Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 19 Jun 1884, p. 3

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Bov. Mr. Gu th ha been aloohd Premium or the onual Momodint Con- Bimng Bull gets .50 I. week to: exhibit- ing himuu. A but weighing 913 undo wu killed Int week a! Mnlladoro. iuoonain. It. W. P. Chisholm in the now High Bohool mum in Oohvlllo. Bonn. Roberto ha been elected Puni- doal o! the Bible Ohrmion Oonhnnoo. The Convention! Union of Onhrio and Quebec bu decided not .0 udmit woman to momherahip of the Union. Mr. Watkins. of St. Outbuines. bu been appoinud Public School Inspector 01 Elgin county. An Englishman bu recently introduced on tho Thames 3 real Venetian gondola and gondoher. Theremno eurplue men in the field ombnoed by the Montreal United Metho- dist Conlerenoe. The amount due de'poaitors o! the Penn But of Pmsbutg is 01,466 000. and the amount of ovordnhs 81,250,000. Hrs. Ford. of Harrison, N.J., uggnvated by her son 13 yam of age. became so ex- cited sh." she fell on a chair md died. Five of the six murderers hanged on a recent Friday in this country declared that rum had led them into crime. There ere now 206 Presbyterian mission union in the Northwest Territoriesâ€"o very oxedisehle showing. The Uniud Bate: House of Represen- n‘im passed the California and Oregon Lmd Gnnt Foxtoimre Bill by a vote of 159 to 10. Mr. W. B. Oink, who has been for seven- teen yous employed at the freight shade of me G. T. R. in Guelph, has been up pointed station agent m Limehouee. ‘ Middlesex County Council has under con- sideration the propriety of stopping the use of tobacco by the inmates of the County House of Refuge. Yesterday afternoon Eddie Dalton, a bright lad of some 9 years. non of Mr. J. M. Dnflon. of the woollen mills. London. was drowned in tho Thames while bathing. A'Vere Cruz, Mexico, young men babe:- onaly kicked his wile. recently, because she refused him 81 a week for spending money At leehioneble dinner parties in New York. lays the Mail, only me green tips of upuegne ere served. The committee of the Quebec Legieie- ture in charge of the Legislative hbrary have reported in favor of excluding works 0! fiction from its shelves. To-dey the ratepayers of Toronto are called upon to vote for or against the by law devoting 8115.000 to certain oivio im- provemente. A London insurance company has re- ceived' In the past 10 years over 325,000 " conscience money " from persons who had fraudulently recovered Insurance. Fifteen Massachusetts girls have an- nounced that they are going to takcatramp of 300 miles in the Adirondacks this summer. They probably intend to do 20 miles apiece. The Duke of Butlend has taken so heavily to heart the removal of the Duke of Wellington’s statue from Hyde Park that he writes: “I! it were possible, I would resign my peerage." The new French ambassadorial abode at Rome in the Roepiglioei Palace. A splendid housewarming entertainment was lately given. Cardinals were thick as black- bertiea in May. One Saturday night last month Edward Pummel of Gaetleford, England, returned home drunk and, it is alleged, ill need his Wife, who was found dead next morning with a newly-born child crying by her side. The coffee, tobbaoeo and sugar crops in Vera Cruz are being ravaged by swarms o! locusts. which have come from Yucatan. It is feared that they will extend through Tamaulipae into Texas. A farmer named Roeheew. livingin the township of Anderdon, while quurelling with his son on Monday. struck him on the heed and knocked him senseless. A fetal malt is feared. The tents of “ the Grande Kermeeee " in Place d'Armee Square. Montreal, col- lapsed during a thunderstorm on Tuesday. A charitable fancy fair in aid of Nortre Dame Hospital was in progress and a num- ber of ladies fainted. The damage amounted to ”.000. but nobody was hurt. Councillor Palmerlon. of Simcoe. has given notice that he will at the next meet. ing of the Council introduce a by-law to prohibit the erection of barbed wire fences on the streets of that town. A Chinsmon ingeniously ended the law in British Columbia which provides that n second story shall not be built on the top of on old house, by raising ‘he old house with jsok screws and building a story un- dernomh it. For ways oh“ are dsrk, eto. New Brunswick is the only Canadian Province sending exhibits to the Forestry exhibition which takes place this year in Edinburgh. Bixveen large cases of wooden goods. specimens of wood and foliage. etc.. have been forwarded from that Province. Miss McFarlane, a respectable young lady of Quebec. committed suicide at Montmorency Falls Wednesday evening. It is supposed that she entered the river above the falls and was carried over the boiling surf. Her body has not yet been recovered. Mr. John Jemee Redpeih, c member of on old end respected family in Montrecl, died yeeicrdey. Inherising an independent forinne from his father. who commenced liie humbly. he gcve up hneineee years ago end lived on his income. He wee one of ihe founders of the gran auger refinery. in which he wee c icrge owner of flock. The Tileonhurg Observer en ethe peeeing of the Scott Act in Oxford u been the meme of bndly tumbling the value of hotel mommy yin the count. The Woodstock tel in Woodstock w ich cost 822 000 to build. woe eold lees week for 03. 500. end the Roy cl hotel In Thameaford. which cost 06 000 3 low vents ego, woe cold the other day for 01. 950. The vacant-pa ooh of the Big ht Hon. Mr. Ohmborlsin. Preoidans of 8the British Bond of Trude. in moving the «com! reading of“). Morohmi Shipping Bill, NEWS IN A NUTBHELL. m- .vâ€" “-v .__V V in oild to be one 0! oh. long.“ on: dollvoud in the HomolOommono. Ha I to wimoutpuuin‘ "on to “to ndrink o woungivlag ultemoo to vb» would an Iixmn o: "venison columns of tho Tuna. The lengths to which keen compciiiion carrie- modern advertieing would make a bower book than has yet appeared. There is hardly any field of labor in which so much ingenuity. fancy. skill and money is expended. allot which. of course. every- body knows. Tennyson not long ago wrote apoem ioran Eastern magazine for the confessed purpose of advertising it. He received 815,00010'r the effort. Now I hear he has been offered 8100.000 for a poem advertisinga certain manufacturere' wares. , iLII L- :_ My Lord Alfred, moat ple will he in-‘ clinedtoremark. will a goose it he doesn't accept. Advertising has given a certain impetus tcart. Not a low 0! the struggling young artists owe much of the encouragement they have received to go on to the liberality of merchants who buy their pictures tocetch custom with. The most original and oleverest idea I: have heard 0!. however. is that of e Chicago man who proposseto hire a phalanx of bald- heads, paint the name of his compound upon their shiny scalps. and exhibit them every night in their historic trontrow seats at the theatree.â€"“Lomger." in the Chicago I nier- Ocean. “John." nid o tuber to his eon. “ you hove dieoppointed me greatly. I have given you every oppormnity to learn something, but it has been just money thrown away. You are the stupidest young men I ever new. You know nothing." _ _ .... "It is true, father," "said John. with 3 sigh: “I never see you with a book in your hand." pursued the father; “you never take up a newspaper; you know nothing of current events. You don't take after your mother or me. for we‘ve both got good natural intelligence. What you're going to do to earn your living in a puzzle to me. There isn't a single earthly thing that you can turn your hand to.” _ “ But I’m not altogether on imbecile. father. I can count up to a hundred." “ 1 know it and that's what vexea me." “ Why 7" " Why. don‘t you see, if you didn’t know that much you would moke m excellent jurylnon for criminal trials. but your know- ing that much entirely diaquslnfiea you. It's a sad oase."â€"Somerville Journal. A Delawue tumor has ploughed under 40,000 herrmgs an a tertilizer. Au Oglethorpe, Gm. boy has invented a cash drawer for which he has refund $10.- A Lsadville girl nnme Daily in reported to have coughed up a. needle on Monday which she loss in her knee 3 year ago. New York piekpookets hsve s new dodge of securing ledies’ purses. A boy of 14 or 15 strolls slang behind s lady and bonuses srnbber ball on the sidewalk so thst it rises and tells close to her dress. While she is wstehing the motion of the bell her pocket is quickly rifled. Miss Jennie Cassedsy. of Louisville, who is inonrably confined to her bed as an in- valid. is nevertheless prominent as super- intendent of a flower mission, and now she wants to send bouquets. on June 9th,to all the prisons. penitentisries and reforms- tories in the United States. She thinks it will humanize the inmates while the flowers last. We have all seen on the plains here. says the Coluaa Sun, beautiful sheets of water in appearance, in which men would look like giants. sheep like bufielo. and small houses like great castles. Portions of a level plain will sometimes seem to rise and a ridge appear. where. in lact, there is no ridge. The prettiest mirage we ever saw, however. appeared to us the other day just above Jacinta. A field of bright ellow poppies was raised to an apparent eight of about twenty feet, so that they appeared as an immense bouquet set in a sheet of water. The delusion was so perfect that it was hard to realize the hot that these flowers were on level land, perhaps lower than the intervening country, and that they were really not over a foot high and on a dry plain. An English doctor reports the case 0! e lsdy who had e regnlsrly recurring series of abscesses uponthe snhles. 0n enter- ing her sittingroom one day he noticed s pair of her shoes. and on the impulse of the moment. he directed his patient to use e large breed-heeled shoe. She did so. end has had no trouble for two years. Her former shoes hsd u long. tepering heel. set nearly in the middle of the sole. A Detroit despstch says John M. end! Elisha Werner. who nearly killed Tree-‘ surer Cruson. of Lafayette. Gretiot County have both been sentenced. John gets ten years and Elishe four. They are Cons» dinns. hailing from Guelph, nnd ntteeked Crueon with the intention of robbing him. The Hungerien pepers, and especially those of Jew-baiting proclivities. now do- clare that the money of Ger-men Jews wee liherolly used and woe lonely instrumentol in fomenting the recent election riots in Hungary. A similar feeling ngninet the Jews and Germans is nine prevnlent throughout Bohemie, and has just found expreesion in the formation of the ‘Boehmer Woldhnnd. on onti-Germnn league. at Prngue, with brooches through- out the country. __ Three trempe commended e women et Creetline. Ohio. to cool: e breekfeet for them. She eeid coolly thet she would do it; but she brought in e cooked pietol in- stead of food. end they fled for their lives. She bed more bravery the strength. how- ever. end hue elnoe been e roving meniee. Speeking of Sir Williem Thompeon‘e eunonnooment ol ebeliel in e "poeeible meanetio sense," the Aliem'u Neurologist thinke that we might ee well be logioel end liborel. end edd to the present eeneee the touch scene. the eel! eenee. the power eenee, the logioel eenee. end the peyohie, mue- enler. end electromagnetic _eeneee. To divide end nub-divide 1e believed to be e rowing hehit with medioel writers. (to-punk- II Alumni-lo add!!!" 0‘ Every ”.1 Idle. Guitar-In Mlmco. Dim-allied. Ian-able Bill- About tic I...“ Den-cu on Which II.“ People Are At home it is quite impossible toproduce all the many vauetiee of ice cream without more or less care and expense. “ The secret of making good ice cream of any grade.” said Miss Juliet Oorson, whose re- ci e are here ivsn. “lies in the freezing. T e old way 0 freezing cream. which is still in use among small confectioners. con- sisted of occasionally stirring the cream while it was freezing in a tin can. set in a tub of ice and salt. A more easy and expe- ditious method is within the reach of the Saverage housekeeper in these days of patent freezers. The same principle underlies all the best known patentsâ€"i. e.. the mixing of the cream by a wooden beater. which re- volves inside the can by the same motion that slightly changes the position of the can in the outer tub of ice and salt. This freezing mixture should he composed oi three parts of crushed ice to one of coarse salt. of which care should be taken that it does not reach high enough around the sides of the can to penetrate to the in- terior and so spoil the cream. The water formed in the outer tub by the melting of the freezing mixture need not be drawn off ‘ while the cream is being frozen unless it is ‘ likely to get into the can. because the water is intensely cold. If it is desired to pack the cream after it is frozen. the water may be drawn oh and enough more ice and salt placed around the can to reach nearly to the top. Ice cream packed in this way can be kept over night. or longer. if the freezing mixture is properly renewed. When ice cream is ' molded ’ or packed in moulds of fancy shapes, all the openings should be closed with butter or oiled paper fixed about the apertures of the moulds with paste or gum tragacanth._ “Ice creams of the most ordinary sort are made with milk thickened With arrow- root or corn starch in the pro ortion of a tahleepoonful to a quart dieso ved in cold water and then boiled in the milk, which is cooled. sweetened and flavored before it is frozen. The sort of ice cream usually made at home is composed of milk with a smallproportion of cream. with eggs and sugar added to it; for instance. uiseolve half a pound of sugar in a quart of milk; 1place it over the fire and let it heat to hoiling point; meantime beat three eggs to cream, pour the boiling milk into them and then return to the fire and stir until it begins to thicken; then at once remove it from the fire;' stir until it is smooth: then flavor it. cool it, and when it is cool freeze it accord- ing to directions given. Frozen custard is made in the same way, only five eggs at least_ are added to a quart of milk. __ “ French ice-cream. thick and yellow, is made by boiling a quart of cream with a long vanilla bean, and cooling and strain- ing it; then the yolks of twelve eggs are beaten smooth with a quarter of a pound of sugar; the cream is then mixed with the eggs and stirred over the fire until it begins to thicken , directly the cream begins to thicken, take it from the fire and etir it for five minntee; then cool and freeze it."-â€"-New York Evening Post. The impenetrable mystery that has hitherto shrouded the tragedy on Luna Island, Niagara Falls. in which Mr. Pear- sonlost hielife, as was supposed at the hands of his brother-in-law. Vedder, and which was deepened by the latter’s oom- plete disappearance, bids fair to be cleared up at last. the body of the latter having been found yesterday in a good state of preservation in the Cave of the Winds. An inquest will be held to-day. An Oswogo (N. Y.) firm has orders for a million torchhght handles, in view of the approaching political campaign. The thirteen-year locusts have appeared in East Felioisns par“), Louisiana. but not in sufficiem numbers to do any damage. The inscription on Bemonefield'e bust in Westminster Abbey in “ Lord Bemnefield, twice Premier of England." Two hundred and twenty-five thencend persona live in furnished lodgings in Paris. and mo“ of ‘hem possess no reserve of pecuniary resources whatever. The poor and despised are much given to honoring ; they feel that their position is equivocal and they brag to make it less so. Can-no Momizmo.â€"Soeneâ€"A ahieling in the north. Tonal (who in a. rapid npholder of“nae and won" on reading the dehue on Dr. Cameron’s Cremation BilI)-It’a nwfn'i awfu’l tey'vo profaned “kirk wi'tero organs an' hymns nn'tot not, and noo tore flying to profane to kirkynird pi pnrnin’ to ashes o’ to said in ponies! It has been said of Millet’a “ Angolan” that it in the only piomre in which sound has been painted. Rein hue tellen copiouer n all parts of the Province and the territory. The crops are in splendid condition and promise well. Keeping a gaming-house has been decided to be: telony by the Supreme Conn 01 Tennessee. Weetoheeter County, New York, in out. faring gran demagee from the ravages of the apple worm. the poets being 30 humor. one the people are obliged to take the middle of ehe road to evoxd being covered by them a they drop from the trees. IIUW T. .1“. I03 CBIAU. Enrl Gnnville cud M. Weddington have agreed upon the beeie of the conference of of Egyptirrn nfieire. They affirm the principle of e tempcrery ocenpetion of Egypt by England, to which. however, no limit is fixed, and propose on internutionel control of the powers to Audit the whole eyetern of revenue and expenses of Egypt Englend recognizer; the euzer'uin righte of the Porto throughout Egy t, including the Bouden, end Frnnce forms ly abandons n1 claim to 5 dual control. Tho lazy and the industrious can never livs nspplyly together; the lazy despise sbo industrious be much. Be loving, and you will never want [or love ; be humble, and you will never went or guiding. Apspor read before the Forestry 00n- greee eeiimewd the coat 0! me rdlroed tie: need In the United Bates every raven you: st 014,784,000. Because“ la silly to hollow everything. there are some so wondrous who u to hollow nothlng. Niagara Ely-ten Cleared Up. Bur-ordinary Action by a Father vhe' Caught Diphtheria from hls Child. Medical men. says the New York Times. will be relieved by the result which has been reached in a singular case before the English courts. The plaintiff was the father of achild whosufleredfrom “oroup.” It being necessary to insert a tube in the child’s throat to relieve it from threatened sutiooaiion, the operation was skilfully performed. After the insertion of the tube the physicians requested the father to free it from the accumulated matter with his lips. which be instantly did. the doctors nwlecting to tell him that he incurred any risk. The child died, and its disease proved to have been diphtheria. by which the father. in turn. was soon attacked. He sued the doctors for damages. The case was tried twice. and was much discussed in the English press. Upon the first trial the )ury dis- agreed. But Lord Coleridge told the second jury that the doctors were right in telling the fatherto free the tube. and a verdict for the defendants was found. The prin- ciple. we suppose. is that it is no part of a doctor’s duty to incur danger in the dis- oharge of his professi: an, when the act to be performed requires no particular skill and can be devolved upon another standing in relations of blood and afiection to the pa- tient On a Saturday night in 1859. when Dan Emmett was a member 0! Bryant's Minstrels. New Y )rk, Dan Bryant came to him and said: “ Dan. can't you get up a Iwalk around?‘ I want something new and lively for Honda night." Dan went to work and by Sun ay afternoon he had the words commencing “ I Wish I Was In Dixie." This expression was not Southern. but appeared among the oireue people of the North. In early fall. when nipping frosts would overtake the tented wanderere. the boys would think of the warmth of the SouthtandAthe pommon expressign would be: " Well. I wish I was in Dixie." This gave the ca ~line. and the rest of the song was original. On Monday morning it was re- hearsed and highly commended, and at night a crowded house caught up the refrain and half of them went home singing Dixie. The song became the rage. and W. W. New- comb'e, Buckley's Minstrels and others gave Dan 8500 each for the privilege of using it. Mr. Werlean wrote to Dan Emmett to secure the copyright. but. with- out waiting for a reply. published it with words from Mr. Peters. Pond, of New York. secured it from Emmett for $600; but Werlean sold thousands of oOpies with- out giving him a nickel. Not only was Emmett robbed of the profits 0! his song. but the authorship of it was disputed. Will B. Hayes claimed it as his own. Pond brought the matter before a music publish- ers’ oonvention. and settled the authorship; but _Dan reaped no benefit from this tar‘ly juntioe.â€"Oaicland Times. One of those rare birds. 3 white robin, was seen at Pl) mouth, Mum. a few days ago. so, LL; In order to impart dignity to the town of Maren. 111.. forty of the merchants have ligned a pledge to wear high silk hate. instead of the wide-brimmed alouohee that have been in fashion there. Falsehood is in a hurry ; it maybe at any (5': he Elvunuvule gulwfial moment detected and punished. Truah is calm, serene ;its judgment is on high; its J03. J . CAVE, PROPRIETOR. king oometh out 0‘ the chambers 0‘ “a" IFFICE â€" 1mm su‘nnm, woonvxLLn. or ._L_ uni. Being the Great Central Llne. aflorde to travelers. by reason of Its unrivaled geo- graphical position. the shortest and best route between the East. Northeast and Southeast. and the West. Northwest and Southwest. , , __- _n -1 AL- _..I.._I_-I ll--- CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND PAQIFIQ R'Y. uuuuuuuus. nun- u-v v-vuq "v. “u"...- “n It Is llterally and strlctly rrue. that Its connections are all of the prlnclpal llnes at road between the Atlantlc and the Paclflc. By Its maln llne and branches ll: reaches Ohlcago. Jollet, Peorla. Onaws. La Salle. Oeneseo. Mollne and Rock Island. In llllnole; Davenport. Muecatlne. Washington, Keokuk, Knoxville. Oskaloosa. Falrneld. Dee Molnes. West leerty. Iowa Olty. Atlantlc. Avoca. Audubon. Harlan. Outhrle Center and Gounoll Blufis, ln Iowa; Oallatln, Trenton. Cameron and Kansas City, In "Human. and Leaven- worth and Atohleon In Kansas. and the hundreds of oltles. vlllazes and towns Intermedlate. 'l’he “GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,” Ae It Ie Iamlllarly called. offere to travelere all the advantages and comforts lnoldent to a emooth track. eafe brldgee, Union Depote at all oonneotlng polnte. Feet Enpreee Trnlne. compoeed of COMMOGIOUS. WELL VENTILATID. WELL HEATED. FINELV UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES; a line of the NIOST MAGNIFICENT NORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS evcu‘ bullt' PULLMAN'S latent deelgned and handeomeet PALACE SLEEPING CARS. and DINING CARS that are acknowledged by preee and people to be the PINEST RUN UPON ANY ROAD IN TIIE COUNTRY. and In whloh euperlor menle are served to travelere at the low rate of SEVINTY-FIVE CENTS EACH. TNRII TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER. TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL. ma "‘0 tumou- A New and Dlreot Llne. vla Seneca and Kankakee. hue recently been op...‘ between Newport Newt. Rlohmond, Olnolnnatl. lndlanapolle and La Faye” end Oounoll Blufle. It. Paul. Mlnneapolle and Inlermedlnte polnte. All Through Passenger. oarrled on Fast lxpreu Train?- Ior more dekalled lnlormatlon. lee ane and 'oldere. whloh may no common.»- woll no Tloken. at all prlnolpal ‘I’IokeQ Office: In the Unned emcee and Canada. or d *‘Vâ€" 'W \v WHO I8 UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEbGRAI’HY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL SEE BY EXAMININO THIS MAP, THAT THE n.n.cgapg, ‘ ”00"..‘8 QUICI‘ION. Vloo-Pru't than" Managor. The Origin 0! Dixie. 'ALBERT LEA ROUTE. CHICAGO. Worth their Weight in Gold- ~\" \‘ ‘.\'\1V\A‘\I\MI\A _ ~ «Ivy» THIS IXCOMPARABLE MEDICINE has so- ourcd {or itbclf an " perishable lame thrnmhuui the world for the a .‘uvintiou and cvm of mos: assesses to which humanity is heir. urif arugulate and improve the quality of _}lo . They assist the digestive organs, cla lncrenso the secretory powers of the Liver. [bra/yo the nervous syntum‘ and throw into the circula- tion the purest Elements for sustaining and to pairing the frame. Thousands of persons have testified that ' their use alone they have [won restored to heal um strength. after every other means had prove. Eisuccebéfull will be Iound invaluable in every household I. the cure of Open Sores, Hard Tumours, BAD LEGS, 0L0 WOUNDS, BOUGHS Colds. Sore Threats. Bronchitis, and all (“Bordon of the Throat and Chest. as alsu Gout. Rheum“ ism. Scrotum, and every kiuJ of Skin Disease. Manufactured only at Professor Huwanfi Entablishmz ALL, 18 New Oxford 8‘ (late .533 L; xtord ISL) London. uni sold at ls. 15d. ‘25. 9d., 45 6d. .. 22:», and 338 each 150\ and Pot. and .u ( “nu. .1 390(2th 90ceuts, and $1. accents, and the huger sizes in proportion I: DAL Lluar‘ l unvc uu .1147: V nu - no \'u|‘\‘ States, nor are my Medicines 94w! ‘heru. Pur- chasers should then-Awe low; to me may] 01. no Pots and Boxes. If :1» address i~' not 55.! Oxfmd Ytrcet. London. they are spurious. é'fhvi Wundvmc gamma, é c.-\U'r10x.â€" I page; gm .Aqert‘imme United my yumâ€"u..- .. v..- Purgative. II 3. Info. dumm of worms in inure. md oflcctul Children or Adult]. FREEMAN’S WORM POWDERS. AND OINTMENT. E. 81'. JOHN STOMAOE and. BOWELS, insult to take. Contain $1131! on Io JUN", owl TM: a. Pau'v “In

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