HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1899-12-28, Page 2•77--"`-:"' "1*
RSON Sz CARLING,
Rimesters, Sollettore. Notaries, Coevoyanoers,
Cermet-4 r-, Rm.
Ineney to Leen al, in per mut, and 5 per, oent.
or)‘1011 :-FANSON'S 1314003t, MOWER,
ife V4LlM* 3 e. u. 1/101inOtT,
member of lio item will be at I1wa11 oz
ilbureday at Oath week,
11. COLLINS,
Couveyamor, Bto.
leXETElie
11,DIPIPIOE Over O'Neire Bank,
IniLLIOT GLAI3MA,N,
t misters, Solicitors, &Wits ?Olio
Convey -allow% (ke, dao,
ganiouey to Loan.
OFFICE, MAIN - STRELT, EXETER.
B. V.ItLMOT. r, W. MADMAN.
1411100.1=
e MEDICAL
J. R. RIVERS, M. B. TORONTO Lnil
JLJ vieRaTaY, M 14 C. M. elnuitn Univer
sity., Cflico-Crediton, One.
fl
E.S.ROLL1N8n. AtelOS.
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ILA. ROLLINS', M.D. A. AMOS, M. D
Exetete Oat
JW.R.ROWRING M. D., M. 0.,
LIF • P. ta, Gra du to VI4 Latin nal tversity
office sad resideswe, Dominion -Lahore-
tory, Exeter.
DRYNDMAZT, coroner for the
County of Ruron. Ofeoe, opposite
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AUCTIONEERS.
BOBSEINBERRY, General Li-
z 4 • (tensed Auctioneer Sales conducted
ilt silparts. Satisfeetinu guaranteed. Charges
moderate. Reusali P 0, out:
ENRY EILBER Litton sed Aug--
tioneer for tie, counties of aurae
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ton Ont,
.121011171117171111T7112532.1111.11111.16111.11i
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ra ttd.
CA RTER9S
1TYLE
IVER
Sick Headache end relieve all the troubles ince
dent to &bilious state of the syeteta, such as
Dizziness, Nausea,, Drowsiness, Distress after
eathig, Pain in the Side, &c, while theirmost
remarkable auccess bas been show33. in outing
/Tender:he yet CAREER'S LITTLE' LIVER PILLS
are equally valuable in Constipaticei, miring
and preventing this antioyingcorapleint, while
they else norreot all disorders of the stomach,
ethroilate the liver and regulate the bowels,
levee if they male, cured
Ades they would be almost pr debase to these
whe tumor from this dfstressIng complaint;
!Alb fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them will dad
the ee little mils vrdeable in so many ways that
they will not he willing to do without then*.
But after all eick bead .••
ebe batie of cm litany lives that here toi whore
make our great boast. Our pills mare it
. thee other e da no,,
tenteene; Limn Lttan PILLS Are Verynandli
and very esey to take. On or twotonko
n dose, Whey aro strietle• yegettb•Iciand do
mot gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
!came ell who use them, In .0/t1e at 26 cents;
ivo forst. sem everywhere, orieitit by mad,
141111)X01111,O., atilt Yak ;
all Jll,Sat 1I ric
11
The ..Mystery Of No
Tbs solicitor's enquiries had. not Yard on you,", said Mr. Lemaire, eoti-
been able to establish the identity he- temptu.ously, as he sat down."
tween the Frew:4cent with whom sheBut jar me • II 1 n
who do not caltavete their imagine -A
Lions, and who are apt to sift even
facts to their extremes1 winnowing
-
point, so that Mr. Lentaire's erose -ex -
the
rm,
nee t
'less
re -
y of
use
inst
an
vell
put
est,
out
ely
vas
his
cle-
ape
053
fly,
uld
ob-
er,
-as
sal
nd
a
en
It
hs
he
ed
Id
a..
s
4a, kept company and the man who
.,seamme,the eteeeleve assistant, but Mr.
Lemaire meant to assume it all the
tut74011yeahras?,, hketoslIvind je.xtin Pierrot
The shot told and for a moment she
Looked aa if she were about to fall.
wi.q1I, ksnavinkigo ijiapiee Plertot," she said
"I fear you have a treacherous mein-
crY: seid Mr. Leximire, smiling. as
IliVuinatheda gheisstueraethe relee,sed her and re -
Worsted, riot broken, savage IIS a
wild -oat that knows itself trapped, and
extlects worse things, Rose left the
witness -box, and for a while &sap.
peered,
Astonishment at the n. ew. tarn things
had taken. was now growing aPace,
but Mr. Slrewton's appearance on the
ecene heralded a volte face that speed-
ily caused the readjustmeet of a good
ma.ny newly acquired ideas, and blew
the theory expouaded by M. Leincire
into thin air.
Mr. Skewton described how he had
proceeded straight to the room where
Mr. Ross had been shot, the body ha.v-
eiribgninabirciera.dy been removed to his own
He deposed to the prisoner's exces-
sive agitation, to the pistol whieh he
was congealing in his breast -pocket,
and Awhiela he, Mr. Skewton, took from
hitt ; to his voluntary confession of
the murder, how it happened, and in
fact all save the motive that evident-
ly prompted it, .
He further related how in Mr. Ross's
room, partly disordered, as if in the
a,ot of (undressing he had suddenly
gone done stairs, he had found an en-
velope on the toilet -table addressed
to that gentlemaia; how he had taken
it down to the prisoner, who recogniz-
ed it at: his wife's handwriting; of
what a terrible effete; was produced
upon hime by the sight of it, and of
how valuable a link in the chain of
evideace he considered that scrap of
writing supplied.
Being brought to book for this last
remark, Mr. Skewton imperturably
went on to relate how he went up to
Mrs. St. George's room, where he found
her locked in with her maid; how, pre-
sently she opened the door to hire,
and presently accused herself of hav-
ing
killed Mr. Ross ; how, by an incau-
tious gesture he had indicated the
pistol in Ins pocket; how she had , I
snatched it from hira, and declared : Lo
that with it she had committed the '
her come up and forbidden her to so l '
I
crime; how he had treated her words '
as idle ravings, now Mr. St, George "
perjure herself; and how she had !an
begged him, her husband, to speak to 1 tel
husband had refused
Jack's face was white and drawn as
.
anunation appeared to theta in
ilfigbhuttalittleregc‘o'°ordk.' t11111 did no ha
,Tob Trubshoes, the cobbler, was
called, not so much as a wit
agabast the prisoner, as to offer
batting testimony to the possibilit
any person having got from, his, ho
into No, .ta that night.
Pushed into the witness -box ago
his will, and presenting as crabbed,
appearance as a human. being' 't
could, he answered the questions
to him slowly and grudgingly at ft
Wit presently got angry, and( gave
his snarls quicker.
What he had to say had been larg
diseounted by Mr. Skewton„ but he 1,
made to relate in detail what haters
apprentice kept, and many other
tails, that made that young man.
Pear an industrious and harm/
creacure who woulu not hurt a
and who, by n.o manner Of means co
/um obtained entrance to tl:ea
bler'e house, unknown by the cololal
that night.
But just as the cross old man. u
congratulating himself on his ord
being over, Mr. Len:mire rose, a
pounced upon him, like a. spider on
fly,
wi‘t'Hhoywoul?o,n, g has janin Pierrot be
"I don't rightly remember.
might bel a. month -or two -or six.'
"Take oare, sir. How many mont
lea,?Aerebee.p. with you?"
"Yon wanted an assistant, and
came to you to oder himself?" •
"Ay, he did."
"How came he to know you Nvant
an a.,ssistand"
"How do 1 know? Peeps you to
"And you took hina without recO
raenuatAons?"
"Prlaps I did, and p'eaps didnt
"You took him without. recommend
,ions?"
"aince you're so pressing, I did."
"lie was a good workman ?"
"Leood enough Lor me."
''Did Frenchwoman call to se
i'don't encourage petticoat
about 'the plates,
m a bacheld.ore. I am, thank the
'She did call?"
'One willed yesterday."
'Was that her eiese visit?"
'Women be euch ilegers nowadays
d dress so much ade. e -how can
1?"
laer before he went down, and howber
Mr. I,emaire pressed the point -to his
e listened. Had she not kneeled to "/
him, his good, his cure, little Elizabeth, Pie
and had he not spurned her asthough ahe
she were the vilest of God's creatures? la
Could she forgive him ? Was her sil- a 1
.exice indeed the silence of outraged sae
love that had turned to hate? she
Mr. Skewton went on to say that m
the most diligent enquiry had failed bra
to discover any traces of any person
or burglar entering the house on that se,
night. True, there was the skylight,
but the cobbler who lived in the house
ow.
tell '," said Jb, getting angry,
never saw the woman -nor tine
rrot, for the matter 01 that -- tilt
ut a fortnight ago, when she same
in a hurry to get a shoe eased. 101
ittle child she had with her. And
never said a word, to. he, nor /as to
r. Eemaire swallowed his chagrin.
vely.
You knew she was maid to 'Mrs.
George?"
N
was above suspicion, or rather, ph
cane/ incapacitated from attemp
burglary, and he was •the only pe
who had slept in the place that night
His assistant stept out, and it had
been positively proved that he did
sleep at his lodgings that night, as
he, Mr. Skewtoon, had made it his
business to find out. He had gone
straight there after work, gone to bed
early, bad breakfasted there next
morning, and only got the news of the
murder when he returnedto work. His
name was Janin Pierrot.
With regard to the tumbler, which
undoubtedly contained a sediment of
chloral, he had removed it without be-
ing perfectly sure of what it had con-
tained, but it smelt odd, and at that
time he had his ow,n, theory about the
murder.
Mr. Skewton's evidence produced it
profound impression. However ranch
he had erred in his zeal and officious-
ly assisted Jack along his road to the
gallows, thereby earning for hiraself
the "hammering ' of the judge, he had
spoken to faots, and proved them, too;
while as yet Mr. Lermaire had noth-
ing substantial with which to support
his theory. Nevertheless, be was in his
bast forni when he jumped up, and
said: •
" You suspected the French maid
from the beginning?" .
" I thought she had a hand in the
destruction of the missing letter."
"You. think so still?"
ysi-
ting she
non wai
You knew her name?"
No. Neighbors tont me afterward
eame erom No. 13, but her money
as goou as any one else's so I
wasn't going to turn, it away."
"At what time did Pierrot leave off
work?"
"Six o'clock."
"He left at that time the night of
the murder?"
"He did."
"You remained in the house all the
evening?"
a Nee,
" What do you think?"
"That Mrs. St, George obtained pos-
session of it, and destroyed it her -
"And your impression was that
Ike maid had doctored the draught ?"
" At Bret -yes."
In order to put hee.,inistress into
a sound sleep while the'esenphires were
stolen ?"
et yes.),
" Iron did not 'believe Mr. St, George
when he accused himself of the mur-
der ?"
"I might not have done without the
confirmatory evidence of the pis-
tol.'
You say you saw he was hiditg
it in his breast, May he 'no have oleic -
ed it up from wthe.re il h'i'/ben flung
by some other person?
" It is possible. But his demeanor
Was that of a guilty person."
"Which you took eare to intensify,
Does it not Strike you that you went
considerably beyond your duty in try-
ing to get WM to incriminate him-
selt 2"
Mr. Skewton wee silent, ,
"Sven after this tonvineing evi-
dence a the prisoner's guilt, you helti
to your theory that a burglar had
something to do witb the bueiness ?"
"Yes. But after working continuous-
ly at the case T was reluctantly oblige,
eri to dismiss the, idea, there was abso-
lutely tio evidence to auppor0
"You did not even astertain that the
cobbler's essietartt Weis Rose Dupont's
loveri"
°Neel
"Then X to grat Scotia
rey-,52;
"You never once left the house?"
job Trubshoes hesitated, scowling
and mumbling his grizzly jaws.
"E'r'aps I did. Jew: a matter of
five minutes. To buy my supper
beer."
"You left your door unlookede"
oyes..
"Any one might have got in during
your ahsence?"
"Who wanted to gett in?" snarled the
old man. "I'd got nothing to steal."
"It was dark when yen went out?"
"Cat's twilight,"
"Did you visit the attic, that night?"
"No; it's a lumber -room. What
should J. want „there at night?"
Mr. Lemaire nodded his head several.
times..
"What time did janin come next
morning?"
"Bight o'clock."
"Did he look as usual?"
"A man don't change his face with
his coat. I took no particular notice
on him."
"Some inquiries were made att your
house that day?"
"Yes,8 passel of fools who turned
the place upside down, and me a d
.7 anin inside out. But, they didn't get
muchtnhange out of either on us."
"He has come regularly to work ever
since?"
"Never missed a
"Seems cheerful?"
"Shoemaking don't 'want cheerful
0 -
ness it. wants skill. janin stuck to
hie work, and didn't trouble about
women, and murders, and such -like
stuff. Lor, sirl" added the old wretch
with a grin, "you've found it mare's
nest, and much good may ib do 'eel"
So departed job Trubshoes; hut Mr.
Lemaire had made his point, viz., that
Junin could easily have returned to the
house unknown to Job, have hidden
in the disuse4 attie and made his Way
comfortably enough tato No. 181 Could
-might have -but did be
The alibi was very clear.
And then the court adjourned for
luncheon.
C,ECAPTER XII.
There' S none may lean on a rotten
staff .
But hira that risks to get a fa'."
Mr. Lemaire was in to WO1`80 plight
than many a elever advoeate had been
before him, viz.: having to make brieks
without straw, and geed, hard, con-
vincing bricks, too, that would stand
any anionnt of scanning end throw-
ing aloont.
"rot, having decided te eel), to wit -
ETER TIMii
110.A508, aS lie rose after lunchcon to
reidY, he bore so confident ti bearing
Irld lead 50 easy au air of aasurance,
that Iteee, elitiim. in a remote corner
of the court, lee:oil:led with fear as
she looked at him.
Rio very first words ga ve her goed
(envie for terror, for he roundly stat-
ed: in a very fine and impressive man-
ner, that the prieoner in the cloak had
. bu.siness there at all ; for, that if
the deteotives had not blundered and
Misled justioe, anothee man, and that
the really guilty one, would be stand-
ing there in his place.
" The name of that, mat," --and here
Mr. Unwire pausee, and his scathing
oYeS found out the French woms,n
where she at, " was eanin Piernot0
Rose Dupont's lover, and Rose Du-
pont's confederate, the man. whOm she
had assistecl to get, into tb.e house,
whom she had helped to depart, and
who had shot Mr. Ross when discover-
ed on the premises by that gent/amoo
when he returned to the house after
Mr. St. George had gone up to berl."
At this daring indictment, unexpect-
ed,. ,startling, a bolt out of the blue,
all eyea were turned ot Jack', then
on Rose, who, cowering as under a
crushing physical blow., had °reached
down with bowed head in her place ev-
ery line of her figure a corroboration
of his words. " That woman," said Mr.
Lemaire, pointing a terrible finger at
her, "laid her plans well. She had by
her the chloral ready to mix with- hal'
mistress's night -draught, and had
long ago arranged Use signal by whieh
she was to let her lover kuow when
Mrs. St. George was sleeping down-
stairs, alone and unprotected, with
the sapphires close at hand; and, in
short, everything fell out precisely as
she had hoped, and inte3aded-with one
exceptiot-the, unexpected contingency
of Mr. Ross's return. Mrs. St. Geor.ge
duly drank her draught, and went to
bed and to sleep; a notoriously bad
sleeper she slept right away from ele-
ven o'cloek that night until eight o'-
clock the next morning 1 Mr. St.George
it due 'course went upstairs and also
retired to met, not, as that woman
with the toothache bad sworn, after
Mr. Ross came in, but before.
"The coast was now clear, all was
prepared for the thief, Junin Pierrot,
and at the given time he stole safely
and secretly into the house. Into the
house, yes, but meanwhile, some one
who had not been taken into the wo-
maia's reckoning came in with his
Latchkey, and in the act of undressing,
hearing movements below, for which
e could not account, probably the the
noiae made by the man's getting w„
through the window, descended quick-
lee and found himself face to face
--etelleeelbeihoffieleftdlite
AMONG TIM POTS AND PANS.
It eannot. be denied, that women's
aime are about as limiteri as men's, and
in many eases more so, but the woman
that gives her whole mind to her pots
and pans, when it is a liMited
is a greater benefactor to her familY,
than if .she dilutes her effoxte in 113'
ugto be also 11131 13? 01 arlastie, 01
reformatory.
Hew blessed it has been for the nee-
jority of mankind, that the minds of
the women they depended on, were
not above their pots and pang. Should
a Woman be despised or relegated to
a lower plena for this ,concentration
of effort ? should she not rather be
commended,
-dame/ate 1 principle. of suecese ?
as carrying out the futi-
The pots and pans are as necessary
to our well-being as the painting of
a great picture, the building of a tera-
Fie, or the composition of a god -like
thec)(1thdll e: foodpo'etr be svu: written, i painted?ut 1 1 ite:nign, ttt el in th4 etn cerai:be oi%; :loll or
ItroublesOme pots and pans by eating
We wonder if all of nes have refleeted
that the toil entailed by pots and pans,
only degenerates into shivery, by dis-
content? The pleasures these valuable
sintarpelneignt:n. its bestow are legion, and are
intimated by appetite, health, and
Leto opprobrivau rest on the rale-
.
tress of the pots and pans, those in-
dustrious 1VIerth33 of the world, wheise
oteef-oit:type was not rebuked for her
carefulness, but for taking trouble out
SUGGESTIONS TO ROUSBKEEPERS-
Potatoes are more easily digested
if warmed over than when first cook-
ed. Retreating softens the woody fi-
ber of string beans and makes them
more palatable and. digestible. This le
not true of the alburainoids Such as
eggs and meat. Bach reckoning makes
in more d* ',ficult of digestion. If
rmed over the process would be
ck. Fifteen' minutes is long en -
h for the .stew 03' ragout made from
left over of the previous days' din-
. t
ems as if it would be best econo-
o use the solid silver every day
keep the plated aware for extra
asions. Solid silver will wear for -
r ; plating will wear off. But then
re's the clanger of loss or theft,
the plating can be replaced.
with an intruder, who, having come th
for plunder, was betrayed by pner
erson-
e
al jeopardy and fear of 'consequences -
into murder. Xr. Ross always carriea 6
firearms ; in this instance he came
a pistol belongingto Mr. St. Geor
and it was natural enough thnt
should present the weapon he had wi
him at theman he found tlaere und
such desperate circumstances at su
an hou.r of the .
"That man," went on Mr. Lemaire,
still with his eyes fixed on Rose's bow-
ed figure, " Janin Pierrot, Rose Du-
pont's lover, alias the cobbler's assist-
ant, snatched the pistol from Mr. ,
Ross's hand, shot him dead with it, laid
him aft the very feet of the drugged r
and innocent woman, who had been
betrayed by the maid, she had bene-
fitted and trusted, and too terrified
to pause and secure the booty for
which he had come, made his escape.
"If the woman up stairs stole down
in the night and saw the hideous work
her greed had wrought, she has pros -
ed herself of sufficient resource and
resolution to go up again, a.nd remain
quietly there till the morning, when
the discovery of the night's events
would come about naturally and no
suspicion attach to herself.
" So, indeed, things fell out, and we
may be sure that when her poor mis-
tress woke out of the drugged sleep,
to find a murdered may only a Yard
or two away, the maid. shrieked loud-
er than the mistress and manifested
ten times as much surprise and ter-
ror.
"And here," Mr. Leraaire turned and
looked at Jack, "came in, apart from
that poor young rn,an's death, the most
tragic, the most unfortunate feature
of the whole case,and the one that so
completely played into Rose Dupont's
hands as left her mistress of the
game. In the first -shock of the dis-
covery husband and wife mutually sus-
pected each other of the crime, the
husba.nd thinking the wife had -kill-
ed his friend in defence of her honor,
the wife believing that Mr. Ross had
stolen into .her room while she was
asleep, been discovered there by her
husband, and that in a fit of fury the
latter had killed hie friend, believing
in her guilt, and left the dead man
there to tell his own tale."
Mr. Lemaire removed his eyes from
Rose, to glance at Jack, and thrilled
with satisfaction at the success of his
bold guess, while the eyes of all pre-
sent, following his, found in Jack's
face a living corroboration of his coun-
sel's words.
To be Continued.
sed and
Se I me
he I eve
th i the
I and
eh
THE TRA.NSVAAL METHOD.
Henry, it isn't Kruger ; Bryce says it
is pronounced Eroo-r.
Is that sot What an informative
thing information is. Please pass me
the soo-r bowl ; 1 need a little more
000-1 in my tea. '
Rheu atis
SOUTH AMERICAN EMEIMATIO CURE
A UNIVERSAL LIBERATOR.
Realer in six hottral *haft a gloat MOO
siege to the pain -racked, boetridden, dee.
Pairing eulferer from theuitatientee cruel
tiptop -and this Is a feet, boene out by
volumed of evidetoe, or thiti greatest of
vain colt rotators.
Aliouinatiem Iti ourreaka-sontli Altera
-
can Ithetteethun ekt#6 u aft absolute
saeciflo, and rtaidelly °meet the mend
stubborn cages In from ons to three days.
"I eutfored intencteliotroti3 rheumatism
and scieelele elect df
teeseoe and
111811Ylidireleiatus 44 lir! aec tatting
boneate faar dotta of coin aliteninatto Ouee iveadertat heille
cl
me; two bettlee mired nadar-lia Jarrett
Meerickvale, Opt.
Thtetetestroche hr,freacitt Simina t.Il tho
Ogtme 646rY-43elgt smear la hams
ionger,-xx.
aolii by 0, Lutz, riuter. ,
ou can make your own bluing juet
as good as that you can buy, and much
cheaper. Get a paolrage of diamond
dye for cotton goods, dissolve the dye
in a little hoe water Ln a sauger, ratx-
in,g if to a paste so there will be
t cif
cold,
110 amps, then put into a quer
hot water. Bottle for use, when
and use lik-e ordinary- bluliag.
DOMESTIC RECIPES.
Oatmeal Cookies. ---Two-thirds cup of
butter and brown sugar;,one map roll-
ed oats, raw; one icup flour; one egg;
one teaspoonful soda or baking pow-
der. Roll very thin and bake In a
hot oven. Mix in this order: Butter,
sugar, egg, flour and oats. If too dry
to roll easily, add a tablespoonful of
cream. These are a good substitute
for macaroons and are so good that
whoever eats them will ask for the
receipt at once. •,
VealePie.--Select about a pound and
a half of veal from the knuckle or
shoulder, and have the butcher chop
it rather coarsely into half inch cubes.
Put in a stew -pan with boiling water
to cover, add three potatoes, out in
small cubes, Salt and -pepper and cook
till done. Then thicken with ascent
table,spoonful of flour wet with a lit-
tle cold water. Make a biscuit cruse
of three cups of flour, a level teaspoon-
ful of salt, three level teaspoonfuls
of baking powder, a heaping table-
spoonful of butter and sweet milk to
make a dough stiff enough to roll.
Line a buttered basin with the crust,
fill with the meat and gravy, season-
ing with a little more butter " to
make it good,' cover with crust, put
in loosely to allow for shrinkage ; cut
a large slit to allow of the escape of
steam, and bake thirty orthirty-five
minate,s in a good oven.
Zara Omelet. --Mince the ham fine,
and allow one egg to eaeh tablespoon-
ful. Beat the yolks till light, season
with salt and pepper and stir in the
ham, beat the whites stiff, and fold
them into the mixture. Butter the
omelet pan or the spider, pour in the
inixfure, tend after it has set on the
bottom put in the oven to finish. When
done, fold double, and lift to a hot
platter. This is a most toothsome way
of disposing of bits of oold ham eith-
er boiled or fried.
MIS0ELI,ANEODS RECIPES,
Veal Soufflee-Scald one cup of milk
with one slice of onion, a snrig of par-
ley and a bit of bay leaf, • Remove
the seasonings. Melt one-half of a
tablespoonful of butter, stir in one-
half tablespoonful flour, and the
milk; then add one-quarter of a cup
state sat bread cruenbs. Cook two
minutes, remove from the fire, add
one 011p cooked veal, finely chopped,
arid the yolks of two eggs well beaten.
Void in the whit ee of two eggs, beaten
untie stiff. Turn into a buttered
baking dish, and bake in a slow over
twerity-five or thirty minutes. Serve
with white mushroom fiance. Melt
0116 tat leepoionteu 1 beit tour, acid one
tab leopooniful flour, and pour on
slowly on eup of aiot) mulk, Season(
with one-qtrarter teaspoonful salt, a
few grains cayenne pepper, and one-
half cup canned mushrooms Mit in
stices long tlhwi se,
RiCe Croquettea.-larash, one half cup
riee and add to it one -bale cup hoping
rater. Cook in double boiler until
Tied has absorbed all the water, then.
uslne , 011 .11111M1111(11111 1 hire 111
1/1 MEM WEE IMMTEMIERMIIMEI mis
AoetablePreparatiortibrAs-
similating therood andRegula-
14 the toxta*s arkIlloweL$ of
p
1)romotosDiOstIon,CheeTfui-
aess and Rest:Contains neither
OpuntMorphia0 nor Mineral.
War NAB c otrc.
-Rage annienlincillifilEMITIER
Sea -
Sar -
-etaite SeqsZ
.lipperntipt
451
Cet4 arm tack4.4
lErzy -
(=fart Jivar
A perfec t Remedy for Constipa-
tion, Sour Stontach,Diarrhoea,
Worms ,Couvuisions ,feverish -
mess and Loss or SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature ot
'NEW YOME.
EXAGT COPYOF WRAPPER.
22,ztr.
'
dastorla is put ap hi oneeke b
le not sold in bulk. Don't allow
you anything else cm theplea or prom 'se
Is "jut as goodll and "Nt111 answer every
pole." .14:17- Bee that you get C/ -A -B -T -0 -1W -
The fao- •
ernes 1R11
signature1,4:(4,e/W "I
of
a ?lei te hetet e, e '
add one cup scalded mtiflr, and cook
until rice is soft. Remove from the
fire, add the yolks of two eggs, one- '
half tablespoonful of butter, one table-
spoonful powdered sugar and a few
gratings from the rind of a lemon.
Spread on a plate to cool Cut in
squares, dip in crumbs, then in egg,
I again in crumbs, and fry, in deep fat,
and drain on brown paper. Serve on
each a cube of currant,
Codfish With Crease:L.-Pick out care-
fully in flakes all the flesh from the
rern,nants of some cold boiled. codfish.;
melt a piece of butter in a saucepan,
and add to it a large ,pinch of flour
and a gill of milk or cream, with pep-
per', salt and grated nutmeg to taste,
also the least bit of cayenne ; stir well
put in the fish, and gently heat it in
this sauce until quite warm. If it
seems too thick or dry, add a little
milk or °rearm ; then, add, off the fire,
the yolks of two eggs, beaten up with
a , little milks and serve. ,
AST
For Infants and Children.
The fac-
simile
gig:stare
Of
BADEN POliirELL IS SHARP.
Marelaing's Defender nag Been Coiled the
Sherlock nomes ot the Arany.
Colonel Baden Powell, the defender
of Mafeking, has been called the Sher-
lock Holnaes of the British army. - 11111
India he used to make deductions from
`everi-day incidents a regular prac-
tine, in order that he Might complete
his training as a cavalry scout. The
following story is told of him. Riding
one day sterciss an open grass plain
in Matabeleland he suddenly noticed
that the grass hadi been renently trod-
den down. Following up the track,
he soon found Una it, was the "spoor"
of several women and boys, A tell-
tale leaf, which he saw lying a few
yards off the track -- whereas there
were notrees for 'miles --convinced him
that the party had come from a yin.
lege some fifteen miles distant, where
trees with leaves of this kind grew.
The leaf was damp and smelt of native
be That it wee lying ten yards off
the tracle showed to the military Sher-
lock Iloirnes that it wind, bad been
blowing at the tune it fell. 1 Baden-
Powell •reaci from these signs that dun.
ing the eight a party of women had
brought beer from the, village fifteen
miles distant, and had taken it to the
enemy on the hi I Is, arriving t hero
about 6 o'clock: He itirther guessed
that the men would drink the beer
at once, 1303 that, by the time he could
reach them they would be getting
sleepy fromit, and therefore give him
a favourable ()hence of xeconnoitee-
ing their porition, He ancoreingly fol.
lewed the women' raolea, found the
enemy as he simpoeeJ, made his obser-
vations, and got 11.' 1) with Valuable
inforraation, without. any difficulty.
1?0ETICATa DREAMS.
Hasn't that poet a far-awey look ?11
Yes,' .1" presume he is trying to see
sqUare meal somewhere in the fte.
Lure.
Defoe, 4
'7,-"73.771" ..
,-.
Wood's Phdspbodine,
The Oreat TrIngli-sh reentecte,
Sold and recommended by all
druggists 111Canaria. Only ten.
able exedicine discovered. Sat
peteteagee guesednieeci to cure all
m to
forSexual Wealmosa, all egeets of slave
Of excess, Mental Worry, Exnestittre rime Of ilee
Wee°, Opium or stimulants. Mailed on receipt
of price, one paekage $1, sim,16. one Itnagetses e
40140 OUPO. Penielliotc free to cmY addWee. r
Weotl7sh<lhWo:pelicio'bdit:lePiaslasYolWcliinn(16E°11e°t1;r.
by Browning, druggist, la
tif Oi
fit.DaL lavitry arnHy
PIASTER ready for on mar
gooey -
.,
should hay* one
DAVIS St LAWRENCE
LIMITIO, MO
Beware ef I
WeguaranteiOa th
Plasters will Lev
pain quicker tla
other. Put 4 e
25e, tin boxes aecl
yard rolls, The kt
allows you te cut tte
Plaster any size.
NER
BEANS
cove
3'felY*1151 sb
ood
weakness of body or mint
by oiemrork, or the &Tore
ceases of you*. Tide Rom
soluteiy cares the inost obstinate 0,4.1eft Whet( 1401
T.ttliATMEgT8 have failed even to relieve. Sold d
gists at $1 per paokage, or six for et, or sent fly ts
seceipt of price by addrossing.TITPl Jenne e
00.. Toronto. Oat. 'Vvritv. •
Sold at Brownine's Drug Stoee Ear r
—
AN EXTINGTIPTIER.:'''
iThump, thump I Rattle, rat
crash -1 •
Young Percey Stonebroke rol
down the steps of the palatial Tea
dence of Mr. Goldbonds.
Mr. Goldbonds returned to the house,
rolling- down his sleeves.
Papa, oh, papa, what 'have y
doing?
This question came in Lingo
tones from the ruby lips „ofa"Arabel
Goldbonds.
Putting out the lig'
htof* your life,
answered papa, who hart done a littie
cavesdeopping in the hall the nighe
before.
Chlidren Cry f6
THE" SlYIELLING af.IRE."
Interesting experitnente with
odors of herbs have from tint
been made, and it htte been
many species of inicrobes ar
stroyed by various smells,
of cloves has been known to
microbe S in 35 minutes ; cinnamo
kill SOMe species in 12 minutes; th
" in 35. In 45 minutes common wild
bena is found efrective, widle the c
of mint has destroyed various f
of microbes /Li 511 minutee
recorded as the naost effeoti
odors as an antiseptio, It ie
lieved that herbs ' which h
Lound in .Egyptian mum
placed on the bodies' more fs,
tiseptio properties then as mere
ments or objecte of ;lentil/milt.
Childrei Ory fo
4114
ORIGIN Oh' FAIRY' RINGS,
These curious green circles in
and pastures, appearing both ou
ground and on hillsides, have
rise to many superetitione and
forth it Va riety of More or les
explariattene. The fame
tor Priestly strongly adveca.
view that the' were en eleetr
The real cause of their form
ong been known to lie the gro
11 spediee of nEungi, which, st
from 'i single geed, spreads circhla 1
and makes a broad diak on the growl
The fruit and soda fern* only at the
Mater flan. The soil in the middle is
xhatieted, arid coneequently, as the
ing grows larger the glen% in the
trust pare vithercl, One of these (dr"
ice near Stebbing, England, attadno
diameter 0 120 fest.
1