~auatlian Jtattsnnlu. WEDNESDAY, M.AY 18, 1887. STANDARD !IEDICA.L wonK FOR YOUNC AND MIDDLE-ACED MEN. Only $1 By Mall, rostpald. ILI.ll~TllA.TIVE SAJIPLES t'Kllll NO ALL. A. Grea& Medleul lVorli: On Jlnnhoocl. Exhausted Vitality, Nervous and Physical Debility. Premature Decline in Man. Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries resulting r.t'om indiscretion or exce>1ses, .A book for every man, young, middle-aged and old. It oonte.ins 125 prescriptions for a ll acute and chronic dises.sesJ each one of which is invaluable. So found oy Author, whose experience tor 25 Year!! Is such as probably never before fell to the lot of any physician. 300 pages, bovnd in beautiful Freuch muslin, embossed covers, full gilt, guaranteed to be a finer work in every sense than any other work sold in this country for $2.50, or the money will be refunded In overy instance. Price only $1 by mail, post· be.id, lllustratives sampls free to any body. Send now. Gold medal a.warded the author by the National Medical .Association. to the President of which. the Hon; P. A. 'Bissell. and l!&Ssocia.te officers of tht> Board the reader is vespectfully refferred. The Science of Life is worth more to the r oung and middle-aged men of this generation sh'rn all the gold mines of California and tho sil ver mines of NeYada. combined.- S. F. Cht·onicle. '!"he Science or Life points out the rocks a.nd quicksands on which theoonB titution and hopes ot many a. younl!' man have been taitally wrecked.- ,l.fanchester Mirror. The Science of Life is of greater value than all the medical works published-in thiscountry tor the past 50 yea.rs.- .Atlanta Constitution. The Science of Life is a. superb and masterly treatise on nervous and physical debility.Detroit Free Press. 'l'here is no mem her of society to whom the 'Science of Life w111 not be useful, whether ,youth. parent; guardian, instructor or clergy· man.-.A rgonaut. .AddreBB the Pea.body Medical ln9titute, or Dr. W. H, Parker, No. 4 Bulfinch Street.Boston Mam ;., who may be consultee. on all diseases requiring skill and experience. Chronic arnl obstinate diseases that have baffled ti.a skill ot all other physicians a. specittlty, Such treated successfully without an instance of failure. Mention STATESMAN, Bowmanville, Ontario. l7·Y· VETERINARY SURGEON. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, fteglstered member of the Ontario Veterinary Medlcu.1 Association. d"Offlce and Residence, t<ewtonville, Ont. Will visit Orono every Tuesday and!Saturday Ofllce hours from 10 a.. m., to 4 p. m., . at Coulters' Hotel, Calls by 1'elegraph rooe1ve immediate attention. .CHARGES MODERATE. Orono Pump Factory. Pumps Chea.per and Better than ever, The Sub11oriber having built a large ne11 Pump Factory in Orono, Is prepared - to furnish- ------------~-- PU MPS OF EVEJIY DESCRIPTION With or without Porcelain Cylinder, ·er the Best Material, on the shortest notlcr and at the !owe11t prices. Oiatern Tubs and Pumps f!Upplied WELLS CLEANED &RERAIRED. ALL WORK GUARANTEED TO GIVE SATISFACTION. Orderslby Mail promptly attended to. DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, PICKETS, MOULDINGS, &c.,kept on hand. R. FERG USON. I.I Pays To buy Foot Ge ar for M en , Women , Boys a nd Maidens, at Popular No. 1, Boot and Shoe EMPORIUM! Our New S tock has arrived, and comprises som ething nea t and pretty for Ladies, Good a nd Ser viceable for M en and Boys , a nd Boots t hat R Boots for every member of the h onsehold. 'l"IUJNK S. \'ALISllS, di SA.Ttarnr.S. IN STOCK. ~Ordered Work and Repairing a S pecialty, as usual. D. DAVIS . $5 to $8 a day. Samples a nd duty F REE Lines not under the horse'sfeet, Write BREWSTER'S SAFETY R E IN HOLDER Co,. Holl, :Mich. to keep the water boiling all the L imo or they will sink and be heavy. Whcu they are done enough, which they will be iu rather Ru.NTS.-SIIAf,r, WE RAISE T.mm ? Home Etiquette. less than ten minutes, take them 01 it and A writer gives some very sensible and put into a hot dish and serve with sweet Some animals .are born ·'runts." Does't trite remarks, which perhaps the mothers sauce. pay to raise them ? Is it not more economii who read this column do not need a.a adSPONGE CAKE.- Beat the yolks oJ three cal to kill them as soon as their n intiness is vice, but which will inttirest thein as some. eggs_well, and the whites until they pile up obsen ed? The runty pigs are usually put thing which some one they know will do in a snowy mass; put these with onehei~ping in a pen and given to the wife or daughter. well to heed. In ii.dYice to yom1g mttrried cup of fine sugii.r; heat five minutes at least. She is told that if she gives it tho· slops people the writer says ; "No two people Thoroughly mix one heaping tea.spoonful of from the house, etc. , she may have what the living together ca.n by any possibility pre- baking pow~er in one cup of sifted fl.our and hog bt iugs when it is big a nd fat. 'rbe serve their own happiness, to say. nothing beat ten mi;nutes, add one half cup of cold fact that in many cases she does not get the of their friends', wit hout something of re- water, b~at lll evenly,_ add one cup J?10re fl?ur , money when the hog is sold, does not deter serve ; enough to keep at least their self· hea..t agam, and bake 1ll a deep 1mn in a qmck her from giving the pig all the slops and respect, enough to make both as polite to oven. milk it can drink. It also gets the crusts, each as in the days of their wooing. " r efuse vegetables, peelings, etc. , from the The quick action of a true gentleman to Household Notes. kitchen; and quite often the zeal of the woRWE WAFFLES.-Boil half a pintofrioeand man makes t he feed of the pig· quit e expcn save a woman, whether wife, acquaintance or stranger, an extra step, an opening of the l sive. Kept in confinement and fed rich, door when hands or arms are full, or the et it get cold, mix with it one-fourth pound sloppy food, the pig increases rapidly in H air Brushes and Combs, of butter and a little salt ; stir in one and · b ut gains more in s ize than in weight. Binge's Cough Syrup, restoration of some article which has been size, dropped, is something which every one ad- one-half :pints of flour, beat five eggs sepe.r- If put out with other swine, on: grass and Rose Glycerole, ately, add yolks together with one quart of · · b ll d " · Toilet Soaps, mires, and for which, unconsciously respects milk, lastly the well beaten whites. Beat exercise, its pot· e y 1sappears, it gets the person who ha.s performed the deed, well and bake at once in waffle irons. pointy, and loses in size, though not so Corn Cure, Perfumery, trivial tbongh it be. There are many who much in weight . As it comes from the pen are farmers, and farmers' wives and To REMOVE P AINT li'.ROM GLAss.- It fre- it is more gut than bone, more slop than large Chamois> a very Imperial Dentifrice, daughters and sons, who think t heir farm quently happens that po.inters splash the muscle. Its fiesh is soft aud flabby. When stock. life makes them exempt from all the courte- plate or other glass windows when they a.re put on harder, driei· food, and allowed to Camphor Ice, sies which are indispensible among city ·Or painting the sashes. W hen such is the case, take some exercise, both of wh ich are essenSponges, &c. town dwellers; in fact they entert.ain a su- melt some soda in very hot water, and wash tiii.l to firm, sweet, wholesome flesh, the preme contempt for what they call "nne them with it, using a soft flannel. It will fact becomes painfully aµparent that its air~," which are iu reality nething but 01·- entirely remove the paint. growth in the pen has been fictitious to a dinary courtesy. A mother should insist Chinese gloss starch is made of two table- considerable extent. that her sons make some recognition of her spoonfuls of r aw starch, one teaspoonful of It is equally true of t he runty lam'b or at her table by appearing with some sem- borax, di8solved in a cup and a half of water. calf. It is put under the care of the wife blan(le of tid,illess even after disagreeable Dip the thoroughly·dry, unstarched cuffs, or children and givtm extra treatment to farm work ; if this is too much trouble for collars, and bosoms of shirts in this, then "bring it out." When the t ime comes to them to take, she should prepii.re the food roll them up t ight and l et them remain a fit for market, it is fo und that this bringing. for their eating at a table where the odors few hours in a dry clot h , then rub off and out, ·by the only methods t hat would have B owmrmville, February 1, 1886. of stable or barn-yard cannot give offence to iron. proven successful, fa on the plan of blowing the r emainder of the family. PAINT FOR Kr.rcHBN WALLS. - Paint on up a silk bag with gas. It may have paid The writer r emarks further : " Why is the walls of a kitchen is much better than to give the runt all the food and care it has it so many people keep all their fine manners kalsomine or whitewa 3h. Any woman who received ; hut would it not have paid better 1 for the out.er world and have none left for can whitewash can paint her own kitchen. to. have given this food a:1d ~are t~ an home? Why do mothers train their little 'l.'he wall needs first to be washed with soap- a!1imal n~t a runt 1 I f an I~ferior ammal ones in every way but by example to be suds, then covered with a coat of dissolved gi~es a fa.11· return for what it gets, a good alway s courteous and t hen wonder that they glue; this must be allowed to dry thorough. am~al ".l'ould make a larger. return. . A~d --MANUF.ACTURER O F - · -~ are sometimes rude ? If you fail to say as ly, and then covered with paint. A broad, cons:derm~ the small marg1 !1 t here IB tn surely as to their elders, 'thank you, ' ' I fiat brush does the work quickly feedmg animals, we doubt if a runt ever beg your pardon' or ' if you please ' t o a ' pays for wha,t it has cost. Jt is of yet more child, so certainly will that ready little wit doubtful proJJriet y to breed such an animal. KING STREET, BOWMANVILL take on the conviction t hat politeness is not How Snow Affects the Climate. Its inferiority is an accident, but some sofor every day use nor for home consumption. '.l.'he masses of snow and ice known as calletl accidents are the result of n atural Has now on hand a number ot vehicles (and is manufacturing a great many more) ot the no patterns and best finish, which I e.m oil'ering tor sale at the lowest pricesoonsistelll No parent has a right to give away a child's glaciers, whi ch are found upon high moun - laws . . A r unt may not give birth t.o runts , with due regard to "'.or~manship and quality. The following le p, list ot playthings without thii.t child's consent. A tains, ho.Ye been the object of many studies; but th e chances ar e good that it will. He. · the prmo1pa.l vehicles manufactur ed by me pa.rent cannot implant a high sense of deli- and i t is a. m atter to be wondered at that the sides, if fed, as runts usm~Uy are, on slops in D ouble Covered Carriages . . .. .. ............................................. .$150 Upwarch cacy and honor more surely than by a re- same has not b een t he case wit h the immense a small pen, t he physical condition unfits i t Single Phootons ............ ... ... ............................................... 100 11 spect for ea.ch child's individuality as pro. beds of snow that every winter cover parts for breeding. A pamper ed animal, given no Open Buggy..................... ...... ..................... . .. ......... ........ 70 1& found as for an equal. of Europe, Asia, and America, t o disappear exercise, is in no condit ion to bear profitable Top Buggy..................... . .................................................. 90 1t " "Why s hould we show our love by our in the following spring. It has perhaps been offspring. If the animals m ust be fed to Democrat Wagon ............ .................................................... 65 11 impoliteneBB? I remember once when my thought that the la t ter have less infl.ttence ma,t urity give them to the shambles, not to sister and I were ta.king our departure after upon climate in general than upon other the breeding pen. Lumber Wagons........................................ .. ................ ....... 55 " a call upon two other sisters, we jostled more special phenomena. But the observaNor are runts less likely to die of disease Light Wagon......... ...... . ................. ...... ............. ;................ 40 11 against one another at the door. Upon our tions that follow will tend to show that this than are other animals. I t is sometimes reExpress Wagon ..·............. ..·.....· ~··· · ···· ······· · ·· ·· ··········· ········· 75 11 mingled apologies one of the girls broke in influence exists and the subject is one well marked that "the runty pig never has the Skeleton................... ........................................ ... ....... . . .... 6() 11 with a laugh : " Do you do that to each wor thy to be studied, eholera ;" "the best animal d ies first. " This, A bed of snow covering the ground a cts as 11-0wever, is not the case. When the runt other 1" she cried, " I should never think of begging Lily's pardon." Yet they were a bad conductor, and r ender s the exchange escapes the fact is remembered always, Possesslng superloi; tacllltles tor ~anuracturlng carrle.gee. I Intend to eel! very oheap for oa or e.pproved credit . and by so doing I hope to greatly Increase my number of sale!!. WoulO. well-mannered young persons, too; truly of temperature between the surface of the borne in mind, because it is somet hing resell the w ood parts only, or the gee.rings ot buggies Ironed. gentlewomen in their relations to t he world. ground and t he lower stra.tum of the at mo- markable and vexatious. ' Vhen t he runt Some one says : sph ereslowerthanitwould be ifthesnowwere dies, little notice is taken, for the loss is "'We have cal'cful thoughts !or the stranger, absent. This is a r esult of the porus strnc- little. This same tendency of our human And smiles for the sometimes guest, ture of snow, t h e interspaces of which a.re nature best to remember great misfortunes At the S hortest N otice, Painted and Trimmed if D es ired. Yet we vex our own '"ith look and tone filled wi"th air. In this matter the condi'ti"on leads to the remark that disease tii.kes the A.t the Factory I also do Pl.anlng, Matching, Turning and Sawing with Circle, Band ·o,. Soro Though we love our own the best ." · mor e l "k of the snow i3 of cousidera.ble imp ortance ,· best fi rst · The r unt ts i e1y to b catSaws, and ·prepare all kmds of lumber for carpenters nd others for building purposes. " T here is n o relation, in t he household, t he minute cr ystals formed by colcl are poor- tac1 ' · tlin,n me1 b Y d tsease, and more ap t t o d ie, Ornamental and Plain Pickets tor fenoes in every s tyle reQuired. ma.de to order. whether of mistress or ma id, husband and er conductor s than the l arger flakes , · th th · l 0 · but if is e er aruma · wife, child and pa.r ent, hostess and guest, the snow by alternately thii.wing and freez. "" Te b el" · to < l o is · to ieve tii a t t.h e b es t tiung but will be mii.de more comfortable by the ing assumes the form called neve, it becomes k'll · or a 1amb , 1 th e run t <~t once. If a pig exercise of a little formal e tiq,uette. a m uch better conductor of heat. Farmers its val ue can be but little. The loss will in countries that enjoy cold winters a.re well ha~1ly equal the coat re<J.uirc d ~o bring t he aware of the protective nature of the snow- a.nuna.l to a self-supportm~ basis. In ~he Useful Recipes. · B AKllD Rrc1: Puonnm.- Boil a quarter covering and do not rettr for their grain case of a calf, a longer .p en od of p robation may; be given ; a!'d. ordinar ily t he chances of a pound of rice in a quart of sweet milk. when it is t hick. '!"he p resence of snow t hus assures a higher . are i~ favor of br~n~rng a colt th1~ough. . Y~t When it b egins to thicken take it off, let it stand till cool, then stir in a lump of butter !-emperaturoto ~he UJ?P-erla ~r of ~he._soil ~han !w e :i1e of t he opm1on that such is ~he mch· . ness 1.s,.,m \nation to keep rat her _tha~ to sa?nfic_e tho and sweeten to taste, one-h alf teaspoon of itwouldoth er wise ha.Ye, a nd1ts t h:Wk grat ed n utmeg; butter t he dish, pour in equally important factor with its structure. rnnt, t hat t?e bo~t ~dv1ce ts to k1~l without Butitseffecton-the a ir is different, for itsepar- delay, provi<lecl it is not of a choice bl'eed a nd bake. C01"TAO~: PUDDING- One egg, c1 ·eam w it h ates the air from the warm th which without ' aud worth the cost of the extr a care necespresence would escape from the ground. \ s~ry- to bring ~P. to a somewhat normal conone cup of white sugar and a quarter of a its c up of butter, mix wi~h two cups of prepar- Snow also exercises an importii.nt influence d1tien, but this ts not often profitable. ed flour and ono cup of milk, add the juice through its power of radia t ion, which is de: of half a lemon, stir- briskly for fo·e minutes, pendent on its ,whiteness and the extent of Transylvania Man-~age Customs. put into a cake pan, bake in a moderate its surface, but in which thickness is not a factor. oven and eat hot with lemon sauce. When t he young couple go to church th e BEEF li'RITl'KRS.-Chop pieces of ste. a k or day after t he wedding, they are met a t th e cold roast very fine; make a batter of milk , England When the Romans Came There church-door by a group of masked figures flour and e.n egg, and mix the meat with it. There.- At t he first coming of the Ro- who surround t hem, ~inging and hooting , Pµt a lump of butter in a saucepan, let it mans by far the larger part of the count ry and p layfully endeavor to separate t he Twenty-five cents extra will be charged when accounts run melt, t hen drop the batter into it from a, w as probably <;overed with wood. During . young m_atron f~om her husband. I~ they large l!poon. Fry until brown; season with. the centuries of Roman occupation some of j succe~d rn so domg, t hen he m_ ust :win her over one month. pepper and salt and a little parsley. the less dense parts of the woodland were · ba~k m a hand-to-hand ? ght w.it h his adverPouim CAKE- Take of flour, butter and clear . ed. In drivingtheirmagnificent straight sanes, or else he must give a .Pi?ce of ~oney powdered sugar ea.ch one peund, eight yolks highways through the country the Roman as her ransom. In gen':ra.l ~t 1ll cons idered and four whites of eggs'.; first beat up t he legionaries felled the trees for 70 y ards on a bad 0 ?1en for ~he married hfe of the young butter to a. cream- keep f beating it, one each side of them to secure them from t he couple if t he :wife b~ separated f~o~ her way- then gradually beat in the eggs, sugar arrows of a lurking foe. So stupendous was husband on this occaswn ; tlierefer e it is cu~ and flour, Bake in a warm oven for an hour the labor involved in t his task that they tom11<ry for the young husband to ta.~e h!s and a. quarter. Cover the sides and t he bot. gladly avoided forests where t hat was possi- st~n~ close _by t?e . church ·door w~de his tom of the be.king-tin with buttered paper. ble, and sometimes even swung their roads wife 18 praymg withm, and .t hen he is ready to right or left to keep clear of these formid- t? catel; hold of her as soo~ as she st eps out. T.li:A BIBCUIT.- Bea,tvery light one egg, pour able obstacles. For many hundreds of years side. ] or greaterpr ecat:,tion,. t he man often it on r a pint of flour, add a glass of milk, after the depart ure of t he legions vast tracts hol~s her around the. wai~t wit~ both hands and chop in one tablespoonful of lat·d and of pr imeval forest rem11.ined as impene.t mble durm!! t he dance w hich nnmediate~y takes b utter, mixed. 'Vork thoroughly together; barrier s between different tribes. In these pla?e before the church, a.pd a~ which they break up pieces t he lled the h"size of m arbles, ·i S which · kl natural fastnesses the wolf, brown bear, and assrn t m~re.1Y ns spec t ~t ors, t a k mg no act"tve mus ro as t m as your ne.i . p rm . e wild hoar still found a secure retreat . E ven i pa.rt, as it is not ~onsidered seemly to dance with dry flour as you roll t hem out to make as la te as the twelfth century the woods to m the church attire. · . As commo~ly seye:al couples are married t hem crisp ; :stick with a fork and bake the north of London swa.rmed with wild boa.rs and w ild oxen . Everywhere, too, the at th~ Ba.J?1e t ime, .it is u~ual. for ea.ch sepa.r· quickly. J m1nn,Es. - One and a quarter pounds of broken m en of the community betook them- a.te ~ eddmg-party to b;mg its own ba.nd of flour, one pound of sugar, three·guarters. of selves to these impenetra ble retreats, wher e music, and dance thu~ mdcpen~ently of !he a pound of buttei-, ~vc eggs, a gill of milk, they lived by the chase, and whence they others. <?n the occ~sion of a. tnple w~ddmg a teaspoon.tu~ of baku~g powder_; bake on~- issued for plunder and bloods hed. The for- I l ately witnessed, it wa.s very .amusrng t o half of t his m small tms m a qmck oven ; ! IL- -eats were thus..fr.om-time.Jmmomoria.l .,, sin- watch t he t hree wcddmg -pa.rties comillg the remainder put a quar ter of ,a pounu-of gularly important element in the topography- d.ow_n t he street, each accelerating its pace currants and bake .the same. ] ~o st or not They have now almost en tirely disappeared , t ill it came to be a sort of race ~p to the at pleasure by lea.Ying out the wlntes of one and tneir former sites have as yet only been , church-door to secure the oest d ancmg·p lace, When buying Coal Oil ask your dealer for the New Oils, or two eggs. partially d eter mined , though much may The ground being rough and sl~nti~g, t here SAGO P u nnrNG. - Boil five t ablespoonfuls doubtless still be done in mo.king our know- was ?nly one spot wher e anyt~mg h ke a flat of sago, well picked and w ashed, in one quart ledge of the m more complete. dl!'nc~ng-floor could b e obta.me~, an ~ the of mi~k till quite soft, with a stick of cinnawm_n~ng pa.rt! a.t once secu~ed this enviable mon; stir in ono teacup of butter and t wo of · -·- ~sit1on, _wh~le the others had to ~ut up white sugar; when col d add six eggs well Honeymooners Routed Out by Mice. wit.h an. mchn~d plane or a few ~1llocks Try it once, you will use no ot her. beaten and nutmeg ' to tast e. Mix a ll well acci~entmg their ball-rooi:n floor. '.Ihe t en together and ha.kc in a b uttei·cd dish thr eePrince Bismarck 's second son seems to be t? sixteen coup.le8 belon_ g mg _ to each wed · .lllctJOLL BROS. & CO'Y, To1·onto q uarters of an hom-. destined t o bring before th e world a modern dmg -pa.rty are m closed m a rmg of byste.nd PoTATO I,EMONPUDDIN<J.- T hree ounces of disciple of the famous P iper of Hamelin. er.s, each : i Y a! bo.nd of_music playing away potat oes -tl e ted . d d . . f t Count ' V ill, who, since hilj r ecent marriage, with heroic disr egard for t he scor ched ears HEAL~H fine lerdous' tifr: ou::: eaaorf 1 w Juhi1 .ote e osug"wro h as exchanged his lively bach elor amuse- of the listeners "Po1ka ! " calls out t he ' ~ > ments for a retired life in some sombre an- fi t " W d ?" th d two ounces of butter ; gra te off the lemon ceatral castl e, hM had h is h oneymoon inter - rs . ~roup ; _ c zer . roars e secon ' peel w ith lumps of sugar, beat t hem and for it is~ pomt of hon'?r t hat each . party add to the other ingredients ; boil t he pote.· rupted in the mo~t prosaic manner by a ~ho~ld d1splar a. noble i?'depende~ce m taktoes and p eel them, mixin g o.11 together with formidable army of mice, which invested t he mg its ~w~ h ne of a ction ; and if, out of the lemon juice an d two beaten eggs ; bake p lace from cellar to garret, causing t he tmerte ?komcidt elnce, lftwo of th t e bands hfatph pen it slio-ht ly greate~t annoyance, and mak ing life almost o s r t e up 1 e se -same une, one 0 em " · . unoearable in t he p lace. In the very nick is sur e to change to something totally differ R AISl!.D CA1rn.- One pmt of melted b utter , of time, w hen like the locusts of Pharaoh, ent as soon a s aware of t he unfo1·tunate mis Purify the Blood, correct all Disorders of the two pounds, white sugar, one quarter-ounce "very greivous were they ," a man present- tu.ke- the caterwauling effect produced by of_ m9;0e, a teacupful of yeast, on~ quart of ed h imself before the Count and entered a this system baffling all d escription. " This LIVER, ST01'IACD, KIDNEYS AND BOWELS. milk, .flour e~ough to make a st~ batte:; contract to t he e~ect that he would cause is nothing at all, " said the worthy pastor, ?eat 11;nd set m a. ~a~m pla.ce to n_se ; mix eyery mouse to ~1sa.ppear as soon as he w!1s from whose garden I wa,s overlooking t he They invigorate and r estore t o health Debilitated Constitutions, and a re invaluable in all Oomplalnts Incidental to Females of all Ages. Fo1 it a t ,mg h t and let i t rise un~i~ mornmg, then given 100 marks_ m pay_ m ent. ~o sooner s~id scene, laughing at t he evident dismay with add one pound of stoned raism s, work well t han done ;the nuce vamshed as if by enchant - which I endeavored to s top my ears. Ohildren and the a ged they are pricel ess. thr ou$h and hii.lf fill your cake moulds. ment, b ut Count Will refused .t o pay when Sometimes we have eight or ten weddings a Bake 111 a. hot oven for half au hour. the man soon after demanded his 100 ma ·k~'t at a time each with their own fiddlers Bon.l~ n Gc:sTARn- Put t wo t ablespoonfuls on t he plea that a servaut had still seen one That is so~ething wor th hearing indeed ! ;, Is an infallible r emedy for Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Old Wounds, Soret of water in the kettle first, to keep t he cus. mouse at the stables. After demanding in - Popular Science Monthly. and Ulcers. It Is famous for Gout and Rheumatism, For d isorders of the ta.rd from sticking. T hen add one quart of vajn to find t he last of h is va nished host, the - Chest it has no equal. milk, two tabl espoonfuls of sugar, two eggs c)lai'mer once mor e demanded , and was re Couldn't Work Without Tools. ( t he eggs and sugar beat en toget her) and fused, payment as long as he conld not prove For Sore Tltroats, Bronchitis, C:oughs, C:oHls , two slices of bread. If hard, dry bre· d i ' s t he non-exist ence of t he stable In- I' ·t en t 1 "t e.ry (t o d isc ' 1 w f mouse. h .'-eeper o f the p em iarg· used, it should be soaked in wa ter awhile d espair, he went at last be ore t e mag is- ed burglar)~" Woll, now you are free again Glflndular Swellings, and all Skin Diseases it has no rival· and for before making t he custard. After· putt1 "ng trates, and his case is now pendillg. For- a.n d you h ave $~ . your pock et . 'r h· ·11 om ts w1 contracted and stiff j oint s lt acts like a. charm. ' it on t he stove, wat ch it closely, for as soon tunately, t he castle wher e Coun t Will take you to some :place where yon can get as it boils it is done. is r esiding is situated i n a very lonely part wo1·k, and I hope you will be e.n honest man Manufactured only a t THOMAS H OLLOWAY'S E stablishm e nt, of t he count ry, where there is but little da n· in the fut ure." YEAST DUMPT.~NGS. - Makea ligh t dough, of the t errible revenge of the first fam" y ea, sir ; I shv.ll try hard not to appear ger 78, NEW OXFORD STREE T, (late 633, OXFORD STREET), LONDONj 11s for bread, with fl.our, water, salt and her e sgaiu " · yeast ; cover with a cl oth and set before the u us rat-catcher being repeated. ·-om-" 'Vell, .why don't y on go 1" And are sold at la. l!d., 2a. 9d., 4s. 6d., lls., 22s., and 33s. ea.ch Box or Pot, ana fire for half an hour ; t hen have a saucepan Londou society has no further use for "I am waiting for my k it of burglars' m a:y bo had from all Medicine Vendorethroughout t.b.o W orld, of boiling wat er, make the dough into round .tirPlllNcbasers should look at the J.abel on the Pois and Boxei. If' the r ddre ba.lls, the size of a h en's egg and p ut them Oscar ' Vilde, and this is why be has dis- tools t hat were t aken from me when I came , here. I can't work without tools." O n 533, Oxford St ree&. L11n d on, they are SJ)liH'lo:o.~ 11 · 1 in. T en minutes will boil them. Be sure cont inued making a fool of himself. HOUSEHOLD. FARM. J. HICGINBOTHAI &SON, PRACTICAL CHEMISTS, We keep the best and sell at moderate prices. Is the Right Place to buy Drugs11 ----o----'- WE HAVE ON HAND: ----o--- Prairie Flower Condition Powder and Pure Ground Oil Cake. HAINES' CARRIAGE W"ORKS GEORGE C. HAINES, Proprietor, CARRIAGES, SLEIGHS, GUTTERS, WAGONS, &O., Sulky................................................................................ 40 .. All Kinds of Vehicles Repaired I M~DOUGALL & METCALF, are ottering Coal as follows : Stove and Chestnut, .................. $6.25 Grate and Egg, ................. ;..... .. ..... 6.00 I LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS, POST & CORD WOOD Always on hand a lowest prices. McDOUGALL & METCALF I Farmers, Threshers and Millmen, Use McColl Bros. & Co.'s Celebrated,. I ::L A R D J: N 1-r.:: MACHINE OIL. TH E BES T TN THE WORLD. FAIILY SAFETY & SUNLIGHT Coal Oil. FOR ALLI I" THE OINTMENT j