HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1889-5-3, Page 22
rJl:yimur Tau,
Onve- Sabbath Services
itt 11 ithin. and fall0 p•m•ItalLY oE
t 230 it. in. Itcy. John Rem, S. A.,
pastor.
Mem: Curl:cu.—Sabbath Services at 11
a.m. and 0:30 p.m. Sunday School at 2:30
p m Rev. 0.3.8. Ilowie, 111, .A., pato.
t17, Joint's Cidenen.—Siabliath ServIces
at 11 • ,m, and 7 p.m. Sunday School at
0:80 a.m. Rev. W. T. Cluff, incumbent,
Mcrunnisr entnica. -Sabbath Services
at 10:30 a.m. and 0;30 p. tu. Sunday
School at at 2:30 p.m. Rev. M. Swann,
Vaster.
ROMAN CATI101.10 CllrIani.—Sabbtlx 9er.
vice third Sunday in every month, at 11
a.m. llev. P. J. Shea, priest.
SALVATION Altary.—SOVVICee at 7 and 11
a.m., 8 and H o'olock p.m. on Sunday and
every evening in the week at 0 o'olock, ed
the harraelts. Capt. Dean in command.
Onn FELLoWs' Loot evory Thursday
aveninu, in Clrabam's block.
Mascrsw Lotion Tuesday at or before
full moon, in Garflold block.
A. O. U. W. Lotion on Erst and third.
Monday evenin,:s of i•anti month,
F0, raTraa'Lo0011211(1 and last Monday
evenings of each mouth, in Smale's ball.
L. 0. L. 1st Monday in every mouth,
in Orange Hall.
PosT Osamu.-- Office hours from R a,m.
to 7:20 p.m.
'Reading, 'Room
and Library in lIohnee' flvok, will be
open fror; n to 0 .i'v!..01: !Lai. Wedncadays
and '-taturdays, Mies Minnie Shaw, ti-
brari•in
Bare,t:r.a W. C. T. P. hold inouthly
meetii; n, the :led Saturday in eaoh
month, at 8 o'clock p.m. 'Mrs. Swann,
Pre. Mr'.A. Strew n. Sve`y.
Taws CovNvIL.—t(obt. Graham, Reeve;
D. Streebon, J. M. McIntosh, Wm. Stew-
art a .v! Witt. Ainloy. Councillor, ; F.
S. riv• ; , Treasurer ;
D. Sr• -wart. Atawseor, end Jas. T. Ross.
Collociw. Board inecte the 1st Monday
in each rnonth.
Sem.m.Brtuln.—T-Fletcher chairman),
181. Dennis, A. Huntet, J, Harereaves, J.
J. Denman and Jas. Buyers ; Sec.-Treas.,
W. IL ?doss. Meetings 1st Friday even -
ng in each mouth.
Puanc Samar. Tnaonnas.—jno. Shaw,
Principal, Miss Richardson, Miss Elambly,
Mies Alienbam and Miss Taylor.
Boum or HEUTIL.-- Relays Graham,
Clerk Scott, Jno. Wynn, A. Stewart and
3. G. Skens. Dr. Holmes, Medical Health
Officer.
"t 81) rim BOYS.
irive made un toy mind to speak
to yea about to little matter, for I
believe veil ' ,1 t whet is fair.
Nee., v. Met the etit . budy jaet the
Otto' b'ks net :ea./ di, and ofbm go
far rt:i- al of year it' chool ; when (34
meay t.f th.tu eteate. sienegrephy,
teleg.eahing, mime kiude of
tat s, reccone itele re, doe; ort ,
mis• ion:tries. c 10. 0 tney are doing
111.•!,Id 11;,•ro e•tell :V0iir, a hat
righ, have you to si, about, as lazy
as a and let 0110-0 girl() work
and tug till they n tired ont, fur
your comfort, (40,1 t. (10 1.1130gs
which von should attend to ....our
self ? Don't tlo y like to run aud
play tia well as you do 0 Don't tLey
need the exermee end fait that you
get in the great Splendid mud airs,
just as much 0 Are yea not pep].
cally !stronger, and better able to
bear the heat ot the kitchen, loud
the breathed over and over air of
in theehoutte than they ? Ought
you not, then, in your big, hearty,
good natured faiiiiion, to "give them
to lift," every time, when the work
pre. tate en them. and to take mite
of your own town, if they do of
theirs ? It Nell ti to me this iejust
"a fair divide."
Let Inc tell pea about three splen
did boys I knew ouee on a time.
Their father died and their dear
mother was left to bring them up
and b. earn the money with whicb
to do it. So these young fellows
set i» to help her. By taking a few
boarder s, doing the work herself and
practising economy this blessed
woman kept out of debt, this gave
each of her sons a thorough college
education. But if they hadn't
worked like beavers to help her, she
never could have done it. Her
eldest boy—only four—treated his
mother as if she were tho girl he
loved best. He took the heavy jobs
of homework off her hands, put ou
his big apron and went to work with
a will ; washed the potatoes, poand-
ed the clothes, ground the coffee,
waited on table—did anything, and
everything that he could coax her
to let him do, and the two younger
ones followed his example right
along. Those boys never wasted
their mother'e money on tobacco,
beer or cards. They kept at work
and found any amount of pleasure
in it, They were happy, jolly boye,
too, full of fun and everybody not
only liked, but respected and 0(1.
mired them. All the girls in town
praised them, and I don't know any
better fortune for a boy than to bo
praised by good girls, nor anything
boys like better, They all married
noble and true women, and to -clay
one of those boys is Presidone of a
college, goes to Europe every year
aliment, and ie in demand for every
good word and work ; another Eves
in one of the most elegant houses
in Evanston, and is my "beloved
physician," while the third is it Well-
tO•d0 wholeettle grocer in Pueblo,
Colorado, rind a member of the city
oonnail.
I tell yon, boys who aro good to
their mother and to their tasters in
the house, always gro v up to be
nice men. Now Pm not blainlog
seteee ,
r •
sou, boys, nor anybody also. I
know that //ay number of you •aro
good and generous OS you can be,
and 1 litlOW, too, that you baveu't
hian taught to tidal( about these
things.
Freeiteiiette. reiotteer.
This le the mouth for bargeins.
Mmiaturee are being revived for
ornamente.
Ladiee' boot hale should measure
one inch high.
Black stockings are quite as rash-
iouable as ever.
Green i$ decidedly the favorite
color of the mason.
Striped flannel ad thick ao n
blanket to used for bath robes.
House waiets are establiehed Na-
tures of the home wardrobe.
Lace will be just as much used as
ever for summer gowns,
The bridal veils won by very
young ladies are always of tulle.
The bustle bee diminished so in
eize that it Is not worth talking
bou
The Om:non:an cloak was first
um .14°4 In Li.didon by Lees lid
Liebe.' walking bunts ere made
....e. of ,loth to mitten the me
L. tutue.
feetorite trimming for e irly
wive hate ie metle of net end field
01.. ors.
The theatre waiet it 00 indlepen•
bni part 'if. e. Fashionable lady's
wardrobe.
Dudes wear buttoned boots be-
cause laced ones catch the bottom
of the trousers.
Ooreets made for we wing with a
riding habit are little more than
;rebus of leather.
Some ultrafashionable ladies
have monograms worked on their
suu umbrellas.
Empire gowns and Connemara
cloaks have almost put tailorgnade
garments out of fashiou.
The Rnesiat cloak, for summer
wear, will be made of surah and
lace It is not adapted for young
ladies.
Brideemaids' die/sees are of white
moussolioe do elie, over skirts of
white teed other 011110 in pale
tailors.
Breton jackets (US filat011ea With
two or three hook, AL oho t hruat and
tam left oven to rev' ti the dress
beneath,
A net very eimilar It the old
fashioned grenadiue is out of the re-
medy imported materials for raid.
summer coettimee.
Accordion plaited skirts have
sprung ae rapidly into popularity as
the Hading veil, end will doubtless
die as sudden a death.
'Phe material generally used for
bridal gowns this season is whits
peen de soie. It has some of the
gloss of eatio, "It Is 8018 and flex-
ible.
Many of the summer dreams are
made without high etandiug collate
and aro 001 10 the V ahem to show
an extra inch or two of the throat.
A new feminine garment is called
the smoking cont. 10 ie not made
for ladies who use the weed, but is
worn when in the company of% man
who does.
"Frill fans" aro so celled because
they are ornamented with a ruching
of flowers. Pale green is the color
most fancied at present, and lilies
of the valley for the frill.
Orchids are something oho eon for
bridal boquets, but the regulation
flowers are white rued. A. blench
of orange flowers is worn somewhere
on the dress for the sake of good
luck.
The latest freak in jewelry is a
set of rings, from two to five, all ex-
actly alike. As the number of
stones iu each ring must be five, to
lady not infrequently has twenty-five
jewels on one finger.
A
SCIENTIFIC.
Late researches toad to show that
persons short of food in mirLocean
might support life indefinitely if pro,
vided with appliances for capturing
the email marine fauna, which is very
abundant in the Atlaneic, and pro-
bably in all temperate and warm
marine waters.
'Nervous agitation is the chief
Caine of nervous exhaustion,' says a
phyeiciau writing in the Nineteenth
Century of 'The Nerve'Rest
His remedy for the ailment is a
frequent holiday, in which regular,
unhurried muscular exercise shall be
taken, If the patient cannot get a
holiday,the best substitute is an
occasional day in bed, daring which
the strained nerves may rest. A
Spanish merchant in Barcelona used
to laugh at those who spent their
holidays in toiling tip mountaine.
Ills practice was to go to bed for two
or three dap, whenever be could
bo spared from his bueinese. An
English woman, at the head of a
large wholesale bueinese, retains ex-
collent nervee, though she is now an
elderly person. Ono day iu ovary
week elm spende in bed, and Ulla
110.8 boon her habit for years. The
nerves matt have time when fre-
quently agitated to recover between
THE FilitiSEL,c; 1-4 )'-; MAT 3, Th)
sbockm„ 'Faun an lieties seolusiou
after 1, geed innon will deprive a
hurried, anklens day or much of its
i0j007. The nerves Can ()Dec bo
overcome by stratagem when they
relage to be centrolled by strength
of
te. 11. pollen eil trIRtrs rod, rendered
Innunons throughout its length by to
email elect:ie lamp at one end, le
used by ,,vo Vientut pliv-icians for
illiuninating froru the outside Settle
of the cavities of the body, such ns
the laryez and the nose. Planed
against the skin of the throat it
lights up the iuterior of the larynx
sufficiently fur surgical operati .u.
Tiler° is heat enongia waste.'
around au ordinary kioihen range —
to say nothing of the faro
furnish all the power ueetled to inn
the sewing machine, pu up ten ,ar 1'
an elevator and ligh, the ilwelliett by
tilectrioity. T130 411330 was:, (,(t
of the cooking }14) 8081,05 might 11.
made to cool the house in sittnnwr
and to dispense Rh the leo
When nitrate( of arninoult, r (..x
ample, is dissolved i u .nater i ansorb,
1011 0.1.0•131.).1H e...1 41.1 •••• 00,14, •.1
1,1l0 111'10011aq it re3,1ily appli ',8 (.1
the cortege/want to 00.1
cliemeere. learner1 v elabora ..1
!acetyl', Limey could t o .o arritegitil
es to keep It C .or (ilao
'he ordinary leo hos, to 0.",1 wa
for drinking more that
the average icv etipely, 'gel to eittal
volume, c air 1.tVrI
shafts to register.. in the ceding, 01
V00113S, so that the heat ui m UMW,
Might be tempered as certain], (1
the cold of winter. ..12110 slant( Silt •
ply of the aininotria tete, inity be twit
repeatedly by evaporating the water,
for which purpose the aete-hea.
above spoken of could be utilized.
The poeeibilities of applied science
in the household hive not been even
nibbled M.—Chime-, News.
1-Iousehold
Sprained. ankle Me been cued in
au hour by showering, it with hot
water poured from a height of a few
feet.
T. p (Usti a copper trade rah
with lemon and salt. Cu, a lemon,
dip in stilt, and rub over the copper
surface.
A. strip of flannel or a mpktu
ening out of hot water and applied
round the neck ofto child that hes
croup neuelly brim; relief in ten
minutes,
e, teaspoonful or more of powder
ed borax thrown into the bath tub
while bathing will communicate
softness to the water, and at the
eieme time iuvigorate autl rest the
bather. Perone troubled with
nervousness or wakeful nighte will
find this kind of a bath a great bene-
fic.
Simmering at 1800 is pronouno
ed more effective in all ordinary
cooking than violent boiling at
212° Much heat is wasted iu
raising water to needlessly high
temperature iu cooking. Chicken,
for instance, will cook much better
iu an hour of slow simmering than
in an hour of violent
To prevent rust, melt together
three parts of lard and ono part of
resin in the powder. A. very thin
coating applied with to brush will
preserve stoves and grates from
rusting duriug Summer, even in
damp situations. For this purpose
a portion of black load may be add
ed.
There is nothing that will so
promptly cut short congestion of the
lungs, sore throat or rheumatism
as hot water when applied prompt
iy and thoroughly. Piecee of cotton
batting dipped in hot water, and
kept applied to soros and new cuts,
bruises and sprains, is the treat
ment udopted in many hospitals.
The following method will make
paste that will last a year :—Die-
eolve a teaspoon of aluno in a quart
of water ; when cool stir in as inueli
flour as will give it the coneietemy
of thick cream; stir until all lumps
are removed ; add as much powder-
ed resin as will lie on a dime, and
a half-dozen cloves. Have ready a
teacup of boiling water, pour the
flour mixture into it, stirring well
at the time. In a very few minutes
it will be of the consistency of mush ;
let it cool, cover it and set in 14 cool
place ; when needed fax use take
out a portion and soften it with
warm water.
Hamilton rate of assessment this
year is 10 mils on the dollar.
The majority in favor of Scott Act
repeal in Ludo and Grenville is
1,298.
&belt Lana was badly lacerated
by a saw iti his sawmill near Toes -
water.
Already 89,000 has been 001)'
scribed fax tho Oddfellowetemple
proposed to bo erected fn Kingston.
ibis reported that the Armstrong
steel gear works of Guelph will
otablieh it branch factory at Flint,
Michigau.
Stratbroy contains some very old
people. Mrs. Matthews is 105 years
•
ol,d, tlielitel Bogan 07, MIA. Huta
iter 94, and Woe, Tinker 02.
If EAT t1,1/a' 1',
um. street. 433rivisrte
ANDREW CIIIRRIE, PROPRIETOR,
1 Fvesh Salt eats
Of the best quality alwavmliana mitt .0
livered to ti801 ..8 81°, villmn 11,0 .d
haT00.
Tetnio very I:movable,
FAT CATTLE WANTED!
For which the Welles': market pries will
bo Paid.
I alto tnake a Montan), of buying Tildes
and Skins.
Don't forget the plan aced, door to
letalter'm Jewelry Store. A. CURRIE.
Private Funds to Loan.
B2OOJO
Iittve boon placed in IU bawls
for Investment on rt -til estate.
towEs'r RATE OF Mit 1'7,1.
40 Commissiin
BorroWitre can hilWo leans coal -
pinto,: in Tlia.c itaye • if
satisfac tory.
W. M. «i1' i,.\(.
Sotieffor, Theissefe,
P•
General BlacksIDIP
wishes to intimate to the public: gederally
that ho does all kinds of Blooltemithi•.::
in a :8 Drimonlike Manner.
wagons, Buggies, Sleighs and Cut -or,
made to Order.
Repairing promptly Executed.
1 maks t Specialty of Ilorac—hooing.
A. Gall Solicit. d. t-e'.Rornombor the
Stand—Rean von BUIDGE.
S. Plum.
21
8101
15 000
vfl
tem ae
—Suet arrived at—
PublishinF, House.
Every Business Man
Should have a
Thousand of
Them.
PNT HIBMIliENG HOUSE,
A woNoERFuL LAKE;
810 WATER METH MOD 8.18(81 81 8(0010810
ttMEDJol
•
p. . 01 N 74 11 MED164,
A 414ES
VORE-PEERZ'OS,-R r4-01
IP861-11 18Y,14g4;
TOrilli0M4000/04/8011qt,
AGENT,
DE,„IDJII,t17v
38-1y. 13 FitY33•433A LAS.
T. FLETUEIER3
PRACTICAL
WATOILUAKEN
AND JEWELLER.
Thanking the public for past favors and
support and wishing still to samara your
patronege. Wu aro opening out fulilines
in
GOLD & SILVER WATCHES.
----
SILVnR PLATED WA.101
from established and rcliablo malcera
fully warranted by us.
Cloas of the
Latest Desgins.
.T.E.W1111L,111:17 :
Wedding Itiregs,
Ladies 0om Rings,
Broaches,
le/airings,
also have in stock a full lino of Vienne
and Violin fittings. rem
N. B. --Issuer ot Marriage Licensee,
T, Pletcher
,./$ l li e.1
.-a:t,„ t it, • 4, !.
.441 Il•Fpfg 0 n
6TILL AT TEE SZIEU\
o
E..DUNFORD, tho Popular mai Fashionable
Tailor, of Brume's, desires to
00110113100 that he has openal out n large MA MAO stook of New
Spring Goods and is well prepared to receive and execute orders.
The Stock now on hand is a most excellent one and everybody
can bo suited,
Scotch, English. and Canadian Tweeds, English
and French 'Worsteds, 86c.
A Perfect Fit Guaranteed.
All Goods made up in the Latest NEW YORK Styles.
A 1'i'7 CLI L Illiitge of new Goads just to Le0 and big bar-
gains will be given, although they are not Bankrupt Goods.
, "ITN NiP XPPOI R; Z:111,
S MEL'S BLOCK, BlirSSELS. NIP 'THANT TAILOR.
ifibr:77:174:111,4171:01,
111
o rindlli011in
See ,he New Noxon Binder
CC (i CC
C Drill
NOXON RAKESAalT? MOWERS.
HEM WILKINSON ROE,
Davis Eewing Machines,
'iboves, Tinware, &a, at
11.122121=2C.15=1.11.....
(
I
41111„,
tt JACKS° 'S
':-BRUSSELSH
(if it
LE
We; the underSigned, call the Attention of the Public lo
the fact that we have put in some
NEW MACHINERY
and are now able to do better Work than has been done in
the past and as good, if not better, than. most
MILLS IN THE PROVINCE.
We will endeavor, to the best of our ability,
to Please all Customers and fill all Orders at
Shortest Notice.
Those Parties having WOOL would do well
to give us a call before going elsewhere.
We have a fine Asosrtment of
SILEVETING,
BLAITEETEig
TAMS
FLANBIBL 0
TWEE '1, &G.
KNIT - GOBS - MADE - TO - 0E131
Hoping vou will favor us with a Oall, We
are, Yours'Truly,
GEO. 110WE & 004.
BRUSSELS..