be treasured hereafter as one Cooking Recipes. PRIED POTATOES. -- Put cold potatoes The Discoverer of the Congo. • place in the ice chest to harden. RAnen APPLE PUDDING, —Fill a three- of the merit interesting relics of the early quert earthen dish with paged and quartered navigators. apples: sprinkle on these one cup of sugar, a little cinnamon, fresh butter the Size of It small egg and one-half cup of water ; cov- ' Failitre imp°8811" er apd hake thirty minutes. Roll it piece of When Poison's Nerviline is need for pain chopped paste into a etripetbout two inches It matters not of how long standing it may wide that will reach around the pudding be, or how often other remedies have failed dish ; roll the remainder to oover the dish. to afford relief, Nerviline, the gr at pain Take the pudding dish from the oven, slip cure, does its ,work promptly. Buy a 10 the strip of paste between the apple and the dent sample bottle, hind try j it for internal diali and prit on tho top crust ; return to the or external pains. You will be convinced oven and bake one hour Serve with creamy cf its extraerdihary power in relieving pain sauce. Ton cent bottles and large bottles 25 tents, at all druggists Take no subetitute. Minors JELLY. —Ribbon jelly is made by pouring difrent colored jelliete one over the other in layers. Yellowjelly from No* is the time of year when Love's lemone, oranges, red fruit jellies, dark plyoting dream geta jolted all out of shape be- lies from blackberry juice, green jelly, made cense the hammock lets go. Cbild This is a fragment of the stery of Jane her last name, fortunately, is not known,—ss told by the matrele of one of our great ety prisons : '; I wes tient for, late Ono night, to &ice her. The keeper of that svaed said some-, thing unusual ailed the girl. 1 hadn't seen ber when ahe was„ brought in. She was 13' big on her cot, laughing aoftly and whisper- iug to herself. 11 What's your name ?' said I, pretty sharply, for I was cross onongh. That was the tenth time I'd been willed up that night. " She laughed egain, and it startled me, the voice and laugh were so weak. How funny you are, Aunt Prue 1' she sefoi. You don't know Jenny I' and tui n she went on talking as before to some Polly, telling her of the lesson at school, and of some new ribbon on her hat, and that she bad to finish milking before' they could go out. Father,' she said, nye he'll sell Juuy, an' she' i my own cow. I rained her Irene a calf, you know, Polly.' " Then she got to talking of the baskets and berries and games, faneying she was at it school picnic, I saw she had been a coun- try child, and thought she was at home again on the farm. " She was a little bit of a thing, and not old, either, but her face showed what she'd been through. 1 celled the doctor. When he was examining her, she fell off into it stupor, but she rousedwhen I tried to get her to take some medicine. She would not take it, latighing et me, but the wee a very gentle little body, too. " Won't you take it for Aunt Prue, Jenny?' I said, hurnering her, So then she swallowed it. ' rou forgot the jellje aunty,' she said, and then she dozed off, waking now and then, talking of some baby, her little eider, 1 think; as if she was just a child again. "I've seen men hung,and sense others m mi die of deliriutre ens n the prison, but there was something more awful in this irl's death than in any of the others. She had been so vile a woman' and she'd forgot ib all, and thought herselfjust an innocent child ! "The dootor was called off. I can do nothing here anyhow,' he said. The wo- man was dying when she was brought in. She's badly hurt, Don't leave her.' " Of course I wasn't going to leave her. " Perhaps you know it hymn?' I said to her, or some verses?' 1 usually leave that kind of talk to the chaplain; but he wasn't there, and she; was going fast, and I had to say, it. Her eyes were shut. 'Hymn ? Hymn— yes, mother,' she said, and she began to sing Jesus, lover of my soul P She had a sweet voice, but it was most gone. When she came to Leave, oh leave me not alone P she opened her eyes, and said, 'Sing, mother. Won't you slug?i It's so long since I — Then she stared around and stopped. "She had come to herself. She saw her clothes all mud and. her bloody hands. There was a bit of looking -glass on the cell wall one of the prisoners had left, and there she saw her face all blotted and pimpled. "She caught hold of ray arm and shriek- ed out, Am I Jenny? Is this a jail 9' and then, thank God, she sank back in a stupor. The keeper came in and told me she was a girl who had come up to town and fallen into bad company, and run down as low as a woman could get. "She did not come to her senses again. She talked to herself and laughed a little in a childish way. She had gone back to the farm again. And just before the end I heard her say, Leave me not alone ! Jesus lover of my soul 1' "1 think He was near her. "She died, and was buried in Potter's Field. There's a lot of them goes that way. I never heard her real name. But in spite of all, I hope He was near her at the end." ass Cause and Effect. A, certain University was once said to be a learned place from the fact that most per- sons took some learning there, while hut few roug t any away wi i em. o ae- cu initiated. ^ 0 --••—••••-•""mge--#411111- 1r011111i0 MEN suffering from the effects of early evil , the result 01 lgnoesnoe and folly, who find themselves weak, nervous and exhausted; also erne Des-Aone and lOvai Mrs who are broken down from the effects of abuie or over -work, and in advanced life feel the consequences of youthful excess, send for and I as M.V. Luhon's Treatise on Diseases of Men. The i twhooko3:.vil be sent sealed to any address on receipt of stamps. Address Id. V. UBON, fa Welling. ton St. East Toronto Out IOnly a girl who hastun a type writer at four dollars per week and finally marries her 1 employer can enter a dry goods store and I paralyze a lady clerk receiving six dollars 'per week. It's 110 use for a millionaire s 1 wife to try it. Ipeople js e are culij cet to badbreatifoul rated tongu7rm1),cisolcierothestoniaei,eanaonoe I be relieved by using Dr. Carson's &osmium Bitters, 1 the old and tried remedy. Ask your Druggist. I Miss X.—" Just think, dear. I had a pain in my knee and had to show it to 'young Dr. Smith." Friend—"And what did he do ?" Miss X. --"He bandaged it." Friend—" What result?" Miss X.—" We are to be married in October." Whenever your stomach or Bowels get out of ore der, causing Biliousness, Dyspepsia, or Indigestion - end their attendant evels, take at once a dose of Dr, s Stomach Bibterc. Bet family mediolos. AN Drupe/its, 60 cents. et. V. LIMON'S CURE FOR DRUNKENNESS Trial bottles sent to any address by express, secure from observation, on receipt of 31.00. Address all orders to M. V. LUBON, 47 Wellington St. E, To- ronto, Canada. Kate—" Louise, dear, there's crape on the Van Briskets' front door. Some one must have died." Louise—" Impessible 1 I'm positive the doctor hasn't been there for several 'weeks." 1 Free ! Free! ! Free ! ! ! A Book of Instruction and Price List on Dyeing and Cleaning, to be had gratis by calling at any of our offices, or by post by sending your address to R. Parker & Co., Dyers and Clermont, 759 to 763 Yonge St., Toronto. Branch Offices: 4 John Ss. N., Hamilton; 100 Colborne St., Brantford. 1 Mr. McFa,ddle—" Let me off at Mike - town." Conductor--" We don't stop. This is a through trein." Mr. McFaddle -- , " Thin playse, sot', will y er sthop long • enough fur me to tell Bridget that it's cox- ( ried through I am ?" i Catarrh, Catarrhal lioearness and Hay Fever. ISufferers are not generally aware that these diseases are OtintagiOne, or that they are due to the presence of living parasites In the lining membrane of tho neee and oustaohlan tubes. Microscopic route* however, shievieeorvetudietctshtiso bbeeeanfa=nildatteltle wrgria isoe!,thtlartrha, ot:)tarrhal tleafiastri and hay fever ale Cured in tom one to three slinp10 applications made at home. A pamphlet explaining this new treatment 10 sent free rtirteNe'll'itiV 'sn=toby6et;ntalciaDixon 4,,, Son, 308 King ) "Do you know who that gentleman is, ! Mary, who is alwayss sitting tit the window I optic:site ? He seems to take an extraordin- ary interest in bay movements." "Oh, tor, i Miss 1 He ain't no gentleman. He's got it i Wooden leg r ' How to Select a iYite. Geed health, geed niorelei good eenee Pald good ife, 'These are the indiepeneeldes. good the four e$: ef ea :Li ly ay si for na After them eorne the miner advantagee of etc:, With the first four, married Sife will be comfortable end happy. Lacking either, it will be in more or less degree a failure. Upon good bealth depende largely good temper and good looks, 0,nd to some extent good eerise also, ise the best mind must be affected more or less by the WeaknesSea and whims etteudent 00 frail health- Young man, if your wlie is failing into int laidisrn, flrst of all ihiege try o restore her health, If she is troubled with debilitating female weaknesses'buy Dr, Pierce's Favorite Pre- scription. It will cure her, Young Wife (petulantly)—" Well, even if I dont come to meet you every night as I used, what does it signify ?" Young Hus- band —'"Thet we have been niarried six months." An ugly Complexion made Nellie a fright, Her fase Wm all pimply ancired, Though her features were good, and her blue eye were brights ' "What a plitin girl is Nellie!" they said. Bet now, as by magic, plain Nellie has grown As fair as an artist's' bright dream ; Her face is as sweet as it lima new -blown, Her cheeks are iike peaches and °ream, As Nellie walks out in *the fsdr morning light, Her beauty attracts every eye, Arid as Inc the people who called her a fright, '0 hy, Nellie is handeome ; ehey ery. And the reason of the change is that Nellie took Dr, 1' erce's Golden Medical Discovery, which regulated her liver, cleared her com- plexion, inecie her blood pure, her breath sweet, her face fair and rosy, aud removed the defects that had obscured her beauty. Sold by druggists, Ice is very populer just now, but wecan remember a time not six months ago when almost every one was down on it. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets Possess Powerful Potency, Pass Painlessly, Promote Physical Prosperity. A young lady was .married the other day and a :newspaper account of 'the event was headed : "Joined in July." "Attached in August" will be the fate of those who cone Wee in the season. Likewise, some Will be "Spliced in September," "Orange -flowered in October," "Nuptialized in November" and "Doubled in December." A. P. 358. "EU -ANTED -8,000 AG ENTS—Ma'e and Female - 1' V Large profits. CM. DENNIS, Toronto. PATENTS For Sale—Illustrated descriptive Cat- alogue free. R. Chamberlin, Toronto. 000 LIVE AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY County in Canada. Address, FERRIS it CO.. 87 Church St, Toronto. itTO MORE PIMPLE—USE FAIRY FACE POW- DER, best in tis world, 25c. it box. GUIMON, 20 Vereatile St., Montreal. ..4§1.01-301141911ft AND 0107VaSSERS wanteel,Alale Or Female, whole or spare time, on salary or commis. eion. Industrial Union of B.N.A., 46 Areade, Toronto. TORONTO CUTTING SCHOOL—Gentlemen desirous of acquiring a thorough knowledge of garment cutting should apply at once to S. Commix, 122 Yonge St., Toronto. Terms on application. ANOTHER NOVELTY Goldman's Sprink- .'' ler ana Atomizer. All tho rage in the States. Agents wanted. Sample by rnail 45 cents. CLEMENT & CO., Toronto, THE BOILER INSPECTION and Insure ance Company ot Canada, Consulting Engineers and Solicitors of Patents. TORONTO. . G. 0. ROBB, Chief Erighteer. .A. FRASER, Seey-Troas. DE. ARMSTRONG, Dermatologist.' Specialty, Skin diseases, Scrofula and air dis- arms of the blood. All cancers cured that are cure - able, without the vse of a knife. Office 'hours, from 9 to 12 a.m. and from 1:30 to 4;30 nine Sabbaths ex- cepted. 28 Dundee Street, Toronto. , RUBBER STAMPS/87a cils, and Burning Brands, &c, Send for Catalogue. BARBER BROS. CO., 37 Scott St., Toronto. WESLEYAN LADIES COLLEGE, IIANIILTOg, CANADA. 9 The First of the Ladles' Colleges—Has gr adu- ated over 200 ladies In the full course. Has educated over 2 00(1. Full faculties In Literature Languages Music and Art. The largest College building in the Province. Will open on Sep. 71175, 1837.7 Address the Principal. A. BORNS, MB., LLB. CIRCULARS free Something new and interestieg. Send at ILLUSTRATED once if • ou want the best. CANADIAN etiS1NESS UNIVERSITY & SHORTHAND INSTITLFIE, Pub to Library Building, Toronto. TROMA8138500011010,Presi- detit ; Cues. H. Bermes, Secretary and Manager. DIRECTIONS FOR STAMPING AND 1519. CEIPTS for manufacturing four different pow- ders—blue, white, yellow and the French liquid stamping for plush. velvet and silk, minutely de- scribed = print, all sent by mail for 40 cents. C. STIDerAte klEROE. 41 Xing St. FAO, Toronto. But- teriek's patterns and books always on hand. Decorated 111a. 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'airy Salt) FOlt BUTTER, ETC. InTortatione Washing. ton "..inet Ashton liratide, in large or small SAeks. Also ltieeet Cans:lien Salt, Write for prices. 'i Bicycles! 0 END AT ONCE FOR LIST Ot Second,fland machine% FROM $15 UPVVAR011 New Catalogue Ready let April A. T, LANE MONTREAL ----rim( me-- JAItS whole", & SOls me,charith, Torono. Toronto Silver Plato Col; ,IA.NuFAcruRERS OF TRH MOM= GRADE OF THE ALBANY STEAM TRAP CO.'S GILVER PLATED WARES• SPECIAL BUILT RETURN TRAP, TRADE •-• C,51 -7114-e UAW), 817'The Celebrated Ilan. (mak Inspiretor. trareshenes Automatic Re starting Injeetor. ALL G011tDS, GUARANTEED. asifefornseres Automatic Siglit Peed ,Luhrieater. MARK. T 0 Ili 0 N T 0 . iteSeEneineers'& Piumb of r 0.41 Mlle Royal Mail Steamollimi: :rirac.,:::lie° ""Y during wieter Sr ort sli.;:71;0e4erayncTill.nursdasural. eenription, Send .or .17713&X7ET760A,RdleolliisaTIoeit.SItS. ; r6Innedr lifeolint4QxneelbeerieSvaeturyTtaa°tYrnutrdPo4191vfelae LivorPool, °slang ) at Londonderry ff0.111/1(1 mails and passengeni for Seotland and Ireland • also from Baltimore, via Hall. lax and St. Johiee, R P., to Liverpool fortnightly tinting summer menthe The steemers of the Glas gow lines ail d Oring winter ,.to and from Halifax, Portland, Boston and Philadelphia; and during:ann. neer between Glasgow and Montreal weekly; Glasgow and noetoa weekly, and Glasgow and Philadelphia RIPotnrhirg hol5hts, peseege, or other nformatIon apply SO A. Setroc.aolier to Co., 13altitaore ; S. Cunard, sc Co.. RaiPax; Shea As Co., St. johnle, Nfld.; Wm. Thomp, son 3: Co., St, John, N.B.: Allen as Co., Ohioan Album Rae jrls So Quebec. Wm Brookie Phliad Love 1:Alden, X919- York': H. Bouiller, Toronl ' phir.' " 11 A llen Is Nand B ton onrea r ' A. • AP• Mtl • . e have e eel oecl f eture I HILBORN to put Dr. Jug'a Nzedichie in aihrown histeini of a HOT AIR FURNACE. HE LEAPING COLLEGE ANADIAN FO youNG gesei bottie as heretofore The lugs that we will use for bhIS i:ntrpoge are made of b elinaotimportedRook. Ingham, era mottled brown colony, with "Eli. Jag's Medicine for Limes, Liver and Blood" in raised let- • tors on the tilde. Our ' reasons for making this chugs are: won- derful cum tire qualities will be better preserved by the Ineclicine being kept 1. entirely In the dark. 2n8— erl it will hato As the Jug will he iegister- e impossible to Clare Bros. Co., Preston Ont. eounterfeit it. 3,d—The 9 /Mlle " Dr. Jug's aiedi. '0 -Mention this paper. FAGS' M ILE eine' will be more easily OF A JUG OF DR. June) Nirnembered by associa- tion. eth Our friends p will be aMbfeDieicirNeeternize at once thatthey are gettine the gennine article, as there iso other medicine put , up in a j aer, DR. JUG 6IEIMCINE 00,. 23 ADELAIDE ST. E., TORONTO. Toronto and Stratiord. I All classes of fine work, .Mfre. of Printers' Lead* Sbsgs areci.rdetal Furniture. Send lot prices. BURNS WOOD Made in 8 sizes. Efficient, economical and durable. Write for illustrated cata- logue of the larg,est and. best variety of furnaces and registers manufac- tured in Canada. Estimates cheerfully given to any one. MILLER'S TICK DESTROYER . 1887 STOCKMEN, givethie valuable pre - potation a fair trial. It opetates 33-C=. *NOW' promptlyandeffectuallyindestrciying Ticks and other verminpests, as well . in eradicating all affections of the 5"skin to which Sheep are subject. Sold In Tins at 35e., 70e. and $1. A 35o. Tin will clean 20 Sheep or 35 Lambs. HUGH MILLER & Co., Toronto. 0 CARMAGETOPS arefamous f,rt3 cornsd114, and cheapness. lluy no other until you see them. 511 the 1 eading Carriage Builders sell them. Factory : 407 Ring St. W., TORONTO: I have ilipoaltive remedy tor tIstrebovedisenee; 85 15, nes thousand, of c.tses of the seem blue see of long standing have been cured. Indeed, so strong la InY rain In itr efficacy, 18,11 will send TWO BOTTLES FREE, together with • VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease to artr an/Serer. Ge express and P. 0. address. DE. T. A. 51.001351, Branch Office, 37 Tonga St., Tonto PEARL PEN AND PENCIL STAMP WITH NAME 500 Postage 6 Cts. Extra et. FOR IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT. THE OSHAWA MOWERS. They surpass all other mowers in workmanship, quality of material, excellence of construction, and performance of work. NEW MODEL THRESHERS. The best threshing machines in America. They do the largest amount of work, and thresh cleaner than any other machines can do the work. In excellence of construction they are unequalled. They are the best made in Canada, and are only egualledby their namesakes in the United States. PORTABLE ENGINES.—No better agricultural engines are made. BALI TRIMMING MACRINES.—The best in the market for horse -powers. WOODBURY. or DINGEE, IMPROVED MORSE POWERS, now the easiest twining and best in the world. Also the CALIFORNIA, PLANET, AND PITT'S HORSE -POWERS, of established repute. IV -Repairs on hand for every machine made. JOHN LIVINGSTONE, Trustee, -JOSEPH HALL MACHINE WORKS, OSHAWA. 18 R When / say Mae Ole not mettla merely to stop them for • time aud then hese them return again. I mean a radleag cure. I hero made he disease of FITS, EPILEPSY or FALL, 1500 sicirersr,se Ifseong study. I tvarrant my romedf to ewe the -worst cases." Beeaase others have failed is no reason for not now reeelmang a cure. Send at once for a ereallse 'and, Freo 0,181. 01 my tnfallible remedy. eivo Express and Poet Office. n costs -you nothlar for • trial, and I will care yen. Addrans DR. R. it. ROOT, Bralut Otace, 37 Tonga St., Toroitet: PTISA13,,iiRst4lJ Or h17 st PRINTS V7 TINGLEY 81, STEWART M'F'G CO AND ADDRESS OF bICEONmC LOON3 Bp: tE1110158. rii0MOM,TTO, ONT. Please meution ibis Paper wheo writing. NAME 13D51 N EMI THE°every of the greatest dig - present age for Rimer- LATINVIE BOWELS, AND CURING ALL BLOOD, Lives. AND Knew COMPLAINTS. A per - feat Blood Purifier. A. few in Hamilton who have been bens. 11 ;ed by its use :— gra. E. Keenan, 102 :lobed St., cured of Erysipelas of 2 years' 'Pending; Robert Cor- rell, 24 South St., langhtpr cured of 'pileptio' Fits after 1 years' suffering ecl0Litrteti, Do Viulaut oe., cured of weaknese i and Lung Trouble; John Wood, 05 Cathcart St., cured of Liver Complaint and Bilioustmes, used only 3 fifty -cent bottles; Mrs. J. Beal, 0 Augusta Ste, troubled for years with Nervous Prostration, two smalllbottles gave her great eelier. Sold at 50e. &MOO. F. F. DALLEY & CO., Proprietors. FAR ERS A D TH SHERS rse on your Illfaehintry only the Well-known eerl ss NINE COLD mums hileialiter4natradfiotrd5u,ortizor gm'allgloansat fano ucsi fieoarrst poTz rsal.so our,PEERLESE Manufacture.e et QUEEN:CITY OIL IVORKS, by SAMUEL ROGERS & 00•3 Toronto es. —T1 -13E— " " T30 -Y -1\711101\T" 42N/I_A_MIV1011111-12 1V101\T_A_IR,C1-1 The Iberia Wood Furnace is especially adapt ed for Churches and Schoolhoesee. Sol fer our Illustrated Catalogue.. THE E. & G. GURNEY CO; (LnitTED) HAMILTON, TORONTO, MONTREAL AND WINNIPM