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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe East Huron Gazette, 1892-11-03, Page 7eate about him, pop this he sent aim his • said. Thus y devises, :h whom he ,a;th he oe- tae retrain• • e h:3 ai- d re-3ater• i'-'•1 on the selamen teal, a:Il tarty Ofa'.1the hose life we the worst. !rain; venue THE SY, .;re They .i Theme know edge d by Mr. J. list r iron bre of their relative oc- eorttes. Ac - u:.) of wciahti sltol°.33, erol;tie iron iacovered up lC nt is about ie true in all have been a meteorites, :a tic matter • wing theory cess of iron lien a stony breaks into fired surfaces lrophe No Eon aerolite k been twist- kler mass of 1W hich reach - is probably wa county, • tial visitor hic matter, 3s --are meal; lis iron may l forms and dule to the When the 1 the earth's ks up the , and they rndition, so ned, as they n. In such my portion such small these would eciable size. , more cont - the origin. tneteruites eller granu- ferous aero - alien a few are aware been found n. Should, which has remarkable s will find Cher knotty o presence Up to the constituent addition to Df metals " is, such as leof cbrom- phide (old - and nickel own as ter - tic pyrites, ne, olivine, Ty compon• Issuea• el, and also protection. Dvernments -s into their objects from w our to se- eir subjects arts are of on record ving been lius Csar terms fol- ny one, 011 olest Pota- e be strong ." In the by stomas ted to his ige to the tl at Rome mark and id 1035, te o hrspital- as countries he system 'g tne 14th far as Rue - countries, sports still to cause xtent both Ipecially to ries on the stem is not of a pass - delay and Bided. The subjects is pf Foreign i is now 3 payment iolds good are aware t by instal- s, a French > legs and lose which sooner than ek ; and he arsons who r are stand - et the sense se of taste ; at of hear - Pmaintains one after 'degrees of ie do yen t. It is all rgIvafiNi HO€y$EHOLD. Light at unset. Ali day the rain had fallen Upon the shadowed land, Crushing the pale, sweet flowers That Nature's lavish hand Had strown when Summer glory Reigned in its beauty: and. All day the beating tempest Oesept with its chilling rain O'er hill and faded woodland, O'er mountain height and plain, Until it seemed that Nature Would never smile again. But as the day grew darker Beyond the western hill There came a belt of brightness Sc silently and still, And then a flood of sunlight The rifled clouds to fill. The storm -drenched world grew brighter As sunlight kissed the land, And clouds so lately dreary Gleated like the golden sand, And all the scene was gilded By the fair sunset band. And thus, I thought, the sunset Will sweetly glow at last. When all life's years of tempest Are numbered with the past, And o'er my dying pillow . It's fair, bright beauty cast. —[By Mrs. M. A. Holt. Teach Children to Work. Teach the children habits of industry while they are yet very young, and they will always be industrious, says Jenness Miller's Monthly. (sive them.at first" only very light tasks, and try to find the work to which eachchild inclines. Don't let them work so long that they become tired and so disgusted with all work, but long enough to accomplish something, and if it is of use so much the better. Teach children that there is a time to be idle as well as a time to be at work. The apparently idle time of the systematically busy man or woman is often the moat fruitful in results, for it is then that any things are thought over and Plare'W When it is possible, let the chil- dren feel that they are working for some definite end. They wish to see the profit of their labor as much as older people do of theirs. Deny ;hem that, and the very highest incentive to habits of labor is removed. A good and industrious woman once said : " One of the mdTt bitter memories of my childhood is that my mother, who was one of the best and most conscientious women that ever lined, was without tact or judgement as to my tasks. On the long, beautiful summer days, when I longed to be at play, and when I ought to have been, since there are always enough dreary days in which to give a child work, she would give me two yards and a - half of unbleached muslin which I was re- quired to hem. It was always stiff and rough and disagreeable. If it had been fine, pretty work, I would not have minded half so much. Those hems had to be turned and measured and basted, until my poor little fingers ached, and my very soul rebelled at the task. When my work was badly done I had to pick it all out and do it over ; when it was well done the piece was torn offwith- out a word of approval and throe n into the ragbag. I was in a state of bitter rebellion all the time, because my toil was of no use to any one. When I said so I was severely reprimanded and told that children were no judges of what was good or bad for them. This is a great mistake, for children are much keener judges than grown people as a rule think them. Then I thought that my mother was very wrong and very cruel, but now I know that she was." For the Bnsv Ones. A small rent or hole in cloth or other wool goods may be repaired by slightly moistening the edges on the wrong side with a little mucilage, and pasting a bit of the same goods under the torn place. If the threads run the same way the repairingcan scarcely be detected. Lace or other thin goods may be reiaired by dampening a piece to match in starch -water putting on the wrong side and pressing with a hot iron. A kid glove can be mended by turning it, drawing the edges carefully together, and fastening with a piece of court plaster cr surgeon's plaster. The latter is best, as it is' stronger. That plaster which is stuck in place by warming must not be used—al- though often sold for court plaster—as in that case the warmth of the hand would probably cause it to come off. When making underwaists for the chil- dren, after the under -arm seam is sewed up, stitch over it a straight strip of muslin, thus preventing tearing crossways, and enabling one waist to outwear two made without this precaution. If four or - more extra thicknesses of cloth are put on under a but- ton before it is sewed on, and very coarse thread used in sewing, the buttons will usually hold as long as the garment lests, if the eyes are smooth and do not cut the thread. We used to dread window washing more than any part of the house cleaning, be- cause in our ignorance we took the hardest way. But since learning the following way it is a pleasure, for it is so easily and quickly done, and the glass is so clear and bright. 1Vash quickly in strong soap -suds as hot as can be used, and wire immediately with a soft cloth without rinsing. If they are then rubbed with soft newspaper they take on a more beautiful polish, but is not really necessary. The dining -room carpet may be quickly and easily cleaned by dipping a cloth in gasoline and briskly rubbing the spots with it. Itis far superior to washing, and does not require half the time. When sweeping a room. if the broom be thoroughly wet, then shaken till no more water drops off, it will prevent dust from arising and many times obv ate the neces- sity of dusting. If the carpet be very dusty, or the room large, wet the broom two or three times before the floor is com- pleted. One of the most valuable cook -books we ever saw was made by the ,owner, having been beg;i'a a year or two before her mar- riage and is still receiving valuable addi- tions, although many years old. A blank book with flexible back, costing but a small sum, was procured and into this was copied all the choice recipes of her friends. Being rnmels away from home, she obtained recipes for all new dishes she encountered. Many recipes from domestic papers were, clipped out and pasted in so that by the time she began housekeeping she had a goodenllection of tried recipes that she knew could be re- lied on. els the book is classified and in- dexed, it is easy to find anything wanted, and becomes more valuable with each suc- ceeding ytar. Assorted Recipes. Con.N Fn.ITTiss.—Grate or cut the corn -from the cobs, To one generous pint of the corn add two eggs, well beaten, three table- spooatfuls of milk, three of floor; season with one-Iltslf even teaspoonful of salt. More flour may needed, for the batter should be stiff enough to hold together. Drip a large sp,.joeiful at a time in hot fat; when browned on. one side tarn; serve on a hot platter. PICKLED LEMONS.—Yon must have firm, small lemons of the best quality - for 'this pickle. Cut them deeply with several incis- ions from end to end, and fill the cuts with salt, put each on end, and lay them in a dish in quite a warm place. The salt will dissolve and make quite a brine. Let them remain in this for three weeks, taking them out occasionally and ratbing with addition- al salt. Tien take them from the brine and nut them in a jar, with a large tablespoon- ful of mustard seed, half a pound of bruised ginger, two ounces- each of cloves and all- spice and a very little tumeric and three or four chiles. Boil all this in vinegar and pour it over the lemons. In about six months they will be ready for use. This pickle will keep for years, and increase in excellence as it grows older. Since the California limes have come into the Eastern market I have tried pickling them by this recipe, adding a double handful of yellow sugar to the vin- egar. They are ready for use in about eight or ten weeks and form a very delicious pickle, not surpassed by the best potted pickled limes of commerce. SWEET PICKI.ED PEACHES.—To one quart of good cider or wine vinegar allow three pints of sugar. Make a couple of bags of cheesecloth and put in them the spices— half an ounce of whole cloves, and stick cin- namon, a tablespoonful of allspice, a table- snoonful of mace, a couple . of pieces of gin- ger root and a few peppercorns. When the vinegar is well skimmed and boiling add the peaches, which should be carefully peeled. By the way, if the vinegar is very strong, add a cup of cold water to the quart of vinegar, and let the vinegar, spices and sugar come to a boil very slowly to extract the flavor of the spices. This amount will take about seven pounds of peaches. Put a few in the syrup at a time and cook until tender, then remove them to a jar, set in hot water. When all are cooked, fill up the jars with boiling hot syrup and cover. The next day pour off the syrup, place the bags of spices in it and boil gently for twenty minutes ; then pour over the fruit again. Do this three times and then cover them securely and set them away in a cool place. - You may stick a few cloves in the peaches, but not more than three or four to a peach. I have seen jars of pickled peaches that were uneatable fiorn the many cloves that were put in them. BOILED POTATOES.—Wash clean, let stand in cold . water a few hours, put in a pot, cover with boiling water and let boil rapid- ly until done. Drain, set on the back of the stove five minutes and serve. SCALLOPED SWEET POTATOES. — Boil large sweet potatoes. Peel and slice, put a layer in the bottom of a pan, cover with sugar and -bits of butter ; put in another layer of sugar and butter and potatoes, until the pan is full. Set in the oven to brown. TOMATOES AND OKRA.—Take a quart of okra, wash and cut in thio slices. Peel tour good-sized tomatoes and slice. Put all to- gether in a saucepan, add a teaspoonful of salt, cover the kettle and let simmer gently one hour, add a tablespoonful of butter, with pepper and salt. LIMA BEANS.—Shell, throw in water for ten minutes, put in a saucepan, fill -with boiling water, add salt and cook tender. Drain, take up, pour over melted butter and dredge with pepper. APPLE PIE.—Pare, quarter and core good cooking apples. Line pie -pans with rich crust, put in a layer of apples, sprinkle thickly with sugar and powdered cinnamon, add a tablespoonful of butter and a little water. Bake in a quick oven. CREAM PIE.—Line pie -pans with crust, bake in a quick oven. When done, take from the stove and stand aside. . Put a pint of milk on to boil ; moisten a tablespoonful of corn -starch with a little milk, add to the boiling milk and stir until thick ; sweeten - with half a cupful of sugar ; beat the whites of four eggs, stir in carefnily, take from the fire and flavor with vanilla. Fill the crust with the mixture and setin the oven to brown. BEEF SALAD.—Cut lean beef from the soup -bone used for dinner, chopfine, with a third as much celery as meat, put in a salad -bowl and pour over mayonnaise dressing. CORN MUFFIIds.—Beat three eggs with a pint of buttermilk, sift in corn -meal to make batter, add a tablespoonful of lard and a teaspoonful of soda. Bake in well - greased muffin irons. FRIED TOMATOES.—Slice large, ripe toma- toes, dip figst in egg then in stale bread crumbs, and fry in boiling fat. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. GINGER CAKE —Mix half a cupful of lard and butter each together. Dissolve a tea- spoonful of soda in a tablespoonful of boil- ing water, add it to a .cupful of molasses, with the butter and , lard, flavor with a tablespoonful of ginger, half a grated nut- meg and a teaspoonful of cinnamon. Pour in a cupful of sour milk, and sift in flour to make a stiff batter. Turn in a greased pan and bake. BOILED FISH.—Wash a medium-sized fish. well in cold water, wipe and rub with salt. Wrap in a cloth, put in a fish -kettle, or lay on a large plate nd put in the bottom of a saucepan, cover with boiling water, to which add a little salt, and let simmer gently ten minutes to every pound of fish. When done, take from the water,: drain, remove the cloth carefully, turn the fish out on a dish, garnish with sliced lemon and serve with egg sauce. ROAST GOOSE.—Draw, clean and singe a young goose, wipe well inside and outside with e,damp towel. Fill with onion stuff- ing, made of a pint of stale bread crumbs, two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, a- tea- spoonful of salt, a sprinkle of pepper and two tablespoonfuls of chopped onions. Put in a baking -pan and set in the oven. Roast twenty minutes to every pound, baste every ten minutes. When half done, cool the oven and cook slowly: Serve with giblet gravy and apple sauce. - Sometimes. Sometimes, When heart andwhen fe seems spirit bounddwith wonderfully dear mirth For very gladness of our God-given birth, And all the happinesses round us here When blossoms throng our pathway, skies are clear, And loved and loving ones are by our side, Until it seems in all the horizon wide, No touch of sorrow ever could appear; Then sometimes, in a moment; at a word, Some memory—a child's sad, lonely cry— Themournful note of some wild ftrieken bird— A look of anguish in some dumb thing's eye— Will fill the heart with sucha weight of grief, That bitter tears alone will bring relief. [Feodora Bell. Do not call a Boston boy a"Hubbub" un- less you want to rais one. The grotesque knocker on the sanctuary door of the Durham Cathedral, which bears a rather distant resemblance to a lien, is said to be of the twelfth century. Cholly—" How do you know she won't marry you, deah boy 1" Chapppie—" Prece- dent, my deah fellah. She nevah bas mar- ried any one." Cholly—" That's so, bah Jove]" A itFMA kir ABLE LASE. It -Grows .for Tears, Then Dries lip,., and Then Starts in Afresh." Near Boberbrunn, in : Silesia, is a re. - markable lake which scientific men do not yet understand. There is a hollow near the town containing about 2,600 acres, and at intervals of nearly thirty years is converted into & lake. For a short time thebottom of the hollow is almost perfectly dry. . Then water begins to ooze through the hills that wall it in, bursts 1 hrongh the bottom of the hollow,"andgradually forms a lake. At present the hollow is about half full of water, and the level of the Iake is still ris- ing. In a short time, however, it is expect- ed to recede again, and in the course of the next twelve years or so the hollow will prob- ably be waterless for a time. No phenomenon exactly like this is known in any other part of the world. There is something like it, however, in Hungary, where the take of Neusiedl has several times dried up. During the last two years it has lost half of its water, and is now not much more than three feet deep. The Htngarian Government has decided to take advantage of this opportunity to drain off the water into she Raab River. The ground is not swampy, and it can be used at once for ag- ricultural purposes. Some Remarkable Feats, A traveler who made a tour of the Orient and who, by the way, is something of a magicianhimself, tells the wonderful story of his experience with some of the wizards of the far East : "r* * * One of these was begun by the largest man in the group, who threw a great coil of ribbons far Toward the sky. 'As it uncoiled in mid air, asmall hawk seemed to be liberated from it. He circled around a few tinges, seized the ends of the ribbons in his beak, and then made off toward a small, white cloud which apparently form- ed before our eyes. * * * * " From this cloud there now slid to the ground a snake, a frog and a smiling native baby, which one of the wizard's ` wives' caught in her arms and held -out for the wondering crowd to inspect. Next, all of the magicians save the larger, O. perfect giant in stature), now left the place. The giant then sat down upon the ground. He then spread a large colored umbrella in such a manner as to wholly conceal himself from our party. Calling me to his side he exact- ed a promise from me to remove the um- brella atter the expiration of exactly five minutes by the watch. I did as be had directed and was unspeakably surprise& to find that the giant had disappeared, though the earth where he had been sitting was perfectly solid. "Returning to the hotel we found our miracle -working giant sitting serenely on the . porch. When I handed him his um- brella he opined it with a quick jerk, dis- closing my watch and chain hanging in a slip -noose from one of the ribs." Its Equal Cannot be Found. We challenge all competitors to name any other remedy t hat is achieving such extra- ordinary results in the restoration and exal- tation of health, or to produce the whole sixteen rarest elements of the body known to science in one pure amalgam, as in St. Leon ; or to point out any other preparation simple -and nourishing as milk for babes, and powerful beyond all art prescriptions' to purify blood and flesh, to build up the taint - est flickering sparks tf life to highest strength and to the brightest flow of spirits, health and pleasure in life that this world can bring. For all such St. Leon has won undying fame. Humanity has no kinder friend than St. Leon. Language fails and only faintly portrays the happy results that follow when St Leon is unstintingly used. To supply the incessant waste of the Human Machine and preserve the highest order and strength to all the organs. " The Blood, the Life of the Flesh," requires sixteen elements ; in the food we eat some twelve only are found. ST. LEON CONTAINS ALL, tunes up the whol : sixteen strings ; builds up ; sickness and indisposition are banished and a . more exalted enjoyment to life is reached and pre- served to old age. Yes, St. Leon is one of the grandest life- giving mysteries ever diecovered, and all who use it not only imbibe that which sup- ports and builds up the body, but also that supplies the electrical current motor of life. This rare curburettect Hydrogen gas searches the minutest blood channels and instantly destroys all disease germs, m icrobes HOOD'S PILLS are hand made, and are per - etc., it is brought in contact with. No bet- feet In coinposition, proportion and appearance. ter proof can be given of the presence of this priceless fluid than to say it will burnQC-CUTTING. G. Send for Illustrated Q Circular of our "New Tailor Sys - Last s>innnter ea actor, who was going on foot through a noisy part of London on Saturday.ht came on a burly .loafer who was hotdingpu ►a'woinat a`g•aiilgt a wall with, one. hand, while the, other he aimed. terrific blows, at her face,'always, ,however, stopping within ' an inch of her >nose, but naming at each feint a half" dozen' .erent kinds of death that he intended to put her to. The actor is something of an athlete, and he is an American ;. therefore he sprang forward to rescue the woman from her, seeming peril, when a little old granny stepped forward and said, "Go 'way, young gentleman, this is a fambly matter," At another time the actor met a meek -look- ing woman crossing London Bridge. She bad two very black eyes and was .shaking her head mournfully, while she repeated to herself. "No, I won't never do it again. Not never. Not never so long as I live." On being asked what it was that she would not do, she replied that she would not in- terfere in a quarrel between husband and wife, for on trying to save a woman.4rom being beaten .the woman had told her to mind her basiuess, and had "punched " her in each eye. Have You Thought of It? For four thousand years or more the world groaned, suffered,and fumed about its corns, for there was no positive relief—no certain and painless cure until Dr. Scott Putnam gave to the world his great Corn Extractcr. if there is suffering now it is a result of carelessness, for the remedy, is at hand. Try Putnam's Corn Extractor. It is sure, pain- less, and prompt. Beware of substitutes. N. C. Polson & Co., proprietors Kingston. There are two things that only a fool will attempt to give advice to—a mule and a printer. - Dr. Harvey's Southern t.ed Pine for coughs and colds is the most reliable and pe rfect cough medicine in the market. For sale everywhere. - The sky, unlike man, is most cheerful when bluest. TOOTHACHE. When suffering with Tooth ache use GUM. GIBBONS' TOOTHACHE - A.P. 628. Clifford Blackmant, A Boston Boy's Eyesight Saved—Perhaps His Life By Hood's Sarsaparilla—Blood. Poi- soned by Canker. Read the following from a grateful mother: "My little boy had Scarlet Fever when 4 years old, and it left him very weak and with blood poisoned with canker. His eyes became so inflamed that his sufferings were intense, and for seven weeks he Could Not Open His Eyes.- I,took him twice during that time to the Eye and Ear Infirmary on Charles street, but their remedies failed to do him the faintest shadow of good. I commenced giving him Hood's Sarsaparilla and it soon cured him. I have never doubted that it Saved his sight, even if net his very life. You may use this tes- timonial in any way you choose. I am always ready to sound the praise of Hood's Sarsaparilla because of the wonderful good it did my son." AnniE F. BLACKMAN, 2888 Washington St, Boston, Mass. Get HOOD'S. with a bright bronze flan when opened in the barrel or at the spring's mouth. Physi- cians pronounce it "inimitable by art" and the great tidal wave in praise of St. Leon sweeps over the land with ever increas- ing force. " St. Leon is just what, my system required, the joy of my life. " A Birmingham steel worker committed suicide in a simple way. He put his head under a trip hammer and had it smashed. A London woman, being tired_ of servant maids, hired a bey of 16 to do the house- work. She was immediately Pummoned for unlawfully keeping a man servant without a license. She paid a fine, with testimony to the superiority of boy servants over girls. A recent report that the White Star line had contracted for a 700 -foot steamer, a ship eighty feet longer than the new Gun- arders, arose from the request of the Liver- poojanthorities to Sir Edward Harland for his opinion as to what size of ship they should provide for in the new docks. The answer was . that accommodations for a steamer 700 feet long would be sufficient for the future. The schooner Dora Sieward, which arriv- ed at Victoria, B. C., from the Be- hring Sea. sealing grounds lastweek, had an experience tyith a submarine volcanicdisturbance on " her voyage from Copper- Island. The Captain's report was mainly ;: the _effect that he got 900 skins and " saw no Russians." Further he only briefly noted that his vessel "was caught by submarine volcanoes, which tossed the schooner odt-of the water and threw the men down on the deck like ninepins." The most marvellous of clocks has been built by a Black Forest maker and sold for $4,(100. Besides doing everything that most clocks do in the matter of time and calendar, it shows the time in Berlin, St. Petersburg, -Madeira, Shanghai, 'Calcutta,_ Montreal, San Francisco, Melbourne, and Greenwich. Every evening at eight a young man invites the company to vespers in an electrically illeiminated chapel where a young woman plays the "Maiden's Prayer." On New Year's eve two trumpet- ers announce the flight of the old year and the advent of the new, in May a cuckoo comes out ; in June a quail ; in October apheasant appears to be shot down by atypical British sportsman who :proceeds tai b gbila game. At daybreak the sun rises ani some bells play a German air entitled "Phcebus Awakes."- On the night of -the full moon they play another German air entitled " Sweet and Tranquil Luna." There are other features too numerous to mention. tem". The leading system. New Sleeve Chart just out. J. at A. CARTER, Toronto. Prac- tical Dressmakers. J snake, thBISCUIT good . COIECTIOMEIIY Cl Try them and -•ee ®NTAUIO VETERINARY C LLE4 E, Tem perance Street. Toronto, Canada. Apply to Principal, A. 8 . ith, DON'T Fa,mmeiniu liY,hwaviteh noawll in use over 29,010 Chatham Mills. I rite for Circular and P: ice 'List before making your purchase. MANSON CAM4"SELL, Chatham, Ont. - DO YOU IMAGINE That people would have been regularly using our Toilet Soaps since 1843 (forty-seven long years) if they had not been GOOD 1 The public are not fools and do not continue to buy goods unless they are satisfactory. " Early to Bed aqd Early to Mise " (KITE EAST ofac use listhment to THOSE NEW WILLIAMS SEWING MACHINE The Williams Mtg. Co.. Ltd„ Montreal. +.How are you?' "Nicely, Thazak Tot,," "Thank Whor .,Why the iiveitD IC Which_ Inc of Pt1ON.'° Give- thanks for its discovery. That it does not make you sick when you take it. +D Give thanks. That it is three times as efficacious as the old-fashioned. cod liver oil. Give thanks. That it is such a wonder- ful flesh producer. Give thanks. Thatit is the best remedy for Consumption,Scrofula, 21ronchitis, ?resting Pis - eases, Coughs and Colds. Bemire you get the genuine in Salmon color wrapper; sold by -all Druggists, at 5oc. and $I.00. SCOTT & BOVINE, Belleville. { tion : _ estEng Eng- . io pmune American Hog's Cas ng fa os N w Heats, Long Clear Bacon,: $plis, Cheese, Lard, etc. Pecs, Bnscawnra.G-, Successors to Jas. Pans & Sox,- rend asetesera 'OH COL:Cabi ®Ni ENIOV Both the method and results when iSyrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste and acts gently yetpromptlyon thekidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy, of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 750 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure itt/ promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Manufactured only by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO,, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. L®QIsV1r,T.�, 7LY. NEW YOBK, N. Y WRITE FOR PARTICULARS Of Complete Steam Lannohesfrom 20x4 to 31x7 "Acrno Coal -oil Boilers and Engines" from 1 to 8 H.P. Large sizes. Coll or wood fuel. "The Marsh Steam Pump" the best boiler feeder in the market. Returns exhaust into feed water heating it from 40 to tO degrees. For catalogue send 3c. stamp. JOII.N GILLIES .t CO. Carleton Place, Ont. Banos Human - Concopllon, Nature's all-powerful he s.et is discovered and when imbibed freely radiates the arterial network of the body, absorbs and rushes off all effete, deadly pois- onous matter. Also it contains all the sixteen elements of ripe mole- cular lite, builds up every weak part, re- stores nerve and vital power, is the sunshine of life, the wonderful. So say all that use St. Leon Water. World, Feb. 13th, 1892. Get the Mark. That's what you want to do when you buy FIXED PAINTS and tell your dealer the proper mark is the Trade Mark because it is pure and no nonsense about it LIcbratd English Wilshire Oils Manufactured by A. RAMSAY & SON - MONTREAL f =11.1Y5 ;sF 'COUGH JOOP5 SMQS37I " Something Good " MADE BY EMPIRE TOBACCO CO., - MONTREAL. GENTS WANTTEDIrOROURNEW BOOKS+ interesting and Instructive Beading or theYoung. Illustrated. Just the book for the children. World's Fair. cook Book. The biggest Cook Book ever sold for the money,. From Epworth to London. Being 50 Photo- graphs of sacred places of Methodism in Eng- land. Beautiful Thout.hts of Life. A hand- some book. Beautiful Songs. Sacred, senti- mental and instrumental. -We have several outer fast selling Books. Bibles and Albums. Send foe List, &c. WILLIAM =RIGGS, Pub isher, Toronto, Ont. UCH; n RE DOLLAR' fi/6I AKER- L R 151092 KYOURSEW/NG MACHINE AGENT 01? IT - OR SEND A3CENT . STAMP FOR PARTICULARS, PRICE LIST SAMPLES, COTTON YARN ' cc. OF OUR AC IVES ,.:MAN BRO3 f .. 'RS IMPORTANT The preparation of delicious and wholesome food is necessary to our happiness. To accom- plsh this line materials must be used. We recommend EMPIRE BAKING POWDER as containing strength, purity. and safety. Guaranteed to give satisfaction. Manufactur- ed only by ELLIS & KERGULEN', Toronto. Sold at 25cts pound tin. Ask your grocer for ib BE AVER, LINE STEAMSHIPS Weekly Sailings Between Montreal and Liverpool, Direct From Montreal. every Wednesday at Daybreak. Pas- sengers embark after 8 p.m. Tuesday. Superior Accommodation for Saloon Intermediate and Steerage Passengers Rates of Passage, Montreal to Liverpool. Saloon $40 and $5, Accordiig.te- Round Trip, $8O & $90.e�ccaoira od'n. The $40 and 580 rates are per La Nepigon only. Intermediate, $80. - Steerage $20. Forfuther information apply to H. E. MURRAY, Gen. Manager. 4 Cus+om House Square. Montrea. Or any Local Agent. NEW TRUSS in my tate=t inven• tion,ihe one True'. answers large and small cases. The very instant yon cause expansion of body by sneezing, motion of legs, etc., the little Pad (not visible on the cut). enters deeper into the cavity. automatically holding Hernia. Club Feet straightened, Instruments Patented, Deformity In. struments ma de for all needs. Abiominal Supporter, Crutches, Elastic Hosiery. Particulars free. Sent by Mail cheap. CHAS . CIdIT=Z Surgical Machinist. 134 King St. W., Toronto. Fariinrs and Stoekffleu le the most nutritious food yet discovered. One pound of 2 lbs. Bread. 3 lbs. Lean Meat. Rice equals 4 lbs. Potatoes. Half the people in the world subsist nearl entirely on Rice. y Mount Royal lining &" ll'f'g Co,, A positive cure for Sprains, Braises, Green or old. Wounds, Influenza, Weak Knees, Galled Shoulders, Sore Backs, Capped Hocks, Swollen Udders. For . RHEUMATISM We guarantee an absolute cure in from one to three applications. One Trial will" Convince. " Pronounced by medical men the greatest discovery of the Nineteenth Century. PRICE 50e. PER BOTTLE. J. CROSS, Proprietor, - OWEN SOUND. • For sale by Druggists. Easily Attached to Halter. I can eat, drink and breathe if I can't get et my blanket. E. N. IIE%EY Sample Muzzle will be sent GILL ESPIES' Patnt link Apron llIank8t Muule. A PRACTICAL INVENTION. Beyond Comparison. The best Blanket ' Protector Made. It Caggct Absorb F.Ith. It Cleans Itself. Follows every move- ment of the head and does its work. & CO., Montreal, Sole Manufacturers. by mail on receipt of 82.(a Liberal Discounts to the Trade. GET OUR GI' CA .i a incre rEcd your Saw -dust pile is reduced. Our Band Mill will reduce it, et/ giving you ° OBoards, When you now get but 100. Capacity of your mill increased, lumber truer, cut nearer to size, less saw culls. BEST (WALL, Entire :cost of chane3aved' first year - 'Continual profit . therea ter- o why not investigate? ... WATiEIOUS, - BRANTFORDD, MAU