The Exeter Times, 1890-3-13, Page 7a
Dishes You Will Like,
SHEEP'S HEAD. SOUP. —Wash a sheep's
head thoroughly in cold water, then rinse
well in lukewarm water and' salt, then put
it with the tongue to boil, with water
enough to cover it ; let it boil up once or
twice and sk•itu it thoroughly ; acid half a
tablespoonful of salt, twosmall or one large
onion, one carrot and one turnip cut in
pieces ; cool; slowly for about two hours,
then remove the meat, strain the soup and
rub the vegetables: through a colander ; add
them to the liquor with pepper, a little sago
and a heaping tablespoonful of corn starch
dissolved in a little milk; let it boil up once
after the thickening is added, stirring to
prevent scorching, and it is ready to serve.
Soup balls are quite anaddition to this soup.
but they should be very smell.
PIGEON" Rory, ---Put into the body of each
pigeon to be served a teaspoonful of butter,
a pinch of sage and salt ; truss thein and
place a piece of white paper over the breast
of each, and tie a slice of bacon over that;
place in a dripping pan and roast 25 Minutes,
basting with butter and vinegar. Serve
with the gravy pieces of toast moistened
with cream, and a little grope jelly on each
piece,
Rnzzl;D Fisc;. --Tike some fillets of any
white fish, wash in salt and water, wipe thele
carefully tt, place on a boar(] or any fist
surface ate sprinkle each one with salt,
pepper, sae , minced parsley and cracked
crumbs, and the last thing add small pieces
of butter ; roll the fillets up and secure thein
with a string or skewer ; lay them on very
thin slices of pont in a baking pan, add half
a cupful of water, cover the fish with a but-
tered piper and bake half or tht'ee•quartcrs
of an hour ; prepare some toast, butter it
well, and place each roll on a slice ; sprinkle
with lemon. juice and dried parsley, and serve
with drawn butter.
Flilzza,t•.n POTATOES. -..-Cut cold boiled
aotatoes into very small pieces, and to each
cupful of potatoes allow half a cupful of
cream or vele milk, one teaspoonful of butter,
a little salt, two teaspoonfuls of chopped
celery, la little pepper t acid the seasoning to
theppo�tatoes, and put thein into a deep Lak-
ing (fish, end pour the milk and butter over ,
them, allowing enough to nearly cover ;
place in quick oven, and brown delicately. ,
Sauce.—One-half cupful of butter, one s
caupful of powdered sugar, four tablespoon-'
fins of thick cream, four tablespoonfuls of
wine; beat the butter to a cream, add sugar :
gradually, then the wine and cream gradual-
ly ; place the howl in which the sem:ale pre- .
leered in a basin of bailing water, stir until.
it ie smooth, then it is ready. to serve ; van- j
Ma. Cali he substituted in place of wine for "
Havering, but three additional tablesp ion-
ftuls of milk will then be required.
over 20 or 25 years in captivity. The
nightingale lives but 10 years in captivity
end the blackbird 15. Canary birds reach
'au age of from 12 to 15 years in the cage,
but those flying at liberty in their native is -
ands reach a much more advanced age.
Womanliness.
There is something more than hard work
that is expected of a woman. A man of any
refinement desires his home to be breathed
upon by a womanly spirit, Now I know
soma real flags and hari:lans that can sweep
a floor, seta table and mike a bed, so you
will say " To be sure a woman has been
here e' and then I know others, women of
considerable ability and reputation, who
never can make a table loot attractive, or
put a room in order, or do not ettre Iluclt
themselves how things are. It is not the
great things about a louse that give rest,
and peace, and comfort, but the tone of
affairs. .A dirty salt cellar, and soiled nap-
kins, and badly arranged platters and spoons
spoil a (limier. But seine women do not see
anything of this sort, while some men ziot
only see it but feel it. A table should be
white, and sweet, and every article on it
neat and tastily arranged ; if not, you de-
grade eating to feeding, and you may quite
as well dispense with a table altogether and
use r. trough.
The same k true of all the hoasekeepU1 .
A refined woman's presence is felt in the
delicacy, order and daintiness of all the ar-
rangements. Above all, the sleeping rooms
are sweet, orderly and restful- heaven;
help a men who has to roll iut(1 fled as a
horse lies down in shavings, and who gets
up only to find disorderly drawers and disor-
derly closets dill lliaorder everywhere. To
be sure, a nem is himself bound to 110 just as
orderl • as a women. I hold that to be a feet
as old es the Ten (.'nunnandinents, that a
• man has no right to be a sloven about the
]louse, clad 11e 1114 no right to put things
anywhere anti everywhere and expect the
woolen of the household to piek 11p after
him, Boys should he brought uta to habits'
of order, Rua men should not fail to do their
share in teething the youngsters. Where it
is possible ea011 child should have a room ley
himself for sleeping, and should he held to a
strict account for the cleanliness; and orderly
appearance of that room. If brought up in,
tins way he will learn not only to like refined
ways indoors but hem), endure nothing else.
But of all things do not assign a room to
'Poli unless you attend strictly to this mit-
ter of enforeilig system, The ronin sllauld
be ventilated and swept by the bay. He
should lay Ids clothes 1lnorder when he takes
them off at night, and he should learn to
keep his drawers in goad form, Even the
disposition of the furniture should be left to
him ; Mull so let him learn household art.
It will cultivate his sense of things, Out of
door; good housekeeping goes by wav of ex-
ample and creatc3 e1eatn yards, clean barns
and stables, and neatly ordered gardens.
You may keep to yourselves the c1..cession
as t+1 twhothor w0081n A 1134)lz in lr,;.a ltzl;ic;11
than Ulan's I hold it should be more capable
(1f appreciating order, ;esthetic./, notices
and general adornment. It has fallen to
her let for ages to try to please by personal
t
beauty, c by1
ben andsuch su h l(1 ar
,a It art of
y
1
P }
apparel as will ple,'tse 11;e mese ullrle eye. e. And
ever since our FSOJ ban lived l n houses, this
four or five thousands years wren= has
been denominated the housekeeper, ma n1a11
the house -holder or house -baht llmsh51111).
He protects and lie keeps things in the eye
of the law; but she keeps things in the eye
of the family. She ought by this time, if a
normal character, to have the quickest sense
of disorder, the finest sense of what should be,
an eye for erraugement to produce unity and
symmetry. This inherited instinct is wom-
anliness, the one quality that turns a more
house into a home. Housekeeping of the
right sort is adding to things an invisible
something, an atmosphere, a flue art, a spirit
which I call womanliness.
I should like to take you to a very cheap,
small cottage that I know of. It is occupied
1lytw'o sisters. The floors are scoured till
they glisten ; the furniture is without a
saratch,and a fly would think twice before he
ventured his nose inside a (door. They are
not prion old maids, but are widows ; and
my opinion is they scrubbed and scoured
their husbands off the earth. As a model of
neatness the little ]muse is exact. The
women are not scolds or sour; they are
simply jolly scrubs. '.1'lle atmosphere is not
woman, but soap. I have hired girls of this
sort. They had an instinct of neatness, and
enjoyed nothing so much as being on their
knees with a scrubbing brush ; but they be-
came nuisauecs—like John's m en, who runs
a lawn -mower over the yard every morning
at 5 o'clock. Eternal cleaning and scouring
is the nuisance of many households. Wom-
anliness is the art of keeping things clean
without a continual racket. But what I
think men detest above all things is letting•
the house go as it will for three days anti
then for three days'olean with all upset.
Some women have their upset weeks, and
then their cleaning day or days. The house
takes care of itself for a while,and then
r
there is a horribleuttin to rights. That
is like letting your clock run flown, and
every fourth day wind it up and strike it all
the way around from 1 to 11. That clock
regulates nothing. 'It is always being regu-
lated.
What I plead for is a smooth -moving, well
orderea home, where the spirit of rest and
work so admirably blend that the friction is
at a minimum. This needs a combination
of moral and physical tact. It is full half
Morals, beoause no household ever did afford
peace and comfort where" selfishness 'ruled.
There most a positive ingrained conviction
in all the members of the family that each
one is to work for the pleasure of the rest,
and so find his own pleasure. The mother
Who will iiot'imdertake to rule and regulate
her household from any standpoint but her
own,' may not be positively ,selfish, yet she
is very negatively selfish. She would not
strike one of her. children for the world, but least enlightened of nations,it has been
will 'allow them to so educate themselves difficultto drive the fachome. The
that they will strike each other. But it dullest man in the Fatherland understands,
needs also the full forte of womanly tact ; however, what cashiering an officer means
a feminine presence, forceful but gentle, and and it may safely be concluded that the
gentleizing the whole home domain.
The ideal home is womanly ; the ideal punish pen the which Emperor proposes to
the
woman is homely. I am not so angry* at any infidel upon tine challenger will have tLe
philologgical history. asrthat which has
effect, of stamping out the duelists in the
changed 'the homely_ woman into the un -
beautiful. There is no other association' of
the ;word hone teat is not plearant. The
really beautifulwomanis homely, andwifely,
and motherly.. The ceeppiracy. of fashion
that pronounces the sweet. holnpkeeper less
CHICKEN SALAD.—Take one plump
Chicken ; when done stand it away until
perfectly cold ; then remove all the skill and
tit, remove the ducat from the bones in Large
pieces, cut it into g 1od•size square pieces ;
add to tide the sante quantity of celery cut
in pieces ; remove the yolks from three hard
Moiled eggs and add to thein the yolks of
two raw eggs and half a cupful of cream ;
lib all to a paste; then add three table•
mnnfuls of oliva oil, one teaspoonful of
cited butter, a saltspoonful of salt, le
blespoonfuls of vinegar and a very little
venue ; mix a little salt with the chieken
I celery, pour over the dressing, garnirtlz
;It thin slices of beet and it hi ready to
°llamas Peneret.—Ono-half pound of
'pins, and half -pound of currants, one pound
flet, one pound of bread or erackererlunbs,
:-half poled of brown sugar, eight eggs,
a tablespoonful of flour, ;one-quarter of a
and of eitroft one wineglass of brandy,
drops of esse of almonds, one half a
lutipeg grated, a teaspoonful eah of cloves
and name. Stone and chop the raisins, chop
the suet very fine, cut the citron into thin
Aces; mix all these ingredients wolltogeth-
er, add the sugar, beat the eggs to a froth,
and to them add the flavoring ; add those to
the dry ingredients a11(1 mix well ; add the
brandy last; stege Dight hours in a but'erad
mould.
4 •
TheiTalue of Sunshine.
Turning over an old agricultural per
a while ago, I saw an article headed. "'LiteO
Daily Value of Sunshine." Looking to see
what might bo the precise use or meaning of
.the expression, it appeared that the writer
had exercised his ingenuity in calculating the
average value of each bright sunshiny day
in ripening the crops of the United St.tel
and having estimated the aggregate worth
of certain crops to be $500,000,000 annually,
11e says : "The bright sunshine of the warm-
est months must have a daily value of some-
thing like four millions of dollars,"
'Whether this be so, or not, the statement
suggests another inquiry, viz : If such be the
value of sunshine in the fields, what is its
daily value in the family, in the school, in
society, in' business? The valve, not of
, physical sunshine to the eye,but of the sun-
shine of the heart, beamingforth
habitually
in the looks and conduct, the sunshine of
kind words, and kind feelings, of mutual
sympathy, and love, and help, from day to
day, in little things, in ,great,—who can es-
timate the value, the daily and hourly value
of sunshine like this ?
Sunshine in the 'family ! Who can calcu-
ateits value ? No storm of sharp, or hasty,
or unkind words ; no blustering of rough,
jarring,, and selfish feelings ; no cloudiness
of cold; unfeeling and repulsive' want of
sympathy .; no disrespect 'or disobedience
from children, and no partiality, irritation,
or severity, from parents ; bat all cheerful,
kind, thoughtful of each other, and mutu-
ally helpful ; every toil cheered; every trial
soothed, and every day brightened by a
considerate, 'genial, and loving spirit. As
sunshine from the heavens to the earth, but
ofnrfinitely greater value, is sunshine in the
family. .
And so with sunshine in the school, where
the teacher is interested in the pupils, and
the pupils are kind to each other ;with sun-
shine in the 'counting -house, and the office,
where a 'cheerful and friendly spirit encour-
ages every ole a cl assistant; with sunshine
in social life, the relationships of ac-
quaintance,'or�fien'dship, or mutual clepen-
deuce,. sunshine between husband, and wife,
parent and child, brother and sister, master
and servant, friend and friend. Who can
reticulate its value for the'llappinoss of,t11,..
The swan is the longest -3i 7ed bird,' and it
is asserted :that it has reached the age of
100 years. ' Knauer, in his work entitled
Natu
4'rlhistorike, states that he has seen a
Loos evity of Dir
The
as,
'felonthat,wins 10
2 yoars old. The following
examples, are cited as to the longevity of the
eagle amd vulture : A sea, eagle captured in
-.1715, and already several years of ago, died
104 years afterwards, in 1819 ; a white
headed, vulture, captured in 1706, died in
1826 in one of the aviaries of Sehoenbrunn
Castle, near Vienna, where it had passed
118 years in captivity. Paroquets and rav
over 100years. The life are mesal su araoia , ut cont ou oi-
ofns reach an age ofwhat Y to you. Pick out the girl The Directory styles, with some coni a
see and marsh birds sometimes equals .get I hintg,
• ral human generations. Like in whose resence life seems real and tions and accessories; will be as popular this
that of- several g P spring -as the have been for the last two
`many other birdly, magpies live to be veru valuable.,, If her: womanliness is apparent Y
old in a state of freedom, but do not reach before marriage it will be after. !seasons.
Apples as 1Iedioine.
Chemically, the apple is composed of vege-
table fibre, albumen, sugar, gum, chloro-
phyll, malic acid, gellie acid, lime and much
water. Furthermore, the German analysts,'
say that the apple contains a larger percent-
age of phosphorus than any other fruit or
vegetable. This phosphorus is admirably
adapted for renewing the essential nervous
matter, lethticizl, of the brain and spinal.
cord. It is, perhaps, for the same reason,
rudely understood, that old Scandinavian
tradition's represent the apple as the food of
the gods, who, when they felt thenlselees
to be growing feeble and infirm, resorted to
this fruit for renewing their powers of
hind and body. Also the acids of the apple
are of signal use for men of sedentary habits,
whose livers are sluggish in action ; these
acids serving to eliminate from the body
noxious matters which, if retained, would
make thobrain heavy and dull. or bring about
jaundiee,skin eruptions and otherallied trou-
bles. Some such an experience must have
led to our custom of taking apple sauce with
roast pork, rich goose, and like dishes.
Tho make acid of ripe apples, either raw
or cooked, will neutralize any excess of
ehalky matter engendered by eating too much
meat. It is also the fact that such fresh 7; 4.177913
fruits as the apple, the pear and the plunn,
when m 1
nen taken ripe and without sugar, ilinlinisk
:acidity in the stonz telt rather than provoke e
it, Their vegetable salts and juices are x.,
ee,aP1,
converted into alkaline carbonates, which '- n
tend to counteract eeklity. A good ripe
raw apple is one of the easiest of vegetable
substances for the stomach to deal with, the
JOTT r LABATT'
Indian Pole 4 eandXXXBrolon Stout
Highest awar:is ana nfedals. for Purity and Excel
lenee at Centennial Exhibition, Phil adelphia,
1876; Canada,1876; Australia, 1877; and
Paris, France, 1878.
TESTIMONIALS SELECTS»;
Prof. If R Croft. Public 1,nalvst, Toronto, says :--"Bind it
to be perfectly round C 414.0 8t1 4.1110 impurities or aclulter-
atio15,etc/ eau stcouglyrecoznuz,edit as perfectly pure end
a very superior shalt liquor."
Soho 13 Ectwaras, Professor of O1otnistry, i Iontrea1, ssys:
"'1 hod them to be remarizably $ouni ales. brewed froze
perry molt and bops,
Rev. P. J. k:d. Pat e,Professor of Chemistry Laval Un -ver
city, Quebec, sags: --"I i r:ve analyzed the Ionian Yalo1a,10
manufactured 11 •rJohrl Labatt, London. Ontario, and have
found it alightale, containing but little ;009$91, 01a heli-
Clous flavor, olid of a very agreeable taste and sunerlor
quality, and compares with the best imported ales. I h the
.1 also analyzed the Porter XXX Stout. of the same brewery,
�: i which is of excellent finality- its flavor is very agreeable ;
•
.• . it is a tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it is a
little richer in alcohol, and oaa be compared adyautsee-
ouslywith any imported artioie.
ASK I:QW. GROCER FOR IT,
whole process of its digestion beinea yam -
picked in eighty-five minutes. t;erart1found
that the "pule of roasted reeples mixed ill
wine -quart of faire water, and labored to-
gether until it comes to 1ie as apples olid ale
—which we call l.'enzheswool--' never faileth
in certain (liselases of the rains, which any -
self hath of often proved, and gained thereby
130t11 0F1 canes and credit." ''The paring of
ten apple, cut somewhat thiel:, and the inside
whereof is laid to hot, burning, or running
cit night,
ht when the 1;i1't�r• goes ea bell;
ad is tieor livuud to the tatsame, doth
eyes
help the trouble very speedily, and contrary
to expectation—an excellent secret."
A poultice made of rotten apples is of very
common use in Lincolnshire for the cure of
weak or rheumatic eyes. Likewise, in the
Hotel des Iuvalides, at Paris, an apple
poultice is used commonly for inflamed eyes,
the apple being roasted and its pulp applied
over the eyes without any interventing sub-
stance, Long ago it was said apples do
easily and speedily pass through the Belly ;
therefore they do mollify the body; and, for
the same reason, a modern mexim teaches
that• 10 cat an apple going to bell, The 1
doctor then will bag his bread.
The nueen's Autograph,
The Queen's signature to state documents
is still a model of firmness and legibility, no
sign of her 11ajesty's advanced age being
discernible in the boldly written "Victoria
11, " which she attaches to such papers as
have to bear the royal autograph, says the
London .Figaro. There aro veteran states-
men living who will ll ree be1 that the
question of tI1e signing of state documents by
the 1savoreign beaalno one of considerable
imputative in the laat months of George IV's.
reign.
During this period His Majesty was in
such a debilitated state that the writing of
numerous autographs was practically im-
possible for him, and under these eirelun-
stanees,a short bill was hurriedly passed
through Parliament authorizing the Sing to
affix a fac-simile of his autograph by neons
of an inked -stamp. It was also provided,
however, in the bill that George should,
before stumping each dotiumerit, give his
verbal assent to it in a specified form. The
Duke of Wellington was in office at the
time, and it was often his duty to lay cor-
tain documents before the King for his
approval.
One day the '.Iron Duke," noticing that
lois Majesty was stamping the papers before
himry t ri l
out repeating the prescribed verbal
forniuhary, ventured to enter a respectful
but firm protest. The King, much irritat-
ed, exclaimed, "D—n it, what can it
signify?" "Only this, sir," replied the Duke;
"that the law requires it." George IV. said
no more, but at once began to repeat the
requisite formulary as he stamped each of
the remaining documents.
A Cihuroh of Righteousness.
In the dark ages the clergy could do what
they liked; and the laitywould do what they
were bid. But times have changed. Now
with the progress of education, now when
the results of science and literary research
are brought within the reach of the masses,
a Church has no chance of living unless it
appeals to common sense, to the reason, to
the moral instincts of mankind. And just
in proportion as it makes this appeal will it
be strong and flourish and grow. Right-
eousness is essential—of all things most
essential—tothe
welfare of men. They can
get on well enough without any particular
creed, they can get on well enough without
special ritual ; but without righteousness
they perish ! The Church, therefore, which
insists most upon righteousness and less
upon other things is the best Church. The
Church which insists solely upon righteous-
ness is the only Church that will not pass
away.
Dueling in Germany.
The ElnperorotUermanyhashis faults, but
his resolution to put down the practice of
dueling merits the warmest praise. Of
course there is really no difference between
the duelist and the murderer, except that
the former more frequently kills in cold
blood. But it has taken people a good many
centtuios to learn even this elementary
truth, and in Germany, which is not the
German army..
The death on Saturday last of Mr. John
Jacob Astor will not leave a large void in
the actual life of New York, for he hsa
always, and especially since the death of his
lovely and Lovable, than the woman who; . noble wife
,'preferned to be inconspicuous so
spends her time. in high -dressing and public far as that condition was possible. But the
parade' -is false. °e boy who sudden removal of the ]lead of a family
I advise the,
desires a life of peace and happiness to find many gs has been so: closely identified for so
eneratioof
the home -keeper. How shall it be done ? the great cities u of the with tgrowthhe
world and has, in
Oh, my dear boys, there isnot after all any fact, represented to a large extent its visible
swop :deep mystery about women, nor ,any expansion, is an occurrence of unusual lin-
encu. deep art in selecting a wife: It is not port. It will revive a host of traditions
a lottery at all. The real, girl is the one concerning the early days of America's
whose presence, leads you to : noble and metropolis, recalla grateful sense of number -
ennobling, thoughts. Avoid all others. The less and great benefactions associated with
chatterbox may be an angel in disguise, l an honored name, and carry sincere mourn -
and so may, be. the flirt. Schoolgirl; airs
ing into many households.
MANUFACTURERS OF
O
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PIANO RTES.
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Their Perfectly Ewen 'iii`e L Balanced Sevi,
The Miele Composed of the Choicest Material and of t t Most Thorough Workmanship
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Wes
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:•t.•
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Just published, a new edition of Dr. Culver.
well's Celebrated Essay and 111 radical cure of
Seal uAronnuete or inoapaolty induced by excess or
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The celebrated author, in this admirable essay,
clearly demonstrates from a thirty years sacoeettul
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abuse maybe radically oured ; poh,ting out a made
of cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by
means of which every sufferer, no ]natter what his
condition may he, may cure himself cheaply, pre.
v and ioall
atniy rad U.
Or Tete lecture should be in the hende of every
ydsth and every man if, the land.
ggo,,ut under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad
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41 Ann Street New York
Past Office Box 450 d186-ly
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our "Relief for Women" is safe and always
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Send for pardonless. Address
GILDED +3LL CO.. T0802ST0, Canada.
LADIES
� smoothest faces bah
Fi eaem .
p..� EA 5 FOFZ t3
lR, f] Cc
on bald'eec heads h fel Menlo. Latest and
t801 dr sic
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Crracov y of the A . modern ;other t lama woa-
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is sus spectacles, e Scywhit
poem eta l,e.d heeds ne.dr' oinCurma, t, andebut
cu live absolute
Only anon.genuine uaian a d. Price
411 cbottle,
to give absolute (0!eat41 . Each
battle hots
0 Prleo 31 a ddrem
or due bottles far 52. Each Mttla l+tnW one month, Addrap
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MADAME OIOYANNANI'S PREPRNRTIONS.
SUPERFLUOUS HAIR operm�rat,ayy that wa,
suporlloona has without the a kin. cwarrant d.
Price s3, injury to a
NAPLES AMID BLACK NAOS yermanentdy
rtmtnt. Sa
from 10 to sOdoys, Warranted. Price for a0 lova tr•acmnnt,gL
A.1TI.COPIPIILENCE PILLS s cvho,:'p4olwpm
1w{nt la a nttter,et selicltnde whether bemuse it is t .•=. "y
testable or unfashionable—STAT T,OLR8 Ming At.
.011PUL4NCE PILLS" lose 16 lbs. a month. They mane.
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4ry6,40 Vs treatment, $9;, or three months medicine, $6.
Warranted.
COMPLEXION_ WAFERS'. tiI.1 S NIO,(I:
1:,oamh tit Wu, develop the form, 8arm1o.e. Permanent
r .,'cit. warranted. Priem $1 a box. or six boxes for W.
n6:18+K t9' IZJE.Eita,Pieiril GXOV aNIggNI
Atle rang 13treet'Tent Toaotato.'�+iR
-11'iclit8AL BALM.
A certain and speedy cure for
Cold in the Dead and Catarrh
is all its stages.
SOOTHING, CLEANING.
HEALING.'
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure,
1,2t°iQJRlirt Failure impossible.
Many' so-called diseases are simply symptoms of
ii:tereh such as headache, partial deafness, losing
aoso of smell, foul breath hawking and spitting,
•.tseea, general feeling of debility, etc. If you are
pnhlod with any of these or kindred symptoms, you
ate Catarrh, and should lose no time in procuring
3
bottle of 1'l.tsAL Balm.. Be warned in q,
oealacted co%d in tread results in Catarrh, followed
i,y consumption and death. NASAL BALlt is sold by
yti druggists, or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of
, rice (yo cents and 6x.00) by addressing
FOLFORO & CO., BROOKVILLE, ONTa
Beware of imitations similar in name
.'l' �.4 tit.. -a• ,,r -
(25.
G°4OS a yp, ``,�,1�e�
dot �`,,� ,�° r v b��� ,••
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ti n '� aC"� d'c+ �
00 i'P
bA •o y5 •Ois' G
h`V ie G( c" -yr.'s ti•i5
1� Q,4 °,� 0va ,s& tit
.c5•4 01 polo `~*..$8 0-' .,. 0,.
49 if
,,0100
Sa see
45>
0' c0'
1' �'4°9 '•1.x`4' �cA
�,. '�B e, o't tier
rUK y' a ,o oS,O •r. �,e,+ aJ'
eye c`�t b >vb �Q sehT
is
r.
s ee a. �,.p�`p '$� ,,,g,4
4: * X90 g6 •PI1 .�^°' o
<' '4 bar `� �'C.
1 ° 4- ti* $ •
Manufactured only by Thortma 1lolloernr, 78New Oxford Street,
late 113, Oxford Str,ot, London.
gam' Purchasers shonld look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots.
If the address is not 588, Oxford Fittest, London, they are spurious.
,. ,
Exeter Lumber Yard
The Undersigned wishes to informhe public in general that ;he keeps
-constantly in stock—
All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL
DRESSED ORIJNDRESSED.
A large stock of Hemlock always on hand at mill prices. Flooring, Sidles
dressed—inch, inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two inch. Sash Doors.,
Blinds, Mouldings ante all Finishing Material, Lath, dm.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY. --;Competition challenged. The best and the:
largest stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1.
her thoroahly seasoned and reedy for use. No shriuka
assured. A call will bear out the, above,
THF. OLD ESTABLISHED J a s.Willis,Manager
iae�,y
yr.) •4
u1 wli�yi' �f'vl.',r7t. Fj•
,tv-
en
J R4. Is.ell
e
k
OLTZ
AGBNT.:
Hay Township Farmers' Mut-
ual Fire Insurance Co.
A PURELY FARMERS' COMPANiY'..
Live .Stook also insured, when in the holds.
or on the road in charge of owner. or servant*
alawnsaaufeetulrer of the Improved Sluprbte
Washer end Wringer liaehines. Agent free
Tosb$tones and elle 'Watson .inplemonte.
Undertaking promply attended to.
G. HOLT5ZMAN.
nude
.esti :t ''"'''i:�ik.VO'tlxr,t:;,t*: ' 91St 'r:u'\ i"'; s2r.,l;_,i.,+..
..ti
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d
1Nk..Ln...ED.113trdc,11r 'a SSA , e1n1aat
,i$twee .gt{rantoed, .E2,s., .and;EsPensea k+sttl.
Lj'y. c 4 ,'' ',e Se' ��; _•a 11ar,�i:revatats ee a aegitinera. ;Steak oumgglate, with fast -selling spec
k } 29•if!.0 0j!O' r'li8,4.t1 • ,V ,;:r arxn to robot ^.50 aclioertise. Write 11NCO
L'i E r :r .:ISlk.l'
t1g ,'1�AGOe.,,laser-,.. .... Eocheaccie.'i'1. T. i'Phle house tl nee tatr0s;t1.
tee