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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1872-11-22, Page 3WODS .N' at .Lx Ss. k.N. ' e1e at rz. LN. cs- CAN apes. �N. NS5; Goodsr_ CAN•.. riety, rN , Scotch,: T .s, ES. and r=N. Stock of X O tri€ aa N • Stocks: -t q,, viz.: Kip wear in es e abte earlyall rl by E.. the ICE will' sett/ Ian of rctr z. N TANIS. .AItTi $: a s -.t Carpets :tire bought • by the yard and worn by :t1t foot: : • _ - .A woman - who tells fortunes i tri a tea c tp neecied` to be a -sant core . --1f you court a .young wotnan, and you are won and=the is won, you will both be one, ` z HA" horse has`heen known to go through the bars of a field correctly and: without missing an oat., • —An umbrella deserves no credit for its service; for it never does any good until it is ' put' up' to it, -Sweet idea for a nevi drawing - room ballad—' I'll bury my love -in. the garden, it will niske the apple • tree grow.` - --A lady asked a• gentleman who Was satiating from .influenza, .My dear air, what do you use for your: cord r ' Five handkerchiefs a day, madam.' - • • —A poor nut honest young lady, Cilia earns a living by-wortking on• hroop skirts, in reply to an etig airy, stafeds that she had spent the "slim Mer ' at the.aprings' —.-' Now, John, suppose;. there's a load of hay on one side of the rioter, and a jackass on the otherF , ancl`no bridge, and the river too . •widi�., to swim, how can the jackass get tothe hay' ' I give it ire:' cell, that's just what the otherjackass. did.' —An old. bachelor got married. Fifteen 'days ..after—mind you,' fif- teen days'.' =he met arid'' said to him Why is my Wifelike a baker who is Making a small gooseberry Pier . ' don't know,' • replied the friend: ' Well/ said the disagreeable creature, it's ' because' t, is growing a little tart.' `' •---A gentleman did not always agree with his wife, nor she With hire. One one occasion she mooed a physician, declaring that her husband had poisoned her., , The husband louttly protested hitt intro. Bence, and •dffered as a clincher this test : ' Doctor,` open her right here, on the spot ; I'm evillieg.' —An editor who, like Lord Dun- dreary, has ;' never seen the conntiiv 'pon honor," gave these directions to : prc an amateur farrier who askee .,i how `� one-sixth :t to break an ox : A good way would of the soli be to hoist him, by mens of a long and this chain attached to his tail, to the top nearly, 'all of a pole 40 feet horn orifi the ground crystalirie Thein hoist him by a rope tied to his continued h®rnd to - another pole, Then de- scend on to his back a five -tun pile- driver. limed ideas ---(From Punch.) Dii:ectir ae it fr44ke-it Cooker' y epi :: a s4 ience `a w4 !Id perp fine arts. that- much' wasted,:ow 1r�tionH 1 i whthpre'v In fact, the is snbjected as a clle•w i jest were to nal,le const tnents, and retain o ly thleset `for llitrposes : of oh t'he Pot up. to , Cook•. Meta : -ao as to ',bitable anti -Digestible.; n all its bratiches is both fi an art ; a k'renchinan ps rank ii among the, bete roan be no doubt trainable. nutriment -ha ng'to'the'imperfect And etlaods :of preparing, it, it in many households. processes to Which food are often .precitely`.such i htado)t=. t might _ 1. , --i<f .h rs .ole; ?. get - rid of its really val- what is wo nutrition or such as some n1 1i• oious dtfm a might? devise in, order to tantallz. his' victims with the empty 'se n`bIanee' of not tishnient,' . while. empty-, ' ;; as destroying :the' by slow starvation. . Vegetable `feed, ase a rule; suffers=less'fn`this:respect than animal, a OU.t• attend essay toy` so gard, to the The mos meat is to serve it up is ' bdiled water she raised to this tends i ons portio juices f%oi The,meat ':hould.be chopped or cut ible and steeped for in ' ciild water; wliieh I be gradually, heated up ature not exceeding .150` renheit, or - 62 degrees' below •itis boiling point. • At- the last MolDC ed, to reach bona shou upi iiit�o sm rather 'si`re hams,` in tract their -Soup ee the =saline i'a creatinine, and kindred eowpcnrnds, some of"th•: albumen and .fat; -and an amount of gelatine, that depends upon 'the° duration. of the boiling- cess: old water e.tracts from one -feu rth .of :the weight constituente of the •meat; vlatery extract contains the savory, saline and ngredients. After long oiling, 'neat .becomes a hard mass, composed of tough, mus cular fibres, .the areolar tissue con- necting th and blood- to mastich de we therefore restrict a in:thi "resent, familiar e suggestions with re- cootemg-of meats. . econolnicaLway of using- ok in. hot - water, - and, in its own fn avy If it r preparing' soup, the ld riot Ate' ton quickly he boiling. point, .since }coagulate the albumin- s ancl- to prevent the passing imp she water. able -food fir: the siieptio ```T' yf ing is the worst ` pogtiibl'e 7 method of cocking meat,'.especililly for persons wlie o diestive p'ow'ers €ire not'vig- •oroits,' aid' ltd alinos ` ihvri•iably` de- velopg a very .acrid •substance known ° 'as' acroleine, and sundry fatty ''acids that are nearly- as un- Viholhsome. Steews Add ',ashes are very savory, batseldotu agree with weals stom- achs.' - Phey°'are fpr thetter when mde front fresh meat' than" from that which has' been already cooked. The repgited cooking of any kind of food detracts materially frdm its nu- tritive quality. ` ''Ac Borne --• one has said : ' It iw better to reheat our good cold reef -and mutton in our stomachs than in poi frying -pans or stewing pots.' • Salted meat is lass eutritioue than fresh;'. because much' of its saline matter is dissolved out by the brine. It=ris well known that scurvy is often produced by the continued use of salt meats without fresh vegetables. Somerhave asserted that !Seat may become poisonous by being cured in brine that has been used again anti again ; - but however that may be, the flavor of 'meat kept in old brine Call 'hardly be as good as' it the liquid was, freslla +made.'—Journal of Chem- istry. as.fine as Sonne- tithe should the toAteglpn degrees Fa t the -soup may be al -low - the boiling point.. The d (be crushed or broken 11- pieces; -and boiled, or ered, for eight 'Or ten rdez thoroughly to .ex - nutritive matter. tains the greater part -of atter, with the creatine, IN THE MIND OF MAN. -----That he is overworked. This his corsritu- tion requires stirbulants. That, if he had theta, be could at this mo- ment invest t few hund&eds to the greatest advantage. That smoking, is good for his nerves, his worries, his literairo pursuits, his toothache, dbc. That he could reform the army, do away with the income tax, man- age the railways better, and make a large fortune by keeping a hotel. That he knows a good glass of wine. That he could win a heap of money if he were in 13auiburg. That med- icine is all humbug. That he could preach = aegood a -sermon himself That he could EOM pick' up his French if he were abroad. IN THE MIND OF WOXA.N.-That she has nothing fit to'put on. That things ought to be bought because they are cheap. That there is com- pany pany in the kitchen.. _ That she is not • allowed sufficient money . for housekeeping. Thatsthe never goes out anywhere.. That her best black silk is getting awfully shabby. That she . requires a change about the month of August. Teat her allow- ance is too small. That she never looks fit to • be . seen. That cook drinks. That there is always glare.' That there is somebody in the house. That, Mrs, Orpington is dreadfully gone off, or dreadfully made up,, no not so•very good look - lag, g, after all. An Unexpeet@d'.I 410. on' a Oow- Catcher. • A day or two `since, while the train from here, -oie the Louisville and Nashville Road, was. runrlivg at its usual rate of speed, a few miles north of •Rich Pond, a negro girl at- tempted' tp.er`OSs the track, and was caught upon the cow catcher. The vetocity of engine Was eo great that, instead of being thrown from the track, she was thrown back against the pilot, where she found a lodgment until some of the hands about the train, seting theaccident, ran forward to the engine, and walk- ed out upon the railing to bet relief,. expecting to find her at least very badly hart. Their surprise was • great on. reaching the pilot, to finch the girl lying quietly and entirely uninjured upon the pilot, and ap- parently enjoying the ride. The engine .sped on, and she was carried thus to the next station, a distance of four miles, and on arriving there' she jumped from her riding -place and exclaimed ' Die- is just de plaee T wanted to come to,'and went on her way- rejoicing. --j- talaville Banner. READ Duncan & Duncan's new adver- tisement, and see if you can detect the mistake. ED, 1ud parts of the nerves essels.. This is difficult e, more difficult to digest, and se'devoid of flavor that it it iul- possible to tell.._ flow what animal it came. A tiel+ig remarks, even a dog will r jt'ct it. For inv• lids, beef soup is by far the best.. " That' ioade from mutton is less dig stible, and is selui'm free from fate The remarkable restora- tive prope ties of soup are due to, the prese h •e of a large quantity of highly n tro - genious principles. Very stro beef tea_olay almost he classed . w th suchstimulants. as brandy an r tea. Creatine,' creatin- ine and Ott er similar substances inmeat bear close resemblance to the theine of tea and coffee,. and the theobromi of cocoa. If wee w'eh to cook meat in such • a way `ass preserve • the m axjimum oft -nitrite. tri in, the most digestible form, we ishould place it, in large pieces in toiling water, and keep it there fo>r five minutes. The high tempera- eiipe'r tti-re coagulates the xibufnen at the sur= taco of the meat, stops up its pores;a 'd thus prevents the juices from escal ing. After this boiling of five mi uses, add cold wa,ter.to, t educe the heat to about 1.60 degrees- Fahr-enhe t, and- keep it at that temperate re mail the anent 1s suf- ficiently ocked. It will then be found -to be tender juicy. savory and nat tions. Salted meat, 'in- tended to be eaten cold, should be allowed tto cool iu the water in which it has be:n boiled. In roa ting meat, as in boiling it, the first._ bject should he to coagu- late the • Ibumen at the surface, in order to revent the escape of the.. jui^es. The meat should be at first pia • close to the fire, kept there foil ten or fifteen minutes; and thea wit, drawn to.a greater distance from t " heat. If cooked in the overt of a stove or .a range, the oven should very }tot when the meat is .first p t -into it, kept at the same heat for short time, then cooled down par tially (by opening the door or .11ecki 'g the firei,_ and the roast- ing should then be allowed' to goon may be of weigh; nearly o than In the rich aromatic this mod al ' dry' USSELL WATCHES, ti,MERICAN WATCHGS, SWISS WATCHES, ENGLISH JEWELRY, Aly1ER1CAN JEWELRY, FRENCH JEWELRY, JET JEWELRY, $ CONCERTINAS, VIOLINS, MEERCHAUM AND BRIAR PIPES, Just Received. at ly, so that the inner parts oroughly done. The loss (mostly water and fat) :is e -third more ie roasting oil ng. Roast meat has r flavor, because certain rrin(ipies are developed by of cooking. The occasion- ing ' ccasion-ing' of dour over the :sur- face of the meat' helps to stop up the pores an. check the escape of , the fat. Rd ted meat is not sb well suited fc invalids and dyspeptics as boit.led: m t since it is -apt to con- tain acrit substances formed out of the tlig1rlheated' fat. Broiling is a species -0 roasting, but it ordinariliy produces a somewhat more digesti- M. R. COUNTER'S. Repairing in all the Branches as usual. 252 Main-stret, SEAFORTH. REMOVED. REMOVED. M; : ROBERTSON, Cabinet-maker and 'Undertaker, Has REMOVED his wore -rooms to JOHNSON'S OLD STAND, Main -street, Beafoi•th, Where he lfas on baud a superior stook of F tarp of every description. CALL A ND SEE • I T. UNHERTaKING. Saving purchased 71St, Thomas ,Bell'"s �m prepared to attend.lunarales on the shortest:. notice, either in town or country. ' Co$1rru,.Al1 Sizes, Kept constantly on hand. urni • HEARSE; I SHROUDS 1 SHROUDS M. ROBERTSON, CABINET MANEB AND -UNDERTAKF',R, Johnson's Old Stand, Main street, Seeforth, has `noir on hand a asatittthont of S E OmD s Which' he can furnish cheaper than they can be got elsewhere. 345 good • CAUTION To the Public of the Britifsh -i'rovinees of North' Ameriosi IBEG most respp�eetfuliy to Acquaint -the public of tile llritish North American Provinces that in May 1811,1 censed the business at 80 Maiden. Lane, New York, fort sale of Holloway's Pills and Ointment,, which were up to that time .pre- pared by William Brown, now deceased, to be closed. T regrot to say that 7 have reason to know that the management of the late business had for some years, in many ways, been most eor. rupt,;nd it may be that the Pills and Ointment were not prepared with the care I have always de. sired: Those who do not wish to be deceived by buying spurious medicines, which are now likely to exwanete from the States or elsewhere, to posses themselves of the genuine. Holloway's Pills an Ointment, manufactures), by me in London, Eng land, will do well to see that each pot and boa bears .the British Government stamp, on which is engraved the words, "Holloway's Pills. and Oint ment,'and that the address on the label is 588, Oidord-et ttrLondpn, -where only they are mann- !sutured, sea iu no other pert of the world.- The retail prizes pre on the labels in British .currency, and not In dollars and cents. No representative of maize will ever'travel through any part of the Br-itish=Provineea or the United States, either to -sell or to take orders for my Pills: and Ointment, and as I have resssson to believe that attempts will ptobably'be made to deceive the public in this way by personas calling upon• Medicine* vendors, falsely representing; that they ere.acting for me and with say knowledge and consent, .F deem jt advisable, to put the public on their guard against any such de- ceptions. r most earnestly entreat all those who may read. this advertisement that they be pleased, hi the piblic interest, to communicate the purport of the same to their friends that they may not be defrat(ded of their moeey`by purchasing, perhaps, worthless imitations of the genuine Holloway's Pills and Ointment:. I would ask as a groat favor, thut, should it conte to the knowledge of any per - sun t'hat'spnrions medicines are being made or sold in my name, he be pleased to send me all the par- ticniara 1}e can collect reppecting the same, that is to say, the name and address of the vendor who is selling the sptiriona medicines, and likewise th'e name and address of the House in the United States or elsewhere, which may have supplied them so as to enable tee, for the protection of the pub- lic, to `institute. proceedings against such evil - doors, and I engage to rem -discrete very handsome- ly any person who may give nto anch information, the . informant's. name nelfer, being divulged. Should any person have reason tobelieve that' he has been deceived by baying epurlous imitations of these medieinee, he Will do well to send me, in a letter, to the address at foot (which he can do at a -cost of six contain postage), -one of the books of instruction which are affixed to the same. I prom- ise to examine it and send a reply, stating whether the medicines are genuine or not, so that, if spd- rions, he may apply to the person from whom he pnrohaeed them to have ilia money -returned. Chemists and Druggists Who desire to obtain the inedioinee can be supplied at the lowest wholesale prices, in quantities of not less than $20 worth— Viz., Ss. 8d., 22s. and 114s, per dozen boxes. of Pills or pots of ointment, net, without discount, for which remittance must be'eent in advance. I have the honor to be, With great respect, rROM&S HOLLOWAY, 558, Oxford street, (late ff44'Stmnd,) London, W�lg -, Oct. 1,1871. • Y • .41 1872.L T 3 LAI ,t4 -QST STQCII, HE C EAPEST STiOCK, AND THE GREATEST VARIETY IS TO BE HAD FOR CASH CR APPROVED CREDIT AT LIViNGSTONE'S -.DOMINION HOUSE, AINLEYVILLE • iLL S BRITAYNJA IIOTJSE, SEAFORT H. • - W. HILL IS NOW suowniG A FULL STOCK; OF DRY COODS MILLIERY,. BOOTS AND ,SHOES AND GROCERIES SUITABLE FOR. THE PRESENT SEASON'S TRADE. And while returning thanks for the patronage of the past seven years, desires to notice that the stock is large enough to supply the heaviest buyer, choice enough to satisfy the most particular, and as good value as an be obtained by any purchaser; that he has had the same ADVANTAGE OF PURCHASING- BEFORE THE RISE As any other house, and will as readily give CUSTOMERS the benefit of it. he following advantages are claimed for the house : . A long experience in the trade. . Personal inspection -of all goods bought. . One price only, the LOWEST possible. . A well -assorted STOCK to select from. BRITANNIA HOUSE, - v Opposite the Post -office, SEAFORTH, TREMENDOUS RCSH a —AT— HOFFMAN BROTHERS' • Cheap Cash Store. • CALi.4 Al ]D A' ZNE •Tiff 0000S AND RRIOES - BEFORE PURCHASING ELSEWHERE. -FULL STOCK IN MILLINERY AND, MANTLES, CLIC,. GOODS ! AT CAMPB} LL's CLOTHING EMPORIUM. A COMPLETE STOCK of WOOLEN GOODS, Embracing Every article required for a FIRST-CLASS MEB- CHANT TAILOR'S business is now ready. I would now .inform my numerous customers that I am ready to show them A STOCK -0.F GOODS THAT CANNOT FAIL TO SUIT THEM And get them -up ,UITS in first-class style, On short notice. Assuring them; at the stone time, of my gratitude' for past favors and every effort on my part to en- sure n- sure iti continuance, GANGER PREMISES AND INCREASED BUSINESS. mHANKS for past liberal patronage, and a continu- ance of similar favors so- licited. WM. CAMPBELL, Merchant Tailor, SEAFORTH. IF YOU 'WANT A. =GOOD Organ. , or . ,Melodeons • c1NTYRE & WILLIS' business hag' grog so rapidly that :they have been compelled: to:remdve Minto -larger premises. They will now be found in Thomas Belt's old stand, next ,door South of their former shop. - Custom work recei4es careful attention; A good fit-antrgoed stock is their motto. fist pari. Juat apt and. Bgota and 'Aloes of all kinds, either home or laato�-mer ' McnirIRE #36. Boot and Shoe Store, ",Hain -street, oea or4h. • CALL ON R A NK PA LTRIDGE, Photographer, Agent for Bell & Co., Guelph, who -take ALL THE FIRST PRIZES. Don't buy a poor ORGAN. If yosi want s cheap musical- inetrtunent, buy a JEWSHABP, , but if you want a first-vl4xss else, buy, -un Organ from Frank Paltridge, Photograisher. Not being at any expense, Frank Paltri4ge can sell you an organ from the beat first -prize maker, on better conditions than any' other man. SEWING MACHINES. A NEW SUPPLY OF The Howe and. the Osborn SEWIYO MACHINES, With all the latest improvements, just received at W. N. WATSON'S, S1 AFOBTH. Call $nd see them, Their well-established reputa- tion renders it unnecessary to particularize their Superior qualities, further than that they are the best and cheapest made. 223 W3i. N. WATSON, Seaforth. CASH and GRAIN. JolltN LOGAN Begs to inform all those indebted to him, either by Note or Book. Account, that they must call and,' settle the same, on or before the ist of January next, and says expense or trouble. ,. The accounts and notes are in the hands of Messrs. Logan t Jamieson, maw are .authorized to receive money and grant receipts for fine. JOHN LOGAN. ,RAL, On And after )Opt. 28,1 will be prt,-. pared to tetras* all kinds of Grain 'and other iFaf niPraduac, tatwhi€ , 3 wi l pays the highest musket Vriee in casts, with far; play, -for an 4- tity delivered at -my Storebonse, at; the way St on. Seaforth. JOHN LOGAN. a 1 1)