The Wingham Times, 1885-09-25, Page 2THE UOUSEROI.17).
To a New Bride and Housekeeper.
sr MAIOARIT,.11. Wn1T1,
You little gums) the lonesomeness that's coming o'er
my life,
When you have lett the farm and me to be Will
Johnson's wife;
But I suppose my mother felt just eo, when train her
side,
Your father Dame one summer's day to carry home
his bride.
Ab, me ! how happy had I beonlf Provideaoo had
spared
31y good old manta see this day, who slimy feelings
Oland;
But, then, I would not bring him back, not even if I
might,
Nor change one crook that's in my lot, for what God
deo is right.
Bub as I sit alone and think I the tome things I'd
change;
Imight have made him happier; then do no, think
it strange
If I should speak some warning words to cava you,
if I may,
From making thoughtless, sad mtetukce, to bring
clouds o'er your way.
So just remember, Hannah, dear, that, though you're
pretty bright,
It may be very p'sale you'll not be always right 1
Perhaps when you aro fretting o'er some other body's
sin.
You'll find the fault was all your own if you would
look within.
As when we washed the window panes together face
to face,
So that the smallest spot or stain would find no rest-
ing plane,
You would insist, however hard to make you see I
tried
That every spot was my fault when 'twas really on
your side.
And, Hannah, oh l bo patient it you find Will some-
times slow ;
Your wits flash out like lightning streaks, as swift to
come and go;
Now, lightning ie a handy thing in stormy nights,
'tie true,
But, after ad, a .toady shine le kind o' useful, too.
And if there's any difference comes'twixt your good
man and you.
Don't stop to ask whose fault it is; the only way to
do
Ie just to take the thing in hand and try with all
your might,
Before it grows too big to change, to fix it up all
right.
You know the dough when first 'tie set, ie molded as
we will,
But when 'tis baked we cannot change its shape for
wood orIll ;
So now, when you are starting out in your newhome,
is just
The time to see what ways you'll set to hardea into
crust.
•
But, dear, you'll not succeed alone, no m tter how
you try ;
You'll have to go down on your knees and ask help
1 rom on high.
We soap and rub and boil and rinse, but after all, you
know,
It takee heaven's sun to -make the clothes as white as
new fall'n snow.
For Young Housewives.
Clean caster bottles with shot.
To remove ink stains 'oak in sour milk
over night.
To brighten and clean old alpaca, wash in
* coffee.
Mix stove polish with vinegar and a tea-
spoonful of sugar.
When cooking beans add one-half tea-
spoon of saleratua.
To brighten carpets sprinkle with salt be-
fore sweeping.
To polish a stove rub with a newspaper
instead of a brush.
To remove tea stains from cups and sau-
cers scour with ashes.
For burn' apply flour wet with cold water,
as it quickly gives relief.
When sponge -cake becomes dry it is nice
to out in thin slices and toast.
To remove mildew soak in buttermilk and
spread on grass in the sun.
If nutmegs are good, when pricked with a
pin oil will instantly ooze out.
If the oven is too hot when baking place a
small dish of cold water in it.
To prevent mustard plasters from blister-
ing mixwith the white of an egg.
To prevent flat -irons from scorching wipe
them on a cloth wet with kerosene
To clean furniture that is not varnished
rub with a cloth wet with kerosene,
To brighten or clean silver or nickel plat-
ed ware rub with a woolen cloth and flour.
When there is a crack in the stove it can
be mended by mixing ashes and Halt with
water.
When clothes are scorched remove the
stain by placing the' garment where the
aun can shin on it.
Starched shirts will iron easier if you let
them dry after starching so you will have
to sprinkle them before ironing.
The wings of turkeys, geese and chickens
are good to wash and clean window', &they
leave no dust nor linet, as cloth.
To brighten the inside of a coffee or tea-
pot fill with water, add a small piece of soap
and let it bDil about forty-five minutes,
To remove grease from wall paper lay
several folds of blotting paper on the spot
and hold a hot iron near it until the grease
is absorbed.
COOKING RECIPES.
COFFEE CAKE:—Two cups brown sugar,
one cup of butter, five eggs, one-half cup
molasses, one nutmeg grated, two teaspoon-
ful cinnamon, one teaspoonfuls cloves, one-
half,cup made coffee, three heaping cups
flour, one cup currants, one teaspoonful sale
eratus dissolved in warm water, one quart-
er pound of citron, one teaspoonful lemon
extract. Creambutter and sugar together,
and be sure to flour the fruit before stirring
it in ; bake in a moderately fast oven.
COCOANUT DROPS :—Beat to a froth the
whites of two eggs, and add gradually one
small cup sugar, one cup cocoanut grated
and one spoonful flour. Butter tin sheets
with washed butter, and then cover with
letter -paper. Drop on this the mixture in
teaspoonf uabout two inches apart. Bake
five minuteff in a quick oven.
JELLY CAIO1 :—'rhreo eggs, one cup sugar,
butter the size of an egg. one cup flour, one
teaspoonful cream tartar sifted in the flour,
one-half teaspoonful of milk, Bake in jelly
oake tins and spread when cold with fruit
jelly. ,y
1SA1tED OrsrARDs :—One quart of milk,
four eggs, five tanlespoonfule sugar beaten
with the egee, nutmeg and tion tablespoon-
fele flavoring extract Scald the milk, pour
upon the other ingredients, stir together
well, flavor andpour into stone china Dupe,
Set those in a pan of hot water, grate nut-
meg upon each and bake until firm, Eat
cold from the cups.
EGGS A LA TRIPE taller(' boil a dozen
eggs, and out them in slices ; peel gomo
etereieritewfwat
small pickling onions and fry them gently
in butter over a slow lira ; .duet them with
Baur, motet= them with equal quantities of
stook, and Bream, add a little salt and pep-
per, and stew them till quite tender; then
add the eggs and give them a warm up;
serve as hot as possible..
Arras MEIulranx:—Prepare aix largo
tart apples for sauce. While hot put in a
piece trf butter the size of an egg. When
cold, and a cup of fine cracker crumbs, the
yolks of three eggs well beaten, a oup of
milk or oream, a little salt, nutmeg and su-
gar to taste, Bake in a large plate, with an
under cruet of rich paste and a rim of puff
paste. When done, take rhe whites of t''e
eggs, half a tea-oup of white sugar, and a
few drops of essence of lemon ; beat to a
stiff froth, pour over and put back into the
oven to brown lightly.
WHEAT MUFFINS :—For a dozen muffins
there will be required a cupful and a half
of entire wheat flour, a cupful of milk, one-
third of a cupful of cream, one-third of a
cupful of water, an egg, a teaspoonful of
cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful of salt
and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Mix the
dry ingredients and beat them quickly and
vigorously. Pour the batter into buttered
muffin pans and bake for twentyfive min-
utes in a rather quick oven. The batter
will be thin and will give a moist muffin
but that is as it should be.
FRIED POTeeoEs ;—Peel tin= and boil in
salted water ; do not let them •boil until
they are soft. Boat ono egg, and have ready
some fine cracker crumbs; roll the potato
in the egg, and then in the cracker and fry
in butter until a light brown, turning fre-
quently that the color may be uniform ; or
the potatoes may be dropped into hot lard.
In this ease, a cloth should be laid over a
plate and the potatoes should be drained f.ir
a moment in this before sendiog them to
the table.
Beauty in Wives.
Beauty in a wife may or may not be a de-
sirable gift, but it is certainly not a joy for-
ever.
The proverb that beauty is only skin deep
may be trite, but I have no doubt that it is
particularly applicable to married women
b -cause (have patience, mesdames !) after
six months or twelve months of married
bliss the young wife may look as handsome
as her better favored eider. A beautiful
woman creates a great impression in the
beginning but it requires good resources to
maintain this first impression, and if she has
not the mental traits so essential to com-
mand esteem, in time her beauty becomes
commonplace. The ordinary looking wife,
on the other hand, if she possess these amia-
ble traits, seems to grow handsome with
time. The beauitful wife is often too con-
scious of the charms of her persons, and if
forgetful of them is flattered by constant ad-
mirers into remembering them.
The man generally makes up his mind
very soon as to what he admires in the phy-
sigce of woman, but finds it more difficult to
c rile to a conclusion as to what is 'essen-
tial to hie happiness in mental qualities, As
a rule the wife should have mind enough to
comprehend that of her husband, to share
hie plans and to sympathize with him in his
occupation. Fainilerity with the husband's
business enables the wife to regulate the ex-
penses of the household to his income, where-
by many unpleasant dissensions are avoided.
To know when the purse is full and when it
is empty is a kind of knowledge that contri-
butes largely t i the pleasure of married life.
An approximation of the intellect of the
man and the woman to the same level ap-
pears to be the most conducive to domestic
harmony, as too great a difference in quality
of mind often engen ers a feeling akin to
contempt in the superior person, which it is
difficult to conceal. Good as the theory of
the extremes is in its physiological applica-
tion it may not be applied to what relates to
the mind. If there be not a psychological
affinity between husband and wife, married
life remians a barren waste. Cleverness or
mediocrity once established as a mutual
foundation, varieties may be found to con
sort advantageously together, such as taci-
turnity with garrulity, vivacity with inertia,
etc., but mutual comprehension and appre-
ciation are indispensable.
Persistence Beaver.
The quickness with which a colony dis-
covers a wholesale attempt against their
peace is astooishing; yet if their numbers
are undisturbed, or dim niched but grad-
ually, even the presence of civilization will
not drive them from their haunts. To -day
beaver are returning to streams in Mich-
igan long ago abandoned by their race, sim-
ply because they find themselves unmolest-
ed, the demand for beaver paltry being
alight, and the prices paid out of all propor-
tion to the labor entailed in trapping. It
has been said that, if a dam or houdb be
once injured by the hand of man, the colony
at once disappear. But that this is fallaci-
ous is proved by the following : Twenty-
two miles from Marquette, Michigan, on
the Carp River, a beaver colony began the
erection of a new dam, Though the em-
bankment of a railway ran nearly parallel
with the streamthe traino passed backward
and forward daily they seemed in no way
disturbed, and worked steadily on until the
water had risen a foot or more. The track
master, observing that this endangered the
line -for the embankment had been utilized
as a wing of the dam—ordered the water
drawn off. But the following day the boa -
vers had repaired the damage done them,
and the water was at its former height.
Again and again and again was the dam
cut through, and as often would be repair-
ed. All in all, it was cut and repaired some
fifteen or twenty times ere the beavers
were sufficiently discouraged to abandon
their attempts.
When George E lot was a girl of nineteen,
she wrote : "For my part, when I hear of
the marrying and giving in marriage that is
constantly being transacted, I can only sigh
for those who are multiplying earthly tars
which, though powerful enough to detach
their hearts from heaven, are so brittle as to
be liable to bo snapped asunder at every
breeze." After she had married Mr. Cross
in her m'ttnre years she wrote, "I shall be a
better, more loving creature than I could
have been fh solitude. To be constantly,
lovingly grateful for the gift of a perfect love
is the beat illumination of one's mind to all
the possible good there may be in store for
men on this troublous little planet,
POUNDMAKERR'S PRISON LIF}
He Is Allow, d to Wear Ills Hair and /melte
Tobacco.
A gentleman thue writes of Poundmaker
and the other Indian and halfbreed prison -
ere incarcerated in the Stony Mountain
Penitentiary t -The warden fool the way to
the garden, and here we saw the veritable
Poundmaker a"trifle thinner it is true than
when we saw him first at Battleford, but
atilt " the noblest Indian of thorn a 1, ' and
looking quite young conaidering his forty-
four yearn. He wore the convict dress, but
it was hidden in a great measure by the
blanket he is allowed to use, and the hid-
eous shoes worn by the ordinary convict
do not disfigure the Cree ohief'a feet, for he
still wears moccaeine. His long black hair
of which he is ao proud has been spared by
the authorities, and hangs down in a long
plait almost to his knees, and is covered
with a twisted handkerchief from the vul-
gar gaze on account of the number of visit-
ors who hanker for a lock of his hair by
way of relic. He had been strictly caution-
ed against parting with his hair in this way,
as the authorities do not wish to sae the
great chief Poundmaker go beak to hie
people baldheaded at the end of his three
years. When we first saw him he was
walking slowly down the centre walk in the
garden with the prospective governor of As-
siniboia, Alexander Fisher, trotting by his
side like an attendant terrier, but on seeing
the warden, he approached us and shook
hands with a smile. Through his interpre-
ter, Alex. Fisher, of Batoche, a amall-sized,
sharp -faced little man, with a cunning smile
whenever he addressed you, we asked
Poundmaker several questions as to how he
felt, how he was treated, and what he
thought of the place.
"I was in this 'country when I was a
young man,' said the chief, "at the stone
fort, on the Red River, over twenty aum-
mers ago. This place was not here then.
It is not a very bad place here, and Mr.
Bodeen is a good man, but it is not like
being out on the prairies where I have my
young men to do what I tell them. But I
must not complain for the government is
very good to me. The walls of that build-
ing," said he, pointing to them; "are very
thick, and the poor Indian could not get out,
bat the white chief opens the door for the
Indian to walk out and see the trees and
sun."
The interpreter said Poundmaker appear-
ed well in health, and neve complained.
He is allowed the use of tobacco, and we ac-
cordingly presented him with a cigar,
Several of the rebel half-breed prisoners
now name up, all being dressed in convict
clothes, with their beards propped short.
We questioned them through the interpreter
as to how they felt, and they all complain-
ed of ennui. Their bones ached with not
having sufficient exercise, and they would
all be glad when they got some work to do.
So far, they had nothing to complain of
either as regards food or treatment, and all
appeared to think very highly of Mr. Bed -
son. Neither Monkman nor Lepine put in
an appearance, and those weeaw, amongst
whom were Parenteau and Champagne
apptared silent and downcast, and declined
to talk, and were evidently glad when we
ceased questioning them. Alex. Fisher, on
the contrary, was brisk and chipper, and
talked away at a great rate, and when we
turned to leave, wished us good-bye very
plesantly. The last seen of Poundmaker,
he was seated inside an arbor in one corner
of the garden, p fling away at his cigar
and looking contentedly down upon the at-
tendant Fisher, who seems quite contented
without his governorship.
Speaking about Poundmaker, Warden
Bed.on said it was not the intension to
treat the chief harshly, or to put in force
all the rules and regulations of the peniten-
tiary in his case. He will be allowed to
wear his hair, and be given as much liberty
as is consistent with safety, and any em-
ployment given him will be in the open
air. At present he is studying botany
under the tuition of Alex. Fisher, and rhe
general impression is that his term of im-
prisonment will be curtailed considerably.
The half-breed rebel prisoner, will be put
to work this week, and then they will
probably not suffer so much from ennui.
A Lawyer's Story.
Speaking about hats reminds me'of an in-
cident that happened several years ago,
when I was living at a fashionable -house, in
a leading city, It was rather a high-toned
klace and contained among its members as
fine a lot of young ladies and gentlemen as
you would care to meet. Well, one day in
midsummer—and it was a terribly hot day,
too —whi'e we were all down at dinner, a man
1.,
hear that, !after 'your remarks of yesterday
on the subject of the Dead Marga' in Saul,
I have bought a flute," eto. The poor man
bore up for a time, but the notes of absence
went from bad to worse. "Dear sir," they
began to read— "I was yesterday ao fee -
ciliated by the • Head Maroh' in Saul that I
protose making a earful study of this solemn
measure. In these ciroumetancea I hope
you will ovorlgok nay necessary absence
from the lent Brea ; for the next few days."
"Dear sir —I regret that, on first hearing
it, the' Dead March' in Saul made less iin-
pression onme than I had exiieoted. As I
would be reluctant, however, to judge the
piece by such [slight acquaintance, I shall,
with your permission, attend tomorrow's
reo tel," Worst' of all—"Daar Sir,—We,
the undersigned, have pleasure m informing
you that we have joined a music -class for
the purpose of practiaing the • Dead Maroh'
in Saul, Unfortunately the practising.takea
place during the hours of your lectures,
which will prevent our attendance at the
latter being as regular as we could have
wished,"
A Story.
The inhabitants of Seymour and vicinity
are said to be much exercised in mind over
the existence in that town of a veritable
haunted house, and those who have occasion
to pass the place after night -fall do so with
quickened pulses and a fear that they may
Hee something that would cause fright at
least, It is believed that in the little brown
house where John Sullivan and his wife
were found dead Last winter, after having
been undiscovered for at least 36 hours,
there ie some strange and terrible aecret,and
that instead of its being, as some supposed,
a case of double suicide, perhaps both Sulli-
van and his wife were murdered in cold
blood. For some time past timid people
have hinted that all is not right in the lone-
ly little place. Two or three families have
occupied the place since the tragedy, and
they at once move out and away, and are
reticent as to the oausee, only saving that
they do not care to live there. Finally it
transpired that the first family were annoy-
ed by strange noises. The second family
heard all sorts of supernatural sounds, and
so did the thir-1 family, and it would be ex-
tremely difficult now for the owner to get a
tenant. Very recently a young man was
riding along, in company with a young lady,
when she suddenly gave a shriek of terror
and convulsively seized him by the arm He
hastily asked her what ehe meant, and as
soon as she could regain her composure she
she said she saw the form of a woman on the
roof wildly waving its hands. Her compan-
ion tried to make her believe that there was
nothing in it, but she insisted, and still in-
sists, that she saw the startling spectre. He
made up hie mind that he would sift the
mystery to the bottom, and the next night,
in company with three or four reliable
friends, he visited the spot, While they
saw nothing, they assert that they heard
many noises that in their opinion must be as-
cribed to supernatural causes.
"Love Sees No Faults,"
it has been said ; but, when a woman is
dragged down, emaciated, wan, and a shad-
ow of her former self, with never a cheerful
word, she can be no longer beautiful or lov-
able. Nature may have been generous in
her gifts, and endowed her with all the
charms of her sex, but disease has crept in
unawares and stolen the roses from her
cheeks, the lustre from her eye, and the sun-
shine from her heart. But to be well again
lies in your own power. Take Dr. Pieroe's
•' Favorite Prescription," it wilt cure Sou ;
thousands have been cured by it. Nothing
equals it for all the painful maladies and
weaknesses peculiar to women. Price re-
duced to one dollar. By druggists,
A Baltimore man called a letter carrier a
liar and was promptly knocked down. He
is now punishing the Government by going
to the post offioe for his own mail.
The great diaphoretic and anodyne, for
colds. fevers and inflammatory attacks, is
Dr. Pierce's Compound Extract of Smart -
Weed ; also, cures colic, cramps, cholera
morbus, diarrhoea and dysentery, or bloody -
flux, Only 50 cents.
When a very mad woman begins practicing
with a revolver the wise man always dodges
in rant of her
A disease of so delicate a nature as stric-
ture of the urethra should only be entrusted
to those of largo experience and skill. By our
improved methods we have been enabled to
speedily and permanently cure hundreds of
the worst cases. Pamphlet, references and
terms, three letter stamps. World's Dispen-
sary Medical Association, 663 Main Street,
entered the hall door, which was standing Buffalo, N. Y.
Crocodile farming is rapidly becoming a
leading industry in certain localities. The
Largest animals are killed and skinned, their
flesh being used to feed their descendants.
One dealer last year supplied a tanner with
5,000 skins.
The Way of the World.
That many with the glad consent praise
newborn remedies, especially if tney pay a
larger profit—no o ne conversant with the
substitution practiced in this respect will
deny, and when you are told by interested
parties that such and such a preparation is
as "good or better"—than the great sure
pop corn cure—Putnam Painless Corn Ex-
tractor. Just for a moment consider if your
benefit prompts the advice, or if the small
additional profit secured by the sale of in-
ferior or poisonous substitutes lies at the
bottom of the suggestion. We say then,
buy only Putnam's Painless Corn -Extractor;
the pafe, auto and tested remedy for erns
will be found in Putnam's Painless Corn Ex-
tractor. N. C. Polson & Co., Kingston,
'froprietors.
In the case of a miser itis much easier to
take things as they come than part with
things ea they go.
The manufaoturereof the "Myrtle Navy"
tobacco invite the very closest scrutiny of
its quality. The expert whose trained
senses teach him to recognize the exact
quantity of tobacco, and the smoker who
budges by his experience in smoking it, will
oth come to the ease conclusion that it is
of the very highest quality anywhere to be
found, It is made of the very finest of
Virginia leaf and is mantttfactured with the
greatest possible oare.
It is a mean girl who will give her faithful
lover the mitten in hot weather,
open, and gathering up the hats on the rack
in to pile—there were about thirty of them,
and some fine ones, too—he started down
the front steps. Before he reached the side-
walk he met a salesman who was a little late
for dinner, and who asked him what he was
doing with all those hats. " Why," said
the fellow, "I'm a bat dealer just around
the corner, and I'm going to Olean these hats
while the gentlemen are at dinner," "All
right," replied the salesman, "take ming a-
long, and clean it np, too." There was soda
the biggeat crowd of bareheaded clerks in
that house you ever saw. And the one who
saw the rascal lugging the hate all off, and
helped him, t to, by giving him his own hat:—
well we nearly thumped the life out of him
Valid. Exouses.
A Scotch professor has made up his mind
never again on any consideration whatever
to tell his students what a high opinion he
has of the "Dead March" in Sattl. Music,
it should bo explained, is the delight of his
declining years, and he puts the famous
maroh before everything. "If a student,"
ho explained one n.ilucky day to his atten-
tive class, " were to tell me that ho had ab•
rented himself from a lecture in order to
hoar the 'Dead March' in Saul,I would consid-
er the excuse valid." The retell assertion was
received with cheers. Tho next day the
class was very thinly attended, and tho
lecture interrupted by the entrance of the
janitors with notes. "Dear sir," thee°
read, " I hope you will excuse my absence
to -day, as I am off to hea- the ' Dead Maroh'
in Saul," " Daar sir,—Having beard that
the ' Dead March' in ,Saul is to be played
to -day at the cemetery, X find myself unable
to stay away from it, Hoping you will,"
etc. "Daar sir,—You will be pleased to
Demonstrated,
Sometimes it wrote hundreds of dollars to
convince a man; very often less is required,
but in the Daae of Pblson'e NERVILI1vo:, that
sovereign remedy for pain, 10 cents foots the
bill, and aupp ieaenoughNerviline to convince
every puruhaser that it is the beet, most
prompt and certain pain remedy in the
world. Nerviline Is good for all kinds of
pain, pleasant to take, and sure to cure
cramps and all internal pains. It is also
nice to rub outside, for it has an agreeable
small, quite unlike so many other prepar-
ations, which are positively disagreeable to
use Try it now, Go to a drug store and
bey a 10 cent or 25 cent bottle. Poison's
Nerviline, Take no other.
If you wish to paper a whitewashed wall,
brush it over with u strong alum water.
ter Alma Ladies' 'College, St. Thomas
Ont., has full staff and complete course in
Literature, Music, Fine Arte, and Commer-
cial Science. Re -opens September 10, 1885.
For 50 pp. announcement, address Princi-
pal Austin, B. D.
The laborer who is worthy of his hire is
oleo worthy of hie lbre.
Prevention Better Than Cure.
Many of the dieeases so prevalent in these
days are caused by using soap containing
impure and infectious matter. Avoid all
risk by using PERFECTION Laundry Soap,
which ie absolutely pure. Ask your grocer
for PERFECTION. Manufactured only by
the Toronto Soap Co.
A.P,245,
ARMS FOR SALE,—All kinds.--Sen4 for Its
Il' Joan J. Demur, Guelph.
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR
IMPERIAL FRENCH SHOE BLACKING
PURE BRED AYItSHIRES for sale ; two cows, tw
f yearling heifers and one bull. Write for demerits.
tion, price and pedigree to G. P. BAxza, Trafalgar.
LEAN—GRAIN—SEND TO MANSON CAMP;
BELL, Chatham, Ont., for circular. Fast clean.
ing fanning mills. Beet in Canada. Also warehouse
mills and duetl. as separators.
VALUABLE FARM FOR SALE -100 acres, 3
miles east of the city of St. Thomas. Fo
particulars address .7. J. LEWIS, New Sarum, On
1t le conceded by all that the DouirnoN
ION BusiNsss Councils, Kingeton.tie deserved.
C1 the most popular business training school In
anada.
ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE, Temper.
s ante St., Toronto. Path no, Gov. Gen. of Canada,
Lieut -Gov. of Ontario. The most auccesetul Voteri.
nary Institution in America—Over five hundred
graduates in euicasatal practice. All experienced
teachers Seaeion begins Oct 21. Fees Fifty Dollars.
Principal, PROP. SMITH, V. 9,
SUCCESS AGAINST ALL PREEJUDIC
st U isms' Eye Water has proved itself a income.
by all who have used it erording to directions it their
eyes were mumble, as will be s en by the undersigned
certificates. It oared mo, 8 years blind, °eculist tailed,
0. Portio ; it has awed me, ooculist would not try me.
Alexander Wand, 6 years b Ind, Cha.. Amiott ; 4 pars,
Elie Dufour; 33 years blind and now I sec, John
Leorcix. Ask your drusgiats for it. Wholosate—Ly
man Sons k Ch., 384 8t. Paul 8c•, Montreal.
AUGUR
SW ELL 1SultiNt!
BUY THE STAB,
Will bore 6 to 25 inch hole; hand or horse -power • le
feet per hour. Oar combined augur and Rook Drill a
grand euooeae, worked by steam or horse -power. Send
tor Clata!ogie.
68 Mary Street. iicausllton. Ont.
JAMES PARK & 80N.
Pork Packers, Toronto.
L. 0. Bacon, Rolled Spice Bacon, 0. 0. Bacon,
Glasgow Beef Hams, Sugar Cured Ham, Dried
Beef, Br est Bacon, Smoked Tongues, Mess Pork
Pickled onguoe, Cheeee, Family or Navy Pork
Lard in Tubs and Pails. Tho Beat Brands of Eng.
fish Fine Dairy Salt in Stock
PERFUMED DISINFECTANT SACHETS.
placed in Drawers, Trunks, Wardrobes, etc.—
They drive away and destroy Moths andotherineeeta,
imparting a delightful and delicate perfume to the
clothing, carried or worn upon the person they are
by their powerful concentrated disinfectant proper.
ties, a perfect means of protection against infection
of disease, giving off at the same time a moetdolight-
ful odor ; made entirely of satin in assorted colors
very pretty, unique, and neat. Every one should
have them, Price 10e. each—three for 25c. Thymo.
Crewel Soap, the great English disinfectant toilet
soap, awarded the gold medal, London, Eng., 1884.
Large cakes, price 15c., or 35c per bcx of 3 cakes,
postage paid to any address upon receipt of price.
Address Triyoo-Ca1eoL COMPANY, 750 Craig St., Mon.
tree!. Circulars and description° of our English Thy-
mo-Craeol preparation(' mailed free on application.
Agents wanted. Write for terms.
Han Vino Royal Mail Stearn hips,
Bailiaiueg atrdayorolan uad Hlfaxvery SuttPortland
a,m
from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, calling at Lo
deaden,, to land mails and passenger' for Scotland an
Ireland. Also from Baltimore viaPlants:andS/.Jobn'e
The steamer, 01 the Glaegowylldnea caing ll durriingmer months
winkle
to and from Halifax, Portland, Buten and PbUada6
phis; and during summer between Glasgow and Mon.
Ertel, weekly • Olugowand Boston, weekly; and Glum,
',ROY
Philadelphia, fortnightly.
For r itdOrMatilln
unnard l
Go, Hnlmifax; Sh Co.
&assage, or .CBaltimore) hrfir
Allem& Go.TCh cago;; Love S& Aiden, Ns i
York ;R. Bendier, Toronto; Allan, Rae dr Civ,
Quebec- Wm. Brookl°, Philadelphia; 11. A.
Allan. Portland. Boston, Montreal._
GURNEY S WA.RIE'S
STANDARD SCALES. 1l
Aro the hest. At.
tested by the Fact
that there aro more of
our scales in use in
the Dominion than
of ail other makes
combined. May.
Steck and Coal
Scales, raronel'e'
(Drain and Dairy Scales, Grocers'a!b Butcher"
%Scales, Beales for Dolnestic Ilse.
Housekeepers, Consult Your Best
Interests
one be eure
toy get the best a Our scales are fand in u ly warranted In
every particular. .411 sues Railroad,' Varehon%e
and Mill Trucks. Alarm Money lirawors.
lu
For
Cata1oguo and Hardware
List forwardedyiipon
application.
GURNEY &WARE•
HAMILTON.
iti'laznepsss=Montreal and Winnipeg.
s