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The Signal, 1897-8-26, Page 22 THURSDAY, August 26, 1897. .1 SIGNAL : GODERICH ONTARIO. IT PAYS TO TRADE AT PIO>ft'S.- SCHOOL SHOESI Vacation days will .Dore be ended. New $hoes necessary for the Boys and Girls. We're ready to supply all s. is at a certain money—saving tv layers. A good, esti r g Shoe e FROM 75 CTS. UP TO SI.5 J for thtt.finer grade, but all made in a way to stand the hardest usage. We consider it a pleasure to show our goois. PRICE, THE. SI -ICEMAN Successor to H. H. POLLOCK. toe We do repairing that gtrss-wtisf•ctioo. US MM WOMEN'S PAGE. • pple Rlegiets. Peel, cors and out into slices four Largs, tart •pples,mix half cup flour with half tea- spoonful baking powder, half teaspoonful butter, snd half teaspoonful salt. Mix half oup water, add to it these Materials, mix all into • smooth batter. Melt one table - speedo' fat in • hying pan, dip the apple shoes ante tbe bettor, pat them into the fry, iwg pan, and fry light brown on both aides - keeping the pan oovered while frying. Serve dusted with sugar. far tae laseuL Correction eines much. buteaooar•Rese after osnanro , at the sup stter a.howr Blessed be t be band tbep,Rnpar niple me for • child, tot there to no wpm ie.. and where it may bloom forth. In the man whose childhood hu ,r caresses there is always • fibre of mem i that can be touobed to geode is us When • child returns from a neighbor'. house, doe's question him .e ,o what was dame dues. hY family. unless you wish to sow seeds of gos- sip and miwbief. illeale Reeelpe, Egg sandwiches made after the following rosette are delicious for • pionio : Beat up six eggs for a dosee sandwiches, salt and pig. jut • touob of ceyeae. Have • good hot pan, with cis, sweet lard -not butter. From a small milk pitcher pour the egg in three or tour spot. In the pan, bast the Same (Inaouty to each, and do not splatter at around. Int it fi y • minute snd turn quick- ly and try on. rhe otter side. Have thin slices of round rolls ready buttered, and put each bit of egg between a soon as taken from tbo fire. This a much ou • r than the old way of making egg s..r.d watches. Tentage Pigs. Tomato- figs are ecen.nnical and tasty. Seleot the small yellow tomatoes; scald,p.al •oa weigh. Allow three periods of sugar to rix of tomatoes. Pat a layer of tomatoes . n the bottom of your preserving kettle. then • layer of eager, and stand them over a moderate fire. Cook very gently until the sugar hu petetrmted the tomatoes. Lift them carefully, one at • time, and -spread on • large meat platter. Dry in the bot sun, sprinkling them I times with granu- lated sugar. When dry pack them in jars, with a layer of Sugar between the layers of tomatoes. Carver with glass while they are drying. rraasple Teta& Take • rather stale spoogs-oaks whioh has been baked in • rather deep fluted mould, ,place it. on m gilts dish, make eevejal_Ljp holes in it, pour over it as mach of the syr- up from a trimmed pineapple as it will •b. sorb, adding the syrup • little at a time about every half hoar, until the eke is thoroughly saturated. Chop • few ilia.. of the pineapple, just roughly, and pot them round the Lase of the eke for • border, and pour over the whole some delicious thick cream. Spri.kle freely with blmoohed al- monds and pist•obot. out in very thio stripe and omndied cherries cat in quarter., and eery.. gxaetltede t■ Cooking It is °trelesness in measuring and pre- paring • dish that so often maces it • fail- ure. There is not ;much nse in putting • dish before your family that is lacking In any aseeutlai, for it le not p•tat.hl.. Not quite enough butter will make the dish .- tough, the pieoruet doughy, the whit* gravy pasty, and so on Too little . will make the °ski.. tastelew, the fruit poor in flavor and the oaks m failure. Be exact in s•asur- irg snd loess will orowu your .fforte. R.•' cipes are usually ,made by people who hove tested than carefully, and when anything is lseeened to quantity it throws the whole thing out nobles tbo-gaantlty IS lessened clear tbnugh. R..pest ?beer reett.gu. Don't ridleul. children. One of the most painful experiences in life 1s unmerited ridi- cule, and the tboaght of it will rankle in the adult ear Inc years to amis. What can you •ipeob ot the dear little unthinking ohildren who make mistakes that to them Seen mimes ! Ho* the poor tittle hearts sobs with isdigoation aad suffering. whioh they gannet express, and great big grown-up people heartlessly make fan of their little woes i It is the firm belief of the writer that whoa dr. Peter greets meg and women at the shining portals one ot the geestion. he asks u : "Haws you ever wit - steely hurt the feeling's of a little child!" Aad ea the meewK will espied the State of the beeatlt.dee he will) meth. oelled Savoy csbetge. which is found ariog the summer r an the maraet, will boil tender in 20 min Jess, wbertar the whit ° " drum - bead " requires ao hour. If used from one' own garden they moat be cut over night, as they wall not 000k ander if freshly out. W in mind boil • woe, firm head of cabbage 20 minutes. pour off the water, pu: on fresh bailing ws:er,and when tender drain and allow to become quite cold Now chop fine, add two well beater eggs. • tablespoonful of melted butter, three of milk, pepper and salt to wte,andmix well. rea tf Dm is usotia ed, il-ti.-ka'ttaf._ Pat in • buttered duh and bake brown i• • brisk oven. Serve hot in the game deb. named ■p a Tree. In the PhilliPlne Island, (a large taeelar group in the Pacific Ooean, loitering • north- ern section of the Eut.rn Archipelago), where the Negrrtotaanho are eaid to be • ✓ ennerot of a raoe of valent peemie.,00ntinae to live in the interior aro the most primitive fashion, and preserve their ancient customs unmolested; One of these customs is the slebnuoo of their weddings in trees. When two Negritos ere abut to get ear- ried, the whole tribe assemble, and thief: each other; the elders then bend the brioches until their heads have thus Dome an content and the marriage as legally e000mp- lubed and tbe oeremuny performed, to be immediately followed by a feast and • dans of • tsarina oheraoter. I • W tee new. It seethe .uob • pity that the dainty little organdieywith their rota gardens of flowers ars so frail, for they are by long odds the prettiest febris of the summer ; but per- spiration all but ruing them. There soems ta be no way to restore them atter the orator is gone. A dainty little woman who always kits as though she had just JOme from the had just oome from • bandbox always pats • lining of the finest white organdie *has in the waists of her flowered gowns. She make• it • wee bit tighter than the outside, aid it comes in oontact with the flesh and absorbs all moistures, so that it does not reach the daintier outside part ot the gown. 1 pother lady makes regular corset covers of the thin whirs that Domes to the neck. Sbe declares that the can wear an organdie all one season by doing this. Advice T. Mays. Hsrece J1an° gives • bit of advioo te boys, "ti'ou are made to be kind, boys - generous, magnanimous. if there is a boy in school wbo has a °lob foot, don't let him koow you ever saw it. If there is • lame boy with ragged clothes, don't talk about rags in his bearing. If there is a LAMS boy, assign him to to some part of the game that Wasn't require running. If be is hungry give him part of year dinner. If there is • dull help him ar pale Mit lasedig.-._1LLhars. is a bright on., be not not eovioae of his talents, for if one boy is proud of his talents, and another envious of them, there are two wrongs and no more talent than before. If • larger or stronger boy bis Injured you, and is sorry for it forgive him. All the soboot will slaw by 'their ooaotenanoee how muob better It is than to have • great foes. And remember who said. 'Love your enemies,' isles them which curia you.' To Make Cabbage ,Me. Cabbage, when properly milked, may be wanted SMOG, the dishes eery of dlgeatioe and of delimits flavor. Thee are two ways given below that go ohmage this vegetable that when followed it will net he reoogsised ssp�mm the same dish earelesly ooekd. For &eau eahhage piek oat • small head,r.meve the moor leaves, ont the remitted*, la thin • allver<" es foe oold .law. Make the fry• 4. pas ep.y bt. pet 1s the eahbag., mow water and add a large espial el 1e hefts soh la a terra tea. of Char or oera.taroh. mix emeeth attid milk t sgp.r Old salt N tufo, le Y ready to intro. The gross, ep. barriers that are impseg..bie to every et forme. And tile la. Ira as bop.. bat Me begtaalsg of • revolsHoa, know and t yratiosal, wklsk will bring we sea of physical lite to woolen, t fell N W.msa. Sons yreachr fa New Jersey reoeutly deplaned that he did not believe teem were ray. weenie sagas in heaven, His dealer•- tioa has aroused deep indignation in chival- rous manbood in many pion, includes: Ke.tuuky, of oourea Judge Tony ba. this to say- " No women angels is heaven 1 No wo- men to heaven, when eves the base earth is filled with them. Perish the thought ! The man wbo made this aaertion is • blind worm, a distributor of Dead Bee unit, • moral Klondike, who deserves to peas tde rat of hl. life on the Dry Tortugas, 900 miles from the nearest pattaooas. I tell you, if teare are no lovely women angels floating in misty robs around the golden any, all the poetry, , the beauty. the music are gone, lonely u • ball room whence the the girls have departed. 11 I had that Now Jersey pre•ober bare 1 would send him to jail for contempt," resell Tartlets. For • dozen tartlets take six tine ripe peaches, out them io baht, remove the stones, and stew the trait very gently until tender, i4 a cupful of water pleasantly sweetened with floe loaf-Pugar, than lift it out carefully and allow it to remain in a 000l pleat until required. Line out some small patty o Tartlet tans with rich pastry, 8l them with dry raw ries, and bake to • wall heated oven until sufficiently 000ked, than empty out the race and return the pastry oases to the oven -without the tin. -to dry slightly harder. When quite 000l, place to the centre of saoh tartlet • holt peach, hol- low side upermost ; fill this hollow with carefully whipped cream, piled as high as possible, surround with • delicate pink bor- der made with the white of an egg stiffly whipped, with a pinch of salt and • few drops of cochineal, and arrears tastefully on • fancy dish paper. The pink birder mentioned serves two puroea -it decidedly improves the anpearanoe of the tartleta,•nd at the same tame fills up and oovrt •ay opera there may be between the fruit and site party. Aprioota and very large ripe plume miry be utilized an the same manner. tlrlm l.! lralla, . J It is a wise plan to prepare • lame quan• tity of these during their season, as they keep good, if properly packed, for any length of tame, and are useful in ►soh • vs- tiety of nye. They form moot attractive nnpnlar drama fnt._.damezt... wkila Sac garoishang and ornamenting numerous sweet dishes they are unequalled. The prones of frosting, carried out as follows, is • very simple business. Pat the fruit, such as ape ascots, peaches, plums, oberns, oto., into • preeervrng•pan, with • small pies of alum, and sufficed cold water to rover them.; stew for • few minutes very gently, then take them out, remove the akin and dip the fruit separately into clarified butter, or finest salad oil. and roll in ooareely-rolled loaf sugar. Wbeo the fruit has been entirely ooated to this manner, arrange it oar baking tine, and plans it to a moderate oyes where it must remain till the sugar sparkles, but oars must be taken to ens that the fruit does not berme at all auslored. A lovely ef- fect can bs ebtamed by orating part of the trait with white e , part with green and part with pink. If required for a dessert dub, pile the different traits up when oold on a handsome glow duh and varnish taste• fully with fresh green leaves ; and if not wanted at Dos pack oarefolly on bozos with sir -tight lids. and pat a sheet of paper be- tween each layer. Store in a 000l plan and as. as relutred. turd -able Carts. Wedding Slags. Probab'y the most expensive wddiat•rings oa mooed were two which were need some little time ago at marriage oremo.ies in the United States. John Jaceb Astor, when he was married in 1891, used a f700 ring to espouse his bride; it bad two large dia- monds, three large rabies, andfa tree !oven' kaot to pearly. The other wag provided for the Corson -Leiter marriage; at was also hl,hly ornamented with d!•monds, rah+.., and pearls of the firt quality,and cost £320 The Verney., of Claydou,Bookinghamsbire, possesses • unique) wedding ring. whioh, while more costly than usual when first 'put• ohaead, owing to its sine, las now become priceless in value from the memories non - fleeted with it. Thig enormous gold ring, intended to be worn outside the thiok mili- tary gloves of the time of Charles L. was u sed by an aeostor of Sir Harry Verney •0 the fatal battle of Edgehill. After tM fight, nothing .f the gallant Verney said be found but a aloud hand, firmly Matched round the ltoyai standard, with the rine still remaining un the finger. With t aaosstrml relic the family of Verney to -Ism!, 1.e all their marrtagee,a lighter circlet b nug substituted atter time o.remony. Cyril., Per Waimea. Women, perhaps more than men, aro how efltted bytebeeling. Before the hioyolo was perfected, horesbeot riding was the may outdoor seeress of the kind salted to fem- Ialns needs, and good, gentle, sued riding brew were bard to dad, o.p.neive M buy, and still more etpeuMve to dare for, so that few women kept era. Good bio n wetly, al- though etly, seem to be within the means of almost every one ; at all events basdreda and thousands of women and girls wbo never weld have .weed a horse ,o gaily over and Meseta and reads on bevels. thea are quite equal in pies to any bat thetaesi steeds. Thesod offsets of All ehaege from . ed..tary indoor Lite to free anti ezhllarat- iag exerolse in tho opals air ie altoady coder. ..lie ble even to the frugal observer. Prej.dlra has already given way before the ta,duating presto.. of what at drat asemed the fad of the hear. bad w. nay already haeoaae vaos.te uld » mural eisabrwwsed frau, eau sallow aged learaidt_.watek pass ee at every tors of the stilet. Tia mote. tiara .1 Avid M•1N bee worms* asaaarv- What to do with Doe's treses at the oils shore is certainly m very serious prebieta, this especially 1ttb thus who have looks that after early J. persistently TM out all attempte to predate waves and tiny, curly locks by artidoal means, There i. • very large army ot women, indeed, who are perplexed by this wetgbty question. The appearance of the hair artifislly curled 1s quite distinct from the wit, graceful, alleg- ing teodnls bestowed by Mother Nature, 1. and.t ibelLW ani. ter Y art know aro a perpetual slates teen • ng . • summer months. Heat and damp alike af- toot thew waves and ourla Few women look well with plain, fiat locks brushed away from tbe face. They aro obliged to dross the hair about the face, not alw.y. to Zook beautiful, but simply to look present- able. But. if, after an hour or se, the ef- feot of • heated iron or orimpaag pin van- ishes under the influence of summer atmos- phere, and strag,img wisps of hair hang over the hoe in folorn, disoonraged-looking festoons, it le hardly to be wondered at that wore* of women provide theme.lywith attachable fringes -vole, early ban or •' poo..." ;het are now made to loo like nature'. own, and are warranted not to gat ,at of orimpor owl when oyolinq or riding, and are not effected by damp weather. hu- midity or sea air. Still, with matey the peejed°. remains arsin.t the wearing of artiticel treee,eses,more erpeoiaily when the hair is abundant. bat merely suffers nodal the summer disadvantage of otter limpness - For rheas are given two recipes for • harm- 1es fluid warranted to keep the hair In anti. Tike ons tabtespobnful of bruised quinoe- .eed, strained rain water nearly sir pint ; boil gently until reduced ode -half ; strain through thio muslin and add alcohol or brandy and ooloene, sob two tablespoon- fuls. Or • brilliant onrling fluid to made of three oanoee of gum •rabic, well powdered, dissolved In half • pint of rose water. A email quantity of ahem will render it strong- er Mouton the hair before cowling or put- t“y it on pins or kid roller.. W. C. T. U. DEPARTMENT. 71e Pollyglea Petition. One of the useerentiag !uteri in .menu - 1 e. with the World's W. ('. T. U. oeaves- Moa will be • d•wos.tntloa of the great polyglot petttioa, of which there are several miles. At the London **overawe, la '96 it was festooned •roared the Royal Albert Hall, and wee • great .bleot lesson and a * wading memorial of the deep protest of our hearts against the °urea at modern ruril- etattoo. The following la an outline of the petition sod bow at was undertaken. To the Ooverameate of the World : " Honored Rulers, Repreeenttives and limothen ;our ;our petitioner., althoogb b.loog- iog to th, physically weaker sex, are atroog of wart to love oar homes, our native land, and the world's family of natlooa. We know that clear brains and pare heats teak* honest lives and happy homes, and that by these Lb. nauoos pruspr, and the time to brought Waterer when the world shall be at pesos. "it. know that iudulgeos in aloohol and opium and is other vioes whioh disgrace our social hie, makes misery for all the world, mid moat of all for is and our ohild- ran. W. know that stimulant. and opiates are sold under legal, guarantee., which make the govrumenis partnere in the troth°, by aooepting are • portion of tae probe, and we know with shame that they are often forced by treaty upon poo - lotions either ignorant or unwtlltog. We know that the law ought d• much now left undone to raise the moral tone of society and sender vas difficult. " We have no power to prevent these great imqurtaes, beneath whioh the whole world groans, but you have power to re- deem the honor of the n•taon from so tode- fesible complicity. pit y e W , therefore, Dom. to you -wit h the united vols* ot repreeenta- tie. women of sooty land beeeeobmog you to raise the standard of the 1.w to that of Christian morale, to strip away the safe- guards and emotions ot the State from the drink traffic and the opium trade, and to protect our homes ty the total prohibition of these cones of civilization throughout all the territory over whioh your government ez tend*. " This petition originated with Mies Wil- lard to 1885, under the convioti•a t ax Mrs -Mary Cement Leavitt avast As able Wire. to the women of tb• ooaatrlee visited some. thing to do at once, some work in which all other whit. ribbon women were engaged, to serve as • nucleus about whioh to rally and hold the women saiiste(' by her in this work for the uplifting of humanity. Through the .Hort of Mrs. Leavitt and other W. Iii bon missionaries and the earnest s- operatiow of dsnomivational missionaries, the petition has ueen oiroulated in fifty nations and has relived seven and • half million sweat ores in almost „ every tongse that has served the confusion of BabeL" These Molted. wegnes'• names, eadoreemente of men and official attestatteos ot aeisties. It was first pahlscly preaeatd in Wash- ingg.oa, D.C., February 16th, 1895 On the afternoon of February 19th following, the general editors of the World's and National W.C.T.U., with the President of the Thieriot of Columbia W.C.T.U., were grant- ed an totervlew by President Cleveland., to whom an attested spy was presented by Mies W;llard. In Jane, 1895, the petition formed • part of the decoration* of the World's convention in London, England, and Her Majesty Queen Vtotorie, having signified her willingness to receive the p.• titian from her subject.. in the fall of 1896, • photographic oopy of the petition with the signatures of nearly halt • authors of her subjects was presented her, bound magnifo- eotlly in two great volumes, It is the ex• pootation to present the petition to the re- presentatives of every other civilized won - try. not in a legal or teub°ieal awls, bat as • wrest popular tstimonW - _ O aria of the lions°. I SHALT NOT PASS AGAIN THIS WAY." The bread that bringetb strength I wast to wave, The water pore that hid. the thirsty live ; i want to help the tainting day by day- " I'm sure I shall not paw again this way.' I want to give the oil of joy for tears, f ittita- omtgntl[ graltdiac fears ; Beauty for ash.. may I give alway- ' I'm tore I shall wit pass again this way." I want to give good measure, running e'er, And tato angry hearts I want to pour The answer soft that twrneth wrath away- " I'm sore I shall not pass again this way." I want to give, e'en as the Master gave, Help to the erring and I want IAD hays Forgiveness in my heart from day to•a•y- " I'm ears I shall not pass again this way." I want to give to others hope and taitb ; I want to do all that the Master snub. I want to live upright from day to day- " I'm sure I shall not pees •game the way." -.9e1.ot.d. A BABY I KNOW. Owl's angel was bidden to make bar fair, Mo he wove the ennshine into lar batt ; He took of the mid noon's cloudless skies, And fashioned therefrom her two Has um. H. wombed her white with the nobler enema Aad painted bar °beaks with the dawm'i faint rose He dimpled bee tray Mods mad teat i He made her sunny, sod sett mad sweet ; He moulded her roved white limbo with art He got her from heard. • pan .bijd-heart. Them be kissed her Ilpe, and her brow and *yes. And bromeitt her, sleeping. from paradi.e. Snob virtue hee in thoo.e kisses thtee, Thu, bow se weary at heart aro war The look aad smile ea our baby's tag* linage rest and wenfert end endless grace Ladles' Hem* Je.vsal. Of !sane IN tenWa a %Wage Visser-W.Q the belies saes iettlral so stew a ear way that i had es premiss to gage Media/ lit Ifs big dgara meat stores. Really t Ani 6W .beat rowel*? " Ob, wgfl, rete w my wife is tin aaly ate is the holly wbo IMO say wadbilem. w I .eeld.'1 pre. ie lar bar. "S MRS. J. OLIVER'S CASE. Bright's Uiseue bad developed as the re- sult of ber tea Tran' suffering from Kid- ney Disease--1)edd'. Kidney Pills again saves a victim from the nave. Brookville, Aug. 23 - Anyone wbo sa- s.rtaed • 1pw years ago that Bright's Draw.e was merahle of a ogre would have hoes plat down as fie only for • lunatic asylum. But it has been ooadasively proved that Dodd'o Kidney Pills are • oars for this disease, so long looted .pow as fatal. Mrs. .1. Oliver. of Phillmpeville, near ben, is one of the liv- ing witnesses to this fact. She suffered from diseased kidneys for tan yeara, and ht's Disease had developed when she beard of sad need Dodd's Kidney P111e, whioh have restored her to periost wealth. Lived Ina slave. Mode Oramer, the 15-year•old gull wbo disappeared from her home in New York a smooth ago, and for whom • galeral abase Was mat out, was raptured aro (sntesl park by the police. Abe had vlopt in • rave h the park for several week.. Salts left bar home la a most mysterious manner. Ia o ome manner fineie'e parents got word that she bad been use in Central park, and they railed ow Capt. Collies, of the a,Mwal. wed told Mm what they bad learned. Mrs. Orem* gave the eaptain • picture of tb mime* gUl, sad as the men were stating ter their poets last sl•bt the Mature was shows to them, and they were la.tgasI.M N keep • .harp lookout for the girl. Dolma- ite. MoO. and &dish were espe.WPy la - attested to heat fog the .N .l.R gM. The d•te.trvea raterod the park at Vity- nlath rarest and Revesth atsa.. yd .t`► ed ee what Y karma as "Uveglie teak." ovseleektog the grpasi. sb..w tea hsps play ball. TM deteett art measly saw m girt AM three* Iii Om aid hide ltaltstd • bes.b. They Rave abs.* yd1111Wft rap- turedMrd .Mlaa at r.bs-T" __Ml4M.a of a.Y`w:JYt,FIi-`a.xiV:fm�s.�e firNoy placed beg d.b.xpaised thee she Icd n her home la 16. Dave as the eogtb sad of the old e eer- .otr, near tbe eon/ease ouster of the large lake. Is 1. 40 fru deep, 15 feet wide, and 000siderably higher thew a tall man. The wtra000 le as large as • doorway, sad alto- gether it' 1s quite an attract!,. epee. The gyri was sent to, the rooms of the Gerry sooiely, and as effort will be made eo have her return to her parental' home. The Priam of Wales Yu for some year bad hie ooape lit with eleetrto•1 lamps, and one of hs Sandringham equipages 1. similar- ly provided- Hie Ruyl nighties is much annoyed when • mishap to the woamulaiors odours sed obliges him to irator& to the ord- inary system of lighting. Lord Crewe, who recently died, and whose titular name was borrowed by the Londo. and North Western Railway Com- pany for rhe:r greet l000motive works, was a very shy rod reserved mag. Although a ooa.tanl tnunenter of ohanty dinners, be never spoke, but invariably went to sleep es soon as the speeches bad bosun. Jean Leon Genome, who pronounced • eulogy over the body of the late M. Gounod ls one of the three hareem punters and sculptors elected honorary Royal Academ- ies The others are M. Guillaume and Herr Kwoea. M, Chrome P heat known in Eng- land by his Sundaes of 11.strn life (the re• cult of early travel) and his animal pictures. He is now is hia sevenuetb year. Min Mary Dickies, • gr•ad-daughter of the great novelist, has already published two promising novels, "Cres Carrante" and "A Mere Cypher." She is several years short of thirty, and lives at Regent's Park with her mother and father, wbo, being the eldest sea. bears the Christian name of the author of "Pickwick." Part of Miss Dick• ens' life was spent at Ged's Hill. but her re- oolleotions of her graadlather are of the 'Wideness. A SCHEDULE OF INFANT'S DIETS - For successfully preparing the food ei an infant from birth upward, the following schedule -which, by the way, must only,bo taken as an average -may ern • medal purpose: - Diet during the first week :-L'reem, two teaspoonfuls; whey, three teaspoonfuls; milk sugar, oo. quarter of • teaspoon ; water, (hot), throe te•epooalala For each porttee;, to to gives ewer f awn boar., Mat 5 [1m. W' 11 p.m. ; and in acme cases, ons or twice at night ; amounting to twelve fleid•ounees of food per diem. Diet from the seoond to the sixth week: - Cream, two teasp000luu ; milk, one table. spoos ful ; milk -.agar, one quarter teaspoon- ful ; water, two t•bleel,ouofate. For owa poftf,bTlirfi 'err,.. every two boars Trow 5 a.m. to 11 p. m ; amounting to 'evictor' fluid•ounoes of food per diem. Diet from the sixth week to the end of the ss000d moral :-(;team, one tabldspoo.- fal ; milk, two -and -a -half tablespoonfuls ; milk -sugar, half a leaspo•lal; water, two - *ad -a -half tablespoonfuls. For rash pot- ties ; to he given every two bo.rf:..•mouat- ing to thirty fiaid-ouno.t par dime Diet from the beginning of the third mouth to the sixth month :-Cream, one tablespoonful ; mtlk, five tablep000fnu ; milk -sugar, one teaspoonful ; water, two tablespoonfuls. For *sob prtios ; to be given avery two -and a -half hours ; amount - tag to thirty-two fluid-oanoes per diem. Uut daring the sixth month; six meals daily from 6or7a.m. to9r10p.m. Morn- ing and mitddsy bottle, each :-Cream, owe tablsepoosful ; milk, nine t•bleepoonlne ; Mellfn's Food, ode teaspoonful • hot water, two tablespoonfuls. Dissolve the Mellin's Food in the bot water and add, while stir- ring, .to the prevloualy mined milk and ream. Other bottles, each :-Cream, one table- spoonful ; milk, Bind tablespoonful. ; milk• sugar, one teaspoonful ; water, two t•ble- v0000nfals. Tots gives an equivalent of tbirty•six fluid-ou•rte■ of food to • day. In the seventh month the Mellin'a Food may be increased to two teaspoonfuls, and Riven three times daily Diet for the tooth and eleventh months: - First meal, 7 a.m: Cream. onetablespoon- Ful; milk, seventeen tablespoonfuls; Mellin'e Food, one tablespoonful; (or flour -hell or barley jolly) two te•epooafuls; water (used only with Milian's Food), two t•hlesp000- foe. Second meal, 10:30 a. m: A breaktast- oopful of warm .milk (eight fluid -ounces). Tided- mere , .-2- poet -W u -yetk-,f owwt p•' lightly boiled. with stale bread-orambs. Fourth meal, 6 p.m.: same ea first. Fafth, meal, 10 p.m.: same as wooed. On alternate days, the third meal may oo.slsi of • teacapfnl (six fluid -minus) of beat tea, sntaining • few stale bread- oruutb.. BOOKS AND PERIODICALS. How • good Illustrated paper lend. • plgganoy to the sweets of the day ! for its pietares not only help the aadentandlng, but often, by the mistrusts they afford, stim- nl•te the imagination. One r. Toad to this thought Ey two most Interesting pages is HAartta's Wsagt.T for August 28th. One metal= an szcelleae portrait of Spai.'e,late premier, Antonio Canova. del Castillo, with the story of • splendidly oour•geow Span- ish life; the other • ..rise of illaatratlose showing the life of President Faure at the Sipes. What • oowtrast 1 The Sp•aiard, prondes• of he oomtryman, s eat and . of letters, toned into the Id of ac- tion as leader of the ve forme ; whip in one hand, • sop in the other ; tom - pelting. winning, oejollag, threatening ; dinning to an ideal sad flghtiag facto, snd 1a the darkest hoar of he country streak, dowel ignobly. The Fnoobmaa, • boar - roots of the bourgeois ; proud, too, but of the present; holding the affeotiow of all Masses of his eoantrym.n by the complete Bes with whioh he reflects thole own ideals in his offloial and private lied, end shortly si to set forth ea a Deactor In • pagwt that is to web. the Rumba Empire and French R.pvblie in perpetual amity. How typleal thra two mea neat of their reggae - tore oosatrles and the penile4 faiths by wbmk owe i. Heise and Murales' I. Mak So- to death 1 Desperados wed the isevitebre but vet-te•b.d,.a ad -d gestfs an era aid. ef bib Pyrra...1 es the ether. a nem. Portable proems am.sraa.., and drams of • Speedy mtllessl(sa let yi elabsee at Rgsi I Amid tee estb.s ase tare I. me se .sg !ism el eialseve dgaikMttoe b this e we 'Elbows. Penmen. altar a11, ah. Fraaeb de well M •tiy tbemssles. (sr Issy themselves allied) M Ara aseerpbws Ilaps- lera el the Marti►, taatrlag with idlest toet- tell who the .sews of • saselaat The mei G.fbny i.e reads the papaw " By •rd Rall Area. 816•,4•,^ *blob aro b Raewee. Weekly. the anew este rrs what w111 be the esteems of R... e:p•sdw »wards the Past Sr talitry Yaws game thee tibio as biro es Met et tbe Waited Meae.a PM $t Peeler burg is ber ettjeatly point .R tM Platt. la, as sw Itis Swims. far as tragi New Tech lac soli. is* She greasar pa& al adoraft mho � y t sad oh fru ebb* meth' ofw e pp.. lm. le se .t and "r NMN Wks aeon the 1 I . tel..+ •-'r ••: .. ver b.>fe�„tet.>.s: HAIRY TO O31tD]ppR LADACFV, RT ALL OR•fR*s -Ma Me. e ^ d .� Why Use Chlckea. 01011, A professor at Doe of oar universities M the subjeot of • quer •noedote. Last winter be wart maned and went to hoaee.keepto. °ataide of to• n. The spring he thought he would add a few bees to kis stook ; he al. reedy had • dog. He eat • couple of hese, and In rood tame bad two largo broad, of ohiokees. He was very proud of them, bat In • week or so the fowls began to die. Tat professor celled in • neighbor to look at the ohloken. and offer advice. They were ore. tainly • dilapidated lot of chickens that time n eighbor viewed. They were thin, and ap- parently without ambition. •' Wb•t do you teed them ! " &eked the neighbor, after • brief y. " Feed them! " responded time professor, as though he didn't hear right. Wit‘, I don't feed them anything. I thought tis old hens had enough milk for them." COLLECT 12 IJ4H7 •SoAp ptr AMO CaUIgTR ht T1R BTEARNs' BICYCLES A" 7cIOLD WATCkES ,�--." GIVEN AWAY EVERY MONTH Seea for 4nlm, ar LEVER BROS.(Limited) Toronts For TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS DUNN'S BAKINC POWDER THECOOI�SBESFFRIEND 4110[Rt��[ IM CANl10�. 1897... . Announcement. New Goods and Best Valves in the Tailoring line at the old -established and reliable Went-st Emporium. Satisfac- tion guaranteed in Quality Style and Price. HUGH DUNLOP QII��tI��� ��/ GODERJOH YT ROi.L RR AOS. A. S. CHRYSTAL, Baceseor Ohrgmtaf • Mose monateotnrer of all kind. at BOIL E RB. Smoke Stacks, Salt Yana, Sheet Iron Works, etc., etc., And Dealer la - Engines, Maehinery Caattap, to. All eines of Pipes and Pipe Fittings, Steam and Water Genera, Globe Valves, Check Valves, Inadraton, Ejectors and 1a. jeotrs Oosetaatly on Hood art Low.. A .peoial line of Steel Watr and Hog Trough. for use of farmers and others. Repairing promptly attended to. A. 3. CEZT TAL. emir P. 0 Box f f. Yedsrteh. Cartage & Fuel Co. are prepared to handle Bag- gage Freight and Household Ef- fects with Dispatch at reasonable rates, Dealers in'all grades of HARD CO SOFT Ai. and Smithing Coal 'Woo& ani Xizang cnt to snit customers and deli• erect with promptness. Order iso licited. Tellephanis AY O. al F. Co. J.8. Pi..rn, D. 0 SIFBACIIIAfr. kiesrtger, Secretary