The Huron Expositor, 1875-06-18, Page 3[ CULTURAL
Association of
nada.
- LONDQN ONT
*timate that he will:
�e itl!etrt tlxe middle of
„1€ Lr u dt ti 'tisf part of hie
be l ea':e<I to rteeive the
'+ I'atroi,a whose policit
:::e risks of any who nay
I may desire to transfer
lid Fano Fnvoiite. par.
in the interval will he
u peat Card and givin
ion and townaliip tolhe
un ersiamed in Tint n
I.ushileld, P. 0;
l'retointtr Note Systems.
az has becu precisely the
ars. This Company has,
axe( pt ft.r uuhewn 1
tc=tit.s aff stf tement% of
:withstanding. ,14,10(
L'ox .t. Owen Sotintir .
Grev.I:ruce arae turon—
RY SALE
'anti the !It iv ..
elt;€[isa1).
et of the (*emit et 4.han-.
Rltec°uth day of 3larch, A.
titin enure !!f (an era .viz.
probation rf( the tinder -
Court (t UO41e ich, the.
es will ltbe o.~T7ar('dfor
the C()Nl i"C�al CIAL
l•:rF(wl{lll, on SAT -
1,475. at 2' cr'cloct
r;1�11 P tltIN•A, nuc-
Eat lnmbt. Eleven, in
-Toe n'.hilr of -lleRillo,,:
.tt,tinirr;; ()ne fir:mired
ti•tl rbc;nt' 9 miles
Fitlt laceelt, utcaple,;
.ttve!ti. The
parr i4, in the
Od L money,
il., 1Ft# tho day of Bale,
tt. Cottrt, without inter--
i•iei tti'r, at11d upon pay.
lat Gentled to t1 convey-
asion. 7 hekaurchae,.
ltn agreennent in
ials purchase. The
he pl.!,iutitr are to
resreet s the condi-
ing conditions of
Fort ltzrl!lttt Weill Ere and
ubteittetk on application
JiOL%jEi TEI),;Sea-
W, Esq., (ioderirh.
IT, Master ttt Crgd(;tic .
Ii'tl:, V ndora' Solkitara.
:lay, 167a. 3204
=1
item
Ethe
_, WOOL.
leased fora term of years
rotes. EN 2ti 1.14
to Carding Machine-, and.
int already In the mill,
p'ia4eel the whoIein first- ,
dresl.t•ctfully informthe
x country that he is now
i Dress Cloth, -and Spin,
cUcrla,lr,oL the shortest
•;K,ssiblc style. He will
wttck of r
l'1rlt' Cl the and
=h he will sell or erchango
-t market price for good
€t to h lu ;e the (;came.
tt a distance frr'rii G'iizr
?left the seine day they
fax{ling machines day
T,E; trr to accare rnods fe
r patrfit ug'. The sub
• lferieece in thebusi-
!tvite the pnt;lie t, give
chezn ci.eswhatkindof
E. Cfl1 BETT..
FR, OWN INTEREST.
CAMERON,
(
water, :=rita llcli, whIs:
aua. friends and euetom-
gild surroundingais.
rE'•pe tftlily l timate
utifulatai nd west end
tined a beautiful
celrr of the latest
• t 4114 mot veri-
ties
eri-t esc tire aekno.wl-
t =t ia• the market,
al and tested
e. I=ii tcb.,.
g .1 r,• services
raetiae in the
laEztt€,. Cub
J1omini011
til j6we1zy
1:11(1.x:,
.ttt21.tro aker
05042,
EL
..!tor- 1tatrr.i:=i that
e f l'f' itl hi:Y trTIr.Itf� f 4
E•-r-t•.l.tt• t' ith hir:c Mr.
••••i"'�l 'tfi fl: iilaan, and
• t=tr.iree: a. The
II.1,I 42,15 Ori t;1,(:FF,
tfro, f•finerfn:Irlstt-
: I,,rt tl L't.rrap 1'4 f:t ory
7:trisrl ft.r the F-aperiOr-
r:illaiu agood supply
('La 'L•'L:N I I'M'S,
Cheese Ftct tt;ry and
I'.'. HE,rur. Hay hakes
•zal, in tii:rt; `e r use
:tatted ttx give hati$fac-
tt•ntled to. Price,;
lle i• it, the lr(:hinCI$•
eit, and G: tern Fat-
. 1'.. WLLarearS.
SALE."
f i•ai.r cnntaLretT fizz
i tis,, :;1,1 flay of lane -
Weed and - iit;, de,-
[ -
tete payment of the
:st a runat ht aald
ble A.ropt n ;aviill beAnetki,, by .l•. 1'.
r't)313IF.'Lt(;l�,L R0
<AF()It t"Ff, t,u. HAT-
N1:. A. 1». Z si:f, at 1
III.1n and 171h in
:ifrk.Iand the build-
dz. Further Iran1u-
be had ram the
of Mortgagee.
fldiO
EALT;H
"ADE ratetiala,
yrrll „ Temperance
Eis the vent 3iexnine-
It , containing their
zutf d furze. It will
r=tis beverage at one-
:a les a time than the
rata way . Tho most:
. xcuraiousa,. pit:-zuCs,:
a forth and vicinitg,
z l,tuutneturer.
fEIM $: JONAS, 20
real. �rJl-
5OPENING.
eon!:c•rineuce of ill;
tis butsiuesit as Her
uric1t, will offer for
='.vf
M tER, &c.
*tune anct lot, on
suable. This is s
:airing to carry
'hares apply to the
DEN, Zurich.
UE;
ere Store, gesfortlr,
its€ in my bands for
,~stied to sell and
ett once or they
;TED,
hey (la HoIntested..
JtJNE 18, 1875.
1$75.
11.1.1111.10=. 111.011211111,
......... .....
A correspendent addresses us and our
readers upon the subject of -coffee. Now,
eoffee is a subject not to he treated light;
fy,as many a, wife knows, and many a hus.
band. For, does it MA eome home to
men's breakfast and besoms ? We should
think it does, and whoa it tomes regular.
ly, in the form it ouglifl to have and with
the warmth that properly pert:tine to it,
it brings s'olace and groat comfort. But,
if, on the contrary, it comes too soon,
and so 1oses SOme of its aroma end *some
of its heat, and. begins to take a taint of
acidity, or too late :so that the hurried
said expectant iips are scalded, then do
clouds lower ; them are mutterings beard;
then, on some occasions, not too rare do
storms break forth, thrill echoes of which
ere afterward heard in the regions below.
Our correspondent does not exaggerate
the interest of his communicaeion, so far
. its relation to the daily comfort of
many people goes ; and WO shall endeav-
or to -supply the information that he asks
for, so far as it is within our power to
d°118:' is quite right in the first plaee,
saying that real coffee has become almost
extinct, and he is partly right in attrib-
Uting its disappearance to adulteration.
No substance sold at the grocer's, except
white vinegar, (whichtis -almoet always
injuriously mixed, mai acids,) is so much
and so frequently adidterated as coffee.
At an analysis of spirits Made ley order -
of the Board of Health it witsfoundesome-
what, it was confessed, to the surprise of
that body that although the specimens
were procured' from all sorts of 'out of -
the -way places all over town, there was
little or no adulteration found in any one
of them, and. that nearly all Of them were
absolute] y p nee. Bad 'rum and -bad whisk y
there were enough of and to,spare—Vile
stuff that wOuld consume any but a cop-
pered throat end stomach ; but it was
not adulterated; it was merely unmiti•
gated bad spirits. But coffee is adulter-
ated, With all conceivable an4 inconceiv-
able substances ; and not only so, it -is
actually made of a paste, east in models,
tolook like the roasted bean, and this being
mixed with enough real coffee to give it a
smell of the real thing, is sold as 'fine old
Java." The substance most commonly
used -for the adulteration of coffee, as Most
housekeepers know, is chicory, the sue-
core- of which the suecory-water so- much
in favor with our great-great-grantlinoth-
clean as Weil as a pleasant flavored sub-
stance, and the addition of a little of it
to pure coffee is regarded as advantageous
by some epicure& particrdarly among the
French. But of the "best'ground Jaya"
coffee now sold' by many grodierse the
greater part is chicory, which rather
too mg& of a good thing. Beiins, car-
rots dried and roaeted, and many refuse
eartieles; needless and unpleasant
to name, are -used for the adulteration of
coffee, and chiefly, of course, in that
which sold ground. The proprietors
of certain mills within fifteen or twenty
miles round about New York tell strange
stories of the substances evifich are
brought to theni in b'arrels to be ground
coareely, and which they haire very
good reasons for believing are sold as
But adulteration is not the only reas-
on for the disappearance of real coffee
from our tables. It is one, but there is
another of atleast equal importance. The
art of making coffee seems to be lost.
Seems to be, we say ; but it is not. The
housekeeper of the -period knoweth it not,
or atleast she doth notpraetice it; and yet
it is practiced by a few, and is easily at-
tained by all. Our mothers used it, and
our fathers had therefore good coffee to
things is implied in the very terms of our
correspondent's letter. He complains of
the disappearance of good coffee, which
he says has become not absol-
utely but alinost, extinci, Plainly. he
and the men of his generation—say thoee
who were boys twentrdive or thirty
years ago -e-hati good coffee once and. have
it not now, Well, we will tell them the
reason, It is because the coffee is not
bought prokrly, and when bought is not
properly prepared, for the table. - And
how it is thus not preperly bonght and
they will see from a receipt that we shall
giVe them, which, if strictly followed,
we are willing to evarrent, under reason-
able penalties, will never fail to produce
aS geed. coffeeus a man ever drank. It is
a receipt which was in ,,cominon use with
our mothers and grandmothers.
Firest find a housekeeper who has been
so brought up that she knriws good raw
.eoffee when she sees it. This part of the
receipt is all important. Next, let her
buy good coffee ; not send an order to
the grocer for it, but personally examine
and. buy the coffee. if it is convenient
for her to buy a bag, that will be better;
for coffee improves by age ; and it is
best to have one bag etanding unopened
while the other is M us& Next, let the
coffee be roaited as often as once a week
undee the personal superintendence of
this housekeeper, She need not sit upon
the roaster ; but ehe eertai'sily Should per-
sonally see that whoever toasts ip does
it gradually, and not too much or too
little ; to do whieli it will be seen that
she shonld know the color and perfume
of properly roasted coffee The roasted
beans should. then be put into glass jars,
tightly stopped. Theu about fifteen
minutes, and not longer, before the cof-
fee is needed the beans should be taken
out and ground, and the grist go directly
from the mill into the coffee-pot, °there
wise some of the much prized aroma and
flavor will pass off Thus made, in al-
most- any sort of pot, coffee wall surely be
good—as good as it used. to be when our
mothers made it, for this was their re-
ceipt. As to buying ground, coffee, or
even roasted e offee in the bean, which
lies open to the air, or even grindiug up
a lot of coffee at home and keeping it in
a big box, which inay be open or may be
shut, and then expecting good coffee,
why, fair ladies, you might as well look
for sunbeams trom cucumbers.
Settle on a Plan and "Stick."
Practical men who have long been en-
gaged in gardening contiguons to cities
are aware that there is in this business a
large class of persons who are enthusias-
tic one year, and plant extensively of a
certain crop, hoping to receive high
prices, basing their calculations on the
rates for the same crop the previous sea-
son, but forgetting to take into aceount
the feet that many others also are influ-
enced by the same considerations. The
perfeetly natural consequence is, that the
raarket is overstocked, pricee run low,
and the bulk of the crop has to be sold
for little or nothing.
Aceording to Poor Richard, three re.
moves are as bad- as a flee, and itis also
true that frequent change of .programme
in market gardening. must, in the long
run, bring disagreeable, if not diseatrous,
results. Experience proves that those
who plant each year about th
tont of land with the name
accept the high . prices than
the low prices with resignatio
successful than those who.are
tacking tO catch the trade ei Inds.
instance recently brought to ur no
will serve as , au apt illustra 'on : '
years ago large, solid, heads f cabb
found brisk salt: during the fa and
ter at from $70 to $100 per thousa
With a good crop these prices re loo
upon as very remimerativ and
course they made quite a sen Hon,
the following spring cabbage s ed wa
demand,- and in many cabba gro
sections, more than twice
breadth of surface was plantet
crop, - That fall and winter h
loads of first quality heads w
less than the cost of producti
these low -prices the changea
were disgusted and turiied
cabbage, doubtless agreenig
les Lamb that this is indeed
choly Mille" Last spring a
extent IA surface was plante
bage, and as might be expo
the circiimstances, _prices are
ing high. These high figures
induce men to plant.* large s
cabbages' next year, and , agai
from past experience, prices ii
exceptions, for the last 10 yea I the tab-
bage crop kas Only- paid a rge profit
planted aboutathe same exten of sur ace
each year heve made money. Ano her
advantage 'of growing, the ea e ,kin of
crop every year is found inth ability it
gives to supply regular cus ers el ch
season, and when ttie crop is
dull of sale. these customere
preference to those whom they
in the habit of buying fro.
whom they. can alwaya depen(
ply. This rule not only hold
&e'en* Mit with every oth
system of ...gardening and
Working Ammer.
eatne ex -
crops, nd
nd
are ore
onsta
An
ice
wo
ge
ed
of
nd
in
the usua
18
with
indred
e sold
u.
his
of
for
ith
way feone
a mien!
uch
with dish-
ed wider
ill again
face with
11 fall be -
very few
Ginger Champa
Among the meet Wholesom
able drinks that are ninnuf
rank ginger champagne, wh'
made by the following process
pare eixty gallons for mark
poses, the first process is to
eight gallons of cold water i
boiler and add to it '158 pou
finest raw sugar and five poun
ed ginger. Let the mixtUre
for half an hour, taking care
all the scum whidh rises to t
Then draw out the liquor fro
and place it in Coolers au
temperature has been reiclue
heat turn it into casks, in
have put thirty-six pounds
raisins, dozen of oranges an
of lemons sliced very thin.
- whole one quart _ of brewer's
let it ferment until it ceages
Now add 'one and, 'hal oillo
spirits, and six ounces o isin lees, well
dissolved in wafer, to refine
Stir this thoroughly into the
fasten up the eork for a' moi
it off °and bottle it, and in a
is ready for ithe, but will kee
if tightlY 'corked. The pee(
flavor is ginger and -oliamipag
its name. But if ginger 181 n
its use may be" dispensed
eighteen dozen of oranges s
arid it will be orange chis
three times the quaptity of
be added, and in that case th
be lemon champagne.
will
have
andi
for a
good
armin
nd
ive
een
OU
up-
ith
or
BL A
dsvr
3
.K001,1 KL
rt. GRENADINES
ii . i
' LACE TRIPED M' ‘LINS
WHITE PIQUES 11
GGAN HOS ERY
CHEA PARASOLS
9GAN &
THING AT ROGERS'.
LL
WING
THIS WEE
COLOR
ORE
AT
:i TED F
CASH M
RO
AT ROGERS'.
BLACK GRENADINES
SIMIPED GRENADINES
AT ROqRS'.
LAWN STRIPED MUSLINS
LACE STRIPED MUSLINS
WHITE PIQUES
Who Wa
JUST
Large fazi
AT ROGERS1'.
BALBRIGGAN. HOSIERY
CHEAP PARASOLS
CHEAP SUNSHADES
AT ROG
BLACK C 4 S H MERES
MOURNING GOODS
Clover,
.And all
kinds of Fie
S LEE'S
SEED ST6RE,
Tares, II mum -ion
d and Garden Seeds.
Ion
WAYS
YRESB
1N STOCK.
All will sold at the
TTIO AS LEE.
HE SE
CAR IAGE
FORTH
FAC ORY.
• CHEAP kINTS
T ROGERS'
ON.
*LACK AND W ITE STRIP D
e.
and a
ur
h ea
ble
put fi
es, whit& are no filled with a very large Stock of the m st desirable grades of
t of Good Bueil:ss, the spbseriber has recently been ged to very much eater
ee-
be
re-
ur-
A co per
ds of the
e sur see.
the b ler
after its
to blood
hichlyou
f chopped
six dezen
dd to the
east, end
to work.
of proof
GRENA
rst s,
he liquor.
hole, and
th. Rack
rtnight it
for years
wheince
reliShed
with, land'
agne, Or
mons ay
result will
Regttlat Price 20e,
thi
we
k 12
NEW TEA
, YOUNG HYSONS, GUNPOWDER, LACK AND COLOGNE
SUGARS.
ool Refined, Cubs and Demerara, Whit Ground and Block Ltunp
TOBACCQS.
Opposite 0. a
cultural Imple
PI
renege
business in
now prepar
returning t nks for
they have r eked shwa
to furnish
mmencing
t they are
DOUBLE AND INGLE UCCIES
ALL T BEST BRANDS TN SMOKING AN CHEWING.
wee 12, per yar
•
C" 1 of General Grpe ries and Provisions, all of which will be sold at You small profit.
C YES, (TUT and OTAIER FIELD SEEDS IN SEASON. .
Chequered Store, JAMES MURP
IQUORS.
Sup I Whiskey aa Imported Liquors purchased in Bo and sold pare as usual. A 1
FOR THE
M WEATHER.
Which, for style and e ellence of orkmenship
and meter' I, cannot b surpassed y any other
They are practical w Amen, dev, their per -
make light ork a spec ty, they can guarantee
satisfactio
GIVE THEM A TRIAL.
REPAIRING PROW= ATTENDED TO,
DOMINION BOOK
TORE
Dominion, Block, Seah•th.
PAR
Forests and Rain- all.
The question of the jnflu
este on the hydrelogy of a re
that has been warntly discuss
men of science, Becqurel fo
hold that forests increase the
water received by the soil ; wl
Marshal Valiant among th
that forests -diminish the
Some Havens, such as IL Ma
direetor of the Nancy School
have endeavored, by way of e
to get together such facts
they did not set the question
least clear up some points an
portion of the experimental d
for a full explanation at so
time. M. Mathieu undertoo
termine the amount of rain -w
ed by the soils of two nei
and the other arable land ;
out whether, in consequence o
ering of trees which intercept
water, and the foil of the woo
abundantly watered as that of
His conclusion is, that timl
receive as much, and more,
rice of for -
ion is one
d. 8eme
mount of
de others,
m, assert
f Foresty,
at res at
the .0,0V -
the r in-
land i as
the op
ered oils
ter
than the open country. --Popular iSe! glee
Monthly. •
per yfir
SUNSHADES, ILI TEN DRESSES,
FREI** M USLINS, GRENADINES, ,
SUE SHAWLS, bRENADINE
Splendid Fay this ek
SHAWLS, &
Sun Hats Dolly Vardens, Riverside, Opera, Rustic,
Tau THICKNESS of the Ethi
is proverbial, and many reins!'
of bunting on the part of our
izens are -from time to time re
recent circumstance of the ki
at a hotel in Montreal,
turning on the subject, the la
forest a bet of $100 that he
through a new lath and pies
at a single blow. A sporting
Won/ of-
uld pro -
his head
red wall
an in the
crowd took him u —when th. landlord
Summoned one o the color
and said, " Jim, jnst put
through that wall and will
with delight as he took a few
ward, surveying the position f
or two and then suddeu:y div
his cranium striking and shi
partition like a battering ram.
dat ain't noffin," said he as h
his head from the aperture..
wall shuali. Why, any of de
ler niggars is- good for comm
tl waiters
our head
give, you
teps blok-
e a second
withdrew
" I Clair to
laff an'
CAR LIST, BLANCHE, AlrBEFrrA.
At WILLIAM HILL'S
Opposite CInn-inercial Hotel, Sea
Tip Top V lu this
CARRIAGES
Coeseisesece.—One of the ost
ed up in Iowa. 'A railroad as be
sold at sheriff's sale, and a fre city a roe-
ment was made by which his in el
official was to receive three Is 'Area and
fifty dolla.rs in payment for is - pa t
the transaction, which req wed two
hours, perhaps, of his valu bie t me.
But after the sale fie happenp to lo k at
the statute which fixed his fe • who he
found to his horror that he had n
transgressing the laws of he S
which declared. that he shoul reeei e no
other fees than those legall assign
him. So he- refused the liberal sum
offered. him, and said he N Quid take
nothing but his lawful fees,I which in
000, The railroad men end vored to
hold him to his original h`arg btr
was teo conscientious to viola e thei awe
he was appointed to uphold and, the
case going lo the courts hi integrity
was rewarded by a verdict in is favor.
811.K WA
NOW ON EXHIBITION AT
M. III,OBERTION'S, FURNITURE WARER00.*S.
FInst-Rate 11'411
this wee In
TABLE LINENS,
TABLE NAAKINS,
COUNTEPP ES,
THE FINEST ASSORTMENT
VER BROUGHT TO SEAFORTH,
WILLIAM ELLI TT
llitEGS to inform the public] gen that he
-1-' nos opened a Book andltatio ry Store in
the front of the
Dominion Telegraph Office,
win be kept constantly on nci.
SCHOOL .13004S,
WALL PAPER,
e MA AWES,
WM. E
THE HURON
CARRIAGE FA0tORY
WILLIAM GRASSIE
TIA.8 now on hand and in course of construction
It number of handsome andsubstantially built
CARRIAGES
ND PHAETONS .
Them vehicles are we made, handsomely fin-
ished and warranted to n easy, and will be sold
cheap for cash or on s time.
Are too xell and Savo= y known to squire puff-
ing. He lute a oumber this best on band now,
and they he sold p.
REPAIRING D NE AS USUAL,
Remember the old 061 Enron toad, oppo-
site Knoa's Hotel, Sado h,
A10) WILL BE OFFERED VERY CHEAP
In order that the -Ittilantine population may have a good time . during the coming summe
NEW QOODS
M. ROBERTS
AT HIOKSONS.
N.
A NI E OT
OF
TIES
JUST FROM ENGLAND :
TURKEY SPONGES,
HAND MIRRORS,
ASBESENT TEA SPOONS,
TABLE SPOONS,
KNIVES AND FORKS,
CROCKERY IS DOWN,
TEA srrs VERY CHEAP,
EA TRAYS,
COMBS, BRUSHES,
Parties selling W. il It ease call nid gee 'I , as
ci
most happy to show.
LOGAN tit JA
IES N.
POCKET BOOKS,
SPECTACLES,
AMERICAN WATCHES,
CLOCKS—All Pelee; Cheap,
JEWELRY,
MILK PANS AND CROCKS, &v.
MESSRS. 0 ,AY c6 SCOTT .
-1-,! business in the
CAL
IN E. HiCKSON & CO'S.
they hate -00)118281188a
lately occupied by Mr.
ed OM orders for
Sashes,- Doors, linds, Mouldings,
ALSO LATII ND- SHINGLES.
:CHEESE BOXE ABD SETTERS,
FARM GATES KAY RACRSI Ake.
A good stock of aed Lnmber on hand.
Facto and Lumber r ard on Goderich street,
Jig Sawing and Custom Planing neatly done.
NEW PHOTOG API! CAllERY
c Los-
-FS now better pre than aver lindsh his
-L patrons with a real, amine Weak*
Photograph or AmbrotyPe.
Give him call an d t him, sad if not perfectly
satisfied -won't ask totesessastin,
se the Os rn, on sad for rals cheep.
Remember the/ warty oppostte the Men.
nd