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Lucknow Sentinel, 1888-08-24, Page 3, . 4 wl• • f'77( •XABM AND IlOtT8E110LD! In this case a cloth should-belaid Over - or a moment in this before sending them to the table. Interesting Itirits, for ‘41he • Rardener and Housekeeper. if grape vines aro J growing t90 'fad and 81012der;:phreh Off the ends), • It ie (petted that over 5(e),000.; rose plants are an•nually imported into America hone ' England, France and, Holland, ' • Use a reeson'es trowel to serene the Moss . Or loose bark off -the :stems 4f fruit t"P8,. taking geed 04 re not to injure the inner hark. • A poor toon the farm imposes a tax upon the neer •every day it -is employed, often greater lea year than the wbole price of e good tool. ' • , • After 'careful' experiments; a dairyman . oonobidoe that brem i prifillable.for the milkman, but that pate are much' more • profitable for the buttermaker. - • The old advice to treat a plow aa a lady ie firet:olase; advice. If anybody cannot do • that, and milk rapidly and thoroughly, better not attempt to milk at all. • '• •Hey • ooe eine the' largest apienet et' ' nntrinif.t p aor when eomewhat, past . . the bloom, bat pproportien of nutriment per ton is greater when out at anearlier ate,ge. • ' • Whenever bOngllS of trete or vines • come troublesome, lop thein off; no matter what time in the pewee. Cut ;smoothly; don't mangle or tear or akin , the ' parts . which are left. . • NO aged -.sow that has. proved babelf a • goad breeder and sucker .should be disposed of, to make reoni for young and nntried Bowe as long as she will raise large litters good pigs. • • - • A prominent dairyman saye to prevent of saltpetre, three parts eulphur and two part? -copperas once or twice a day. during spring mid, fall: . Whenever yee see little' holes in the Out- . , ..rant and gooseberry leaves the .best thing .tO do -is to apply white hellebore; dusting oparefOly over the leaves. If the work he donenarefully the remedy is almost certain. Take a 'bushel of air -slacked lime, ten 'epoands of sulphur And • sheet four minces ..of crude carbolie said; mix- thoroughly and etheee }plate and the putatoep fshonicl, he, dreme - ere•-•ereVeee. "en"' • - - In - -fruit growing remember that 'finite are like grain and vegetable °reps in this that they mnfithave manure to keep up the fertilftee Unlike vegetables, and - grain, however;their feeding roots; ate meetly at the surface. It is best, therefore, annually to top -dress fruit trees. If manure- cannot be had, any fresh earth from ditches or roadiside ePtett.dhalf an heoli or so under the trees will have a wonderful effect. Indeed, we do not know bat that for the pear tree a thin 'layer of road sand is one of the hest, of manures We have seem apples thrive amazingly with a coating of coal ashes A large English' farmer says that hip manure which is taken from the etables and piled up.' under a (Med; all winter is. 'worth in the,epringleur times as ' mueh as that whittle has been eeposedto the weather. This is undoubtedly nearly correct if the exposure be A bad one, such for example as throwing the, menu° • out of the Mettle window and letting it rept in a pile against thanicle of the Ettable exposed to ekerain dripping from the roof. In this way meet or the fertilizing Belts are drained out of it into the earth below the heap or are washed' away in the.overflow. of the yard, and the manure is left of little velue: . Entire wheat renfrins.-:Fora dozen Muffins. there will be required a onpful and a half of entire wheat flour, a cupful of milk, one-third of a cupfbil of 'water, an egg„ a teaspoonful of prepan of tarter, half a teaspeonful of SOS,half a teaspciouful of Salt and two tablespoonfulauf sugare..Mix ,the dry ingredient e and sift them intb a bowl. Beat the egg until it is light, and add the milk and water to it. Pour this mixture ;von the dry ingredients, and beat them quickly, and vigoreuely: Pour the batter into 'buttered- muffle •pans and 'bake for twenty-five minutes in a rather quick oven, The batter will he thin and will givea moiat ..muffin, but that is as it ebould be, - • -• Considerable of the work of pruning next • year-canbe_avoided by going bier.' the. *zees • and rubbing. off :all the • shoots and Witter ' sprente that have ,started up where they are , net *anted. This ought to he done • before the wood hardens. , •' • A remedy for tints in tho 'lawn is to dig to the bottom of the nests as soon An they are disceeered. Throw &it the loam and •. then cover the bottom to the depth of about ' ten inches with coarse salt; fillup with soil,,anduosnally the :ants Will not trouble any more. • ' Add to the centioity of yew farm by • adding to the strength of the Soil. ' Many farms of fifty acres 'produce :more and are VASTNESS Or INP4•• A Ponagollas Wetien. WItli cbreat Cttioe and iNture•• For 00 ieata at lend, writers have endeavored to bring home to Abe outside world•a, knowledge of the vastness of India, but so far as oan be Perceived. have failed. The average man, sni the Wortnightly Review, reads what they pay, learee up theie, figerea, tries to understand their desoriptioes, but fails, for all his labor, to realize whet Indio, continent large as Europe west of the :Vistula, and with 30,090,000 more people, fuller of ancient natio)* or great pities, of varieties' of civilization, Of armies, nobilities, Priest - hoods, organizations ' of every conceivable purpose, from the spreading of great religione down to ,eysternatio mnrd'er, There are twice as many Bengaleee as there are Frenchmen; the Hindostanees, properly so called, outnumber the whites in the United States; the klehrattap wotild.fill Spain, the people of the Punjab with Scinde are double the population of Turkey, . and I have named four orthe more salient divi- siege. Everything is on the same bewilder- ing Beale: Tee fighting peoples of India, the men are as' big as ourselves, ms breve as ourselves, and more regardless of death than ourselves, number , at least 120,000,000, equal AO Gibbon's' calculation of the, population of the • Roman empire. There are 400,900 trained brown soldiers in native service, of 'whom' wahear perhaps once in ten years, and at least 2,000,000 men who thinktheir proper profession is arms, who would live by arms if they could, and of whom. we in England never hear a word. It the Prussian eonsoription were.aPplied in, India, We should, without counting reserves or hind vehr or any force not summoned, in time of peaoe, have 2,50e,000 soldiers actually., in barracks; with 800,000 reereite coming ,up every .year -a feirce with which not Only Asia, lant the ',whole worldemight;be subened.; °There are teni of ' millions of peasants whose -hoardings make' of -India the grand absorbent of the preCione Metals,- tens Of millions of peasants , beside whOse'poverty fellahs or .Sioilians or Connaught irten are rioh; of artiteen, ranging from the Mee who build palaces to the men who, • nearly' neked-e-red-eltietet without 'tools' do the humblest Work • of the potter. Every occupation which ' exists :•in Europe waists also in India. The industry resheeeveatacontintretemeeereece nee,.for fii-Azirmiliefflejfirieike:TV'See 4,44! /heydittlaTaX4rapcAtiaaltiztOdlil,if ' nothing either to eat or drink; and but foe .the Europeans would • import 7nothing Whedeirer. She is enfecient te herself, for every thing save silver. • Amid these varied masses these 250,000,000, whose varied desokiptions• would fill volumes, the tide of life flows as Vigorously ,as. in Europe. There i3 as intich labor; as much conten- tion; as much ambition, • as n:fineh crime, 'as much variety Of; 'eareers.hopes, fears and hatreds. It is still Possible to ternoneyleis Indian to become vizier of a dynasty ° Older than history,- or finance -minister of a new prince whose personal fortune in hard cash is double that qf thelateEniperor William, or abbot of. a monastery richer than Glas- tonbury ever wee, owner of an estete that Cover? it•:::county,-- head of„ a firm whose transactione may eie with those at the Barings or Bleiohroderse One man; Jute Perished by name, fed and transported the arniy which Conquered the Peinjak Batter•„ pudding. -ix smoothly mie tablespoonful each of flour and sugar, with a Out est milk and a -pinch of salt. Pour it inta a well -buttered pieedish and.4eaye it in a Blow oven till' set. • It must not boil: Cornstarch eake.L-Two • cups 'et white sugar,.one op.of b tter, the ethitele 44-13 geleatinkeiee„ • „feennertegeli. A4s.-'•44 - 37. two cupsief flour and one of cornstaro , flavor to taste. • . 'Amoutetten.-F-eSteep-som-e- neatly shaped slime of breadewithont ernet, in a ou•stard, of egg, milk and e little sugar, well beaten. together. Fry a golden brown and serve eery hot, with a sqeeeze of lemon and sifted sugar over them. • ' . ' • Pearl barley pudding.- Simmera table- spoonful of pearl bar*: till 'thoroughly, swelled in milk. , Lay it in e. pie dish, pour in the milk and a little sugar; place some. tiny pieoesi of dripping (well clarified) on the top ane bake. •• , • . • r • „ Tepioce and apples. --Core the apples and stew them, well covered with water, either ters ..ve ' ' whole or in guar , with , sugar to taste, moreeeasilyoultiveted thancother_ferms of till tender. -Boil • three or , fonFouncee-of tapioca till hquid, pour it onthe appleis and bake half an hour. '. Serve' With a jog of ' 4 -401,!**4. 43X,E47,8 4 FFIMEPIAR It Begins. With en10,*noti, .nald ,X441, With *4 "'elopers. As re drove Of steers was Patidmethe grocery Mere of Wm: Peters, e corner of •Efamsook ' and Jefferson etreete, least evening, one of them with & Mind of an inquiring turn walked into the epos door and darted on "a tour of .investigation through the store. The 'pipet) was filled with Cestomers, who fled' precipitately at the steer's ePereaOh.• ThOlfe who 0Ould' not reach the door crouched under the connter in an agony ofitear, Hia bellship leisurely proceeded to inspect the cab- bage pile, and, after manohing contentedly at it for a few moments turned his atten- tion to a lip:sleet of red pepperis that lay within tempting reaoh. After a sniff ho. concluded they were ;edible, and taking a geed mouthful began to chew. No sooner had he broken the elsie of thip red,hot vegetables than the Are began to burn, and he stamped around the store in agony, bel- lowing with rage and pain and threatening to demolish everything within reach:. 'Spy- ing a crate of eggs, he made p. plunge for them and eruerged from the box with hie head coated with egg Yolks After stamp- ing around the store. for • a short time he escaped and joined the herd. An immense crowd' had gathered around the 'store; and a Tenth district policeman was considering the: best meene of ending the show, when the steer :ruehed into. the etreet.*-Pliffa- . delphia Record. one hundred-a-cree:--If you can double the productiv,enese of your farm you will more than double ate velue. . The weighing of the milk, testing ofthe • cows, endknowing to a dollar what one is doing, is a great help to the dairy farmer. , It enables him to get rid of • poor milkers and replace them with good ones, and the, latter sost no more to 'keep and handle • than the former. ' . A 2 -year-old steer requires in his daily food; to enable him to make an even, well- . • developed _geowth, about one . pound of • flesh -forming food to eight pounds of fat and heat -producers, and this is &beet the Cup pudding. --Mix carefully one • cup each of flour, ground rice, finely chopped snot, milk and raisins, with a tablespoonful of soda, the same of ground ginger (it liked) and a tablespecnful of vinegar. • Boil four hours and'eerve with sweet sauce; but it is very good' without. °Marmalade pudding. -Five ounces of bread crumbs,. four ounces of suet, two ounces.of candied peal, one lemon, one egg, three tablespoonfuls of Marmalade., Chop • •proportionn which these ewe dames ee. the suet very finely, shred the candied peel, i nuttiente are found in good timothy hay. • ' Not only should (skim milk be warmed When it as fed to carvesbut it should also be warmed, When it is fed to young pigs. The fact is that cold milk is just about • poison to the bowele of any young 'animal that it is fed to. Not only should it always be warm when it is fed but it should- in- . , .varialgy be sweet, • • In using'kerotenie or coal oil in an emul- • sion for destroying Maeda considerable •-care ehould be taken to keep it thoroughly mixed.- If allowed to stand even a few „minutes, the oil and water will separate , arid oftenconsiderable damage will • be the result,,as the oil alone will injure the 'trees andplants quite eerionsly if applied to them. • , There are se many heautiful annuals' that bloesome if early sown, from the early spring until frost comets, that the snoops- sion can be easily kept up, and one need never be without therm It will require but little time to cultivate them, and the vigor gained from : the outdoor exercise will ' compensate for its °Utley even if the :flowers yielded no other returns. No inaplement , needs better .care than 'those that are costly or difficult to coin- , street. Softie of them are need but a shozt, * time dieing' the Yette,•such es harvesters: • Thee should he well gleaned, and every part enisieet to rust given a brushing .over , with'-lertisenee It cenvenierit, experedve• e °Inachineiy should be. &sepia, as during • ; . the winter there is always an accumidition Of dose that does :ixioto or bee damage to irailements, lic Tbe potate fldti Amnia not heallowed to grow up in grass after the crop is off. To allow wee& and grass to take posseedion is , , I ereatethe rind of the. lemon ; put these in. grediente with the cruisibe into a basin, and mix with them the?armilade and egg. Well greases e hada, turn in. the mittens; cover with greased paper. and steam font • Floating island. -Beat the yelks•of three. Age hntill_very light ;-sweeten and flavor to taste; etir into a qeart of boiling milk, cook till it thickens; When • pool pour into' a•loW•glasedigh ; Whip the whites of the eggi to a 'stiff froth;'.sweeten, and: poet over a dish of boiling water to cook. Take a tablespoon and drop thewhites on top of the cream, far enough apart so that the "little 'White islands will net tench each other. 13y dropping little !spoke of bright jelly on each island a, &aging effect will be ,produced. Also by.,filling Wine: glasses and arranging gtround the stand adds to the appearance of the table., sirely illoviieg the field to. be seeded with , s ch.pests for nextneasoni thereby doubling' t-weelteber-ing.the. • Sow thp potato field to some kind of crop, rye being, excellent for that piarpose. • To. ineke • blackberry wino: Measere your .betrieeand brine° then:veto every gallon add one (part of boiling water... Let the enixtuee Mand twenty-four hours, • earring occasionally; then strati off the liquor into a cask; to every genet' add two ' pounds of sugar, cork tight and let it stand until the following October r and you will hews wine ready for use Without further labor. ' • , • e ,. • Small potatoes are very nice cooked in this way: Peel them and, boil in silted Valet ; do not let them bolt. dont they get eoft. Be t,ono egg, Mid, have reedy ,sonie fine crack r crurlibs ; roll the potato in the egg and then in the cracker and fry in butter until a' light, brown,' turning fio. quently that the color may be uniform.; or ' the potatoes may.be dropped into hot lard. 7 A desirable dessert:Elponge 'cream fur- nishes a ,very' delicate and easily: Made dessert. The ingredients are: One Pint of treshrtiilk, *three tablespoonfuls of gela- tine, three , tablespoonfuls Of sugar, three eggs: Pat the gelatine inth cold mulk, let it Mend for &little while; Pia on the stove and bring the milk to ti boiling point; then addthe sugar and yelks of the eggs, which have been well beaten together. - Remove froin the fire and stir in the whites, which have also been beaten stiff: Add a little salt, finvot to suit, and pour into ineelde 'wet first so the cream will turn out easily Veleet oreani.-e-Two tablespoonfuls Of strawberry jelly, to tablespoonfuls of currant jelly, two tablespoonfuls of Pul- verized sugar, whites of two egge,beaten etiff ; then whip the cream fill a Wine- glass one-half full of the: Whipped cream; and, 'fill the glaei with the above Mixture beaten to a cream. • • • TOmette,Se.voy.-.--Four poundsof threa- t ••' two. onside bf • s• • ; • New Amerleans•x.C44. Frederick Barnard, tbe illnetrator, eur- plisse& inc e littletheOther cley when he said: "Yen Aniericane are not a bit like the English in your appearance. In the course of a century or so yOu've changed from the English type altogether. The voices of your women have grown lend and shrill, and your Men have got darker faceit and keener eyee. I've got so now that I oen tell the Now -Yorker pretty well by his eyes wherever I find him. 4 They see sharp eyes and are set neer together, e thongh. theirowner'. had brought them elope to :his nose by poking that Organ into very narrow Places Where it wad necessary to see at the same time. You look like a lot of ferrets. Then the eYebroweeinetead of goingatraight across -the -face elope • down- ward at the outer edge and Conte rather close tegether above the. nose, That not only makes yen look shrewd; but it Makes you leek bored and Wed and . dragged out, as I suspect most ef you are. A great many of:yen leek like actors. Beaton peo- plelook somewhat different , from ' ' New Yorkers, as they Ought to, for they live ins more Christian tome' than, this. Your eternal jumping and rushing in • this city make me tired, as the.boys say."-Dreeklyn Eagle. A Western trnitine. . •• "Away 'gut on what is known ee the Boutb.branoli of the Union Pteoifie Railway, in Gunnison county, Col., is a station called l'arlin. ' There is nothing of the place except a depot; and a post office, and every train must stop. 'there five minutes, omfiGirous .irrao What a Skilful hardener' Hae to 13hor Boston. Thousands' of visitors have Nov • Danvers; hospital grounde tbe Weeks, says e. Bneton letter, p caeoarry great loads dr , being made on visiting e Wednesdays. The )r view by the many r mavellons fiowp ranged by the Tassinari, and rive' Unite", 0 • tuthee. aithout stooping. fountaine and thirty ettrieties of plan: portable boxes, and the back of a eh*. flews and draperies,/ Floriste from far anx. near have pronounced this design the best • ‘, they ever paw.' A -solar °look or sun dial attracts mut% \ attention, as • it accurately tgle the time of day by a shadow cast by a bole of growing plants placed at an angleof 47 degrees, and pointing to the ,North star. The shadow fails on floral numerals in the- • rim of a horse-shoe shaped. bed Of plants: There are numerous 1300 of lesser note,and, several photographs have been taken of the • . Prinoieal °nee, . • ' Itegniar Hours tor foneei " The final word of phyablogy to the ' dent is not to turn night into day, 'and to . •never subtract here a dee measure of. No • one needs 'regular and full hours of sleep more than the brain -worker. I believe we hied nothing by taking .nine hours of sleep; no one can. do Bound and bountiful thinking with less than seven or eight 1101tr0. • We are creatures of habit: whether iss a passenger•or a freight tram,. iiti;Snaleelaintofproergiulatrtithya.t thwer,buneogonibeetrialuesgpll Not many feekdietautilthe. house of John Perlin. ' The house, is 'midi; of loge et -regular- helms,"af-ver:•-habitnal.137-; take"; and is. -on the side of a hill which atretolies back and hitches itself.. to . merintain that raises itself up until its, .snowy summit touched the blue sky. The waters come down the mountain Bide in a 'silvery laughter and all day long: Make music Within a stone's, throw of 'John Perlin. The acres of foliage, the peat -Ares green•for niileteabout bekeig to John Pat - lin. The , herds of 'blooded cattle on the 4haits.illeittlikautuos and in istoienhe Valle4bie are John Pam% eAtleer41.4-igteetem.e.liffem,PF;'enPei, charthed..a fair.% 411-ciftertli,fithh °mike end Mocks and creaks Of milk from JOhn_Parlin's Holstein herd. ° • "Here in this seeinded spot, remOtelrOM the:contentions of . this base, world, came the railroad engineer running his , nee. John Perlin took hint in and gave him' of his cheer in a hospitable matmerthat Would inspire 55 American Walter 'Scott. The engineer •went away, ;and liter on came other .railway Men -some of thein mage nates -and *John • Perlin furniehed them food and resitand plenty of milk. Then they. told hinitheYwented 1,500 acres of his land and tusked him to name his price. The old man, in his generosity of heart, in his nature Which partook Of thesfreedbm of his home and its 'picturesque surroundings, said tothem ' You can hey° 1,e00 acres if you will put ndePtit over there near the dairy and make all of your Whine stop there five minutes. The toad Was built. ) The agreement wee kept, :and id till thin' day. And 'John Farlin; sits in the doorway of his log house and Sees the trains come in and atop. And the passengere,nnathe'en,"' gineers.and the .:firemen itha the Mathes - tore and the btakerninel leave their trains and go oier to the 'Wry and partake of John Pietlin'es-Huleteineowle--inilk,÷-fresk and cooled by the •inbentain strewn, free Of • charge. Then they return tithe train and it speeds sWity; and John Perlin staiads.in his doorway and waves ' his hand and • his children shout in • nature's graseeeat the .departing ecene."--eChfcago Times: • • • anger, cinnamon, cloves an mace. • ee an elute the tomatoes, adding tile , vinegar, sugar and spines'. Boll half an hour , and, bottle'corking tightly to exclude the air. If notexpoted. to, mold this will keep for years in a drycloset. •The Danger of Travel., Oherife-Harry; do Ton know that / don't like' to travel ;on' the railroad on Monday. , ° • . Harry -Why 2- Clattelie-Because there's always a'wash.: mit on the line. ' ' •Yelieilat Went With, the nor. At ;We Mountain Resort, -Fond Mamma (who:•te sobbed just been rescued' by Ds Jones from a watery grave)-" Thank you ever so much, Itr, De JoneS, bit yon!te • forgotten to got Tomray,o hat." , • The Cruise of a ihrttle. : Captain Gleadell, of the steamer °Ger- mamo, reports that & ,bottle thrown dyer - board from the Celtic two years ago, in, latitude.40 degrees 31 minutes north, lenge tittle 30 &greet ,45 minutes west, was picked up recently at Rivadeo, On the north Coast of Spain: The bottle had travelled 1,059 miles eastennitheatii, half east; at the rate of nearly 31 „Miles ' per day. This: is a ;very slow rate of teeneletion for any drift- mat - tee in the **trent between the .pointe named. isebettle thrown into the Serge:sae Sea, on its northeast margin, has been known to reach Coble a dietetic° of 3,200 miles, in 437 dem making an average daily progress of more than 8 miles. This is about the speedmade by other 'like waifs in the Atlantic Egnatoriel current. The , cruise of the bottlereperted by Captain Gleadell must have been aPpotrently•nitich longer than a greateircle drawn between the.poiet at which it „was thrown out and that at Which it was picked tip. It omelet indieate t o e sleep promptly when the hour • comes. Sleeplessness is brought . about by irregre-,e larity. So; `again, if we deduct from the regular hours given to ,sleep; it becomes difficult to eleep•at all. Drum compel it for . a time, but no drug exists which gives normal sleep, -or fails in time to make us ite slave. Natural sleep can come only,bn a natural process. Night, let it be under- stood; is not, and is mierer, the time fo study. - The very best .rule is to study in th e. .-.4 very clearly their general direction an $ higher latitudes of the North Atlantic. , . ,We: B.'S. Stowe Sadly Altered. - After the, death of Professor Stowe' the, eyes of the twin daug,htereof Mrs Stowe,Whis were her inseparable companions, detected a chaegein their reothetrand-have courage - musky admitted of late .that the, wonderful personality of Harriet Beecher Stowe is sadly altered. At times, it is Arne, she is bee old selfa wantan-oltremendous force of will; unteilingconinitin sense and a' mind remarkable for vigor and quality. In 'her, tithesofclouded' mentality she will deny acquaintance with her oldest and• hest friends, and forget face as familiar to her as . the fingers cin' .her hand; again, she Will 10013 strangers,' • in •the street, question there, and, as in the case of an Italian pedler whom sho. recently confronted on the sidewalk, she Will berate them seundly for imaginary offences. But sho inks 'slight and frail in appear- ance, so .gentle and winning in manner, ordinerilythat every One realizes that some- thing is wrong with the little woman, and they treat her as they Would it child. Her, neighbors wee° long ago, made &were of the fact that, like Emerson,she is failing at the eop,e.tid With a great taiderness and thought -1 fulness they speak of her as of one who had -made a long and useful Sojourn here and who is now living in two *worlds' at One and .the same time. Occasionally she seems si , like her min strong self that these abonthei 'hope ehe is recovering, buttlie condition is temporary, and the delightfoil conversetitin- . alist and practical woinen is gone, and with the eclipse of the former individuality the beautiful eyes look vacantly upon Well known feces and familiar scenes; and she is merely a memory of her other self. - Laura C. Holloway in New York Graphic. a " SanUking Carr • Funny doctor (with cigar, to individtte smoking foul pipe) -You 'should really take care. . medical Man, and affanre you, My dear sir, ‘that 99,per cent, of the casts of throat disease arise fromthe.smokin,g of bail pipe." Indiv Lanni i "Humph 1 And de yen know • doctor', that, 99 of the cases of Wick eye aro °tweed by not • minding One's one Wittiness Moonsitine. . , -114 -ereatt' meal ; '-n•but never --"m Tho veniiig. later hours of the day should be given to . snort, to light reading and to those occupa- tions that relax the nerves. Let no temp- tation ' whateVer induce , you to return to writing or study, or even letter -writing; or to anything annoying•or exciting, after 4 in the afternoon. 'Defer 'all matters liable to arouse and intensify attention or snail* until Morning. ; If you have a *eery let it alone till the early.hotirs ; and to with an problem that taxes the brain, , Children, should be forbidden their books in the ' evening. We 4811 • be driven to reverse the prevalent' fashion of turning, night into • , day. The night has the advantage of robe-. 2 tive- quiet; but the disadvantage of being ' • the true-tine-foredeep.-M.--Mauricee-M.D.,-, - in' Glebe -Democrat. • • , McBean, a, *ming Man of good famile,"wed arrested, at Winnipeg on Sattarz day might on a charge of ontraging.an Ice. landie servant girl' in his father's family. Ete asserts his intocende; and gays it is a eaSis of, blackmail. D.tist,a • , -Fall Shades In.31fMnerY• er, Miyinerg Tradejourna. . , The syndicate of Paris manufacturers - have adopted the folk:evil% as among the leading colors for the coming season:. • 'Emerande-a deep, richeemetald green., Scarabee-a dark; yellowish green. Couroncon-a shade lighter than Nara. • Penpliere-a shade lighter than coriron'. •Nil -a light, watery green. Coqualicot-a rich, blood Ted. . • Cardinale -a dark scarlet. ',Boulanger -a bright, live -blood red. Benton d'or-a. golden Yellow. Mais-a straw Suite*. Voleari-i reddish terra Meta. Alezan-ea dark, reddieh brown. ' 'Peotole-alight, golden brown. : • Oxide -n dark elate. Liontiettuaa-dark fawn. . • Heron -a gray drab. • ' • Luciole-a gend'arme blue. In searching seine old clothing whioh belonged in the late Archibald Sprague's road, in one of the pockete were.. feted two 50. 'shilling notes ' of - the Bank of British North America, Of a •veei, ancient date and...style, They had evidently been in poosension .of the .old gentleman for eethe years previews to his death; put away ' and forgotten, only to comelo light when 7` the clothes were being ripped nO for acme household piirtiose.Gcsit• Reporter. • Druggist (excited) -Run and overtake. Col. Bourbon, James„; I've Made an avO mistake in his prescription! James (seizing his hat)-Wh-what's the nilistake ! Drug; • gist -The prescription called for spiritus fermenti and aqua. I gaVe him all aqua. The doge will kill him • ' "Papa," said' a beautiful girl, "young Mk. Thistle has written me a note in which healsks me to he his wife." ' ' • '- -' Written , you a note? • why in thunder didn't he porno himself ?". • . . ' "It would have been pleasanter that way no doubt; papa, but I suppose:, he feels a little timid; and besides, papa think how much more binding the note is." ., ,A. wheat crop of • 30,000,000 btishele up in Manitoba coffees a rather, &airy , pros. peat.' t rel. 4 • '' ' fSarah Bernhardt is return to Parte from England on Friday of this week. She .will rest throtighont August, and then will take steamer for Ladle and Australia, to be gone seven Months -time enough for tlio °lament:her- pet Diger to grow into good. sized scratchers. . . _ ,.11:4•1Y4 -14:00s. ,DISCOVERY. , , • • whank unlikeartificial eysteinai Cure of mind wandering. : Any book learned in one reading. Claeiseaof 1,037 at tialtiniore, 1,095 etDistroit hlr i,ntattL'ifeittlef,cireletitit tii4s2O'fa-tliateles andante, at Yale, Welleffley, Oberlin; Univ of Primi„ laidliigan,-Universaty;Chautanque, atm • otd. Endorsed by Rictus» Manton, the ispikw 'Het, lions. W4 W esrort,TIMAIr BEN:AM , Judge' Otinlort,-Dr. Bnewzi, E. H. Cook, Prin State liotnial College, so. Taught by pondenco. Prospectus NATvnue from ' PROF.,•LOISETTE; 237 P11tla Ave.,11.M. DO• zi„ L.' 33,30J THE COOK'S BEST FR1