Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 5 Oct 1899, p. 3

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%;zzz’e75074, ‘ \ 72106742? ("3* C0. Iled to iuit just FANCY N OBEY be: the $0 city’s 3i early 510.?53038 as, Single Chairs, 'Ies. Ottomans, Lounges 101° and Bed-Room Ktmimis us of the ap- Preach of cold weather. “e think of puttmg up Q? WES, and buying new A 3%”. 3:13 HABRlSOH QCTOBER 5TH: I 899 MEREEEi 9r KRNT STREET. as anv. izi':e aivantages. Individual experienced specialists. Re- ploymen: for graduates. Pros- These are in the lat- The prices are as low est woods and styles. tom. \Ve .shall try to hold it. We are determined to in- crease it. With this in View we hare put in an elegant stock of goods. Everything JAS. HARRISON PRINCIPALS To the people of this district in the furni. ture line. For many years we have enjoy- ed an increasing cus- WEI-I. a”? building this me before gm- 1 have an up-to- and can supply is needed for the very lowest; at workmen. the and satisfaction 3r; case. Enlarg- "i 1; 2w machinery orders turned out (“J IV! ‘53 EIECLE prt PAY éB‘i’S DIP a few minutes he declared that his mission was to shoot the Archbishop He was asked why he wanted to murder Rev. Dr. O'Connor. and replied that he was fulfilling a request made to him by a. voice which always haunted him. Think- ing that the best plan was to pamper his caller, Rev. Father Cruise invlzed him in and asked him to Bib down while he went in search of the Archbishop. In- stead he called up the police. and within a few minutes two policemen were at the door. Thev took the man in charge. and escorted him to the station. Latter he was committed by Magistrate Dennison to the lunatic asylum. â€"â€"A man named Samuel Wood, who resides near Kelvin, in Burford town- shlp, tired of life. first shot his faithful dog dead and then blew out: his own brains Thursday. Wood was 50 years of age and unmarried. He had had a lot of trouble, and his mind is supposed to have been unhinged. He took his shot-gun, and, calling his dog, walked towards a woods not far from home in search of small game. The men must have been brooding over his troubles, for just before he reached the woods he turned on the dog at his heels and shot him dead. He then walked into the bush where he came upon some men at work. The men asked him when he had shot at. and he replied that he had killed his dog, but would. give no reason except that it: was better dead. Wood then strolled back to where the dog lay, and before anyone noticed what he was dolno: placed the muzzle of the gun be his head and pulled the trigger by meats of a stick. The whole top of the man’s head was blown cfl', and he fell deed instantly close beside was suspicious of his caller and he volunteered to transact his busineas. At first the man refused to discuss any- thing with Rev. Father Crulse, but after â€"an night last week a stranger pull- ed the bell at the parsonage" of our lady of Lmrdea, Toronto, and waited in the porch for the door to open. The call was answered by Rev. Father Cruise, and he asked the man when he wanted. The strange:- was a peculiar-looking character, and all the time he was talking he fumbled about in his pockets. He said he wanted to see the Archbishop on urgent business. Rev. Father Cruise Port Perry entered the field as a third bidder and got the coveted distinction on a promise of $5,000. Oshawa town affer- ed to supplement the Messrs. Gawan’s wife: with $1000, uniting $10,000 in all from that town. The Cowan Bros. agreed to extend the time for building from eighteen months to two years, to reduce the stipulation as to cost from 25,000 to $20,000, and changed the site toabetter part of the farm, but there was a. very strong feeling against locating the house at a. corner of the county. Whitby's offer of $5,000 was supple- menzed witha cheque from Mr. Jerry Long for $1.000 but when Port’s offer was (Ousideted, the argument of centra- lizy, combined With Whitby’s aversion to Oshawa, carried the day in Port’s favor. â€"The Ontario county council met again last week and struggled wlzh the poor house question with the result that r â€"The wife 'and little daughter of Albert Armstrongr of McIntosh Mills were very seriously injured in a runaway accident at firockville on Thursday after- noon. Mr. Armstrong left the team of spirited horses in charge of his wife for a few minutes. lrecziog her to drive to another part of the town. Mrs. Arm- strong endeavored to turn the tie on Mainsh, but the horses became frighten- ed and dashed around a corner, upsetting the carriage and throwing Mrs. Arm- strong and the child out. They were dragged beneath the upturned waggon for some distance. The child’s skull is frac- tured, and Mrs. Armstrong is badly injured about the head and face. â€"Two lads named Barber of 83111006, Ooh, desired to fight with a lad named Stewart, also of the same tawn. Stewart being smaller than either of the Barber lads declined to enter into any contest. One of the Barber lads ran home and procured a gun and then told Stewart if he did no: fight he would shoot. Stewart declined, and thereupon the Barber lad gave him the contents of the gun, hitting himln the face. It is thought the lad will not recover. land. He leaves a, wife and an infant child at. Cardinal, friendlesa and without means. -â€"'.l.‘he Federal Grand Jury at Buffalo on Thursday found an indictment against Samuel Gallagher, formerly a student in the Royal Dental College at Toronto. for smuggling phenacetlne and other drugs into this country. Gallagher was only 19 years old when the crime was committed. He pleaded guilty, and his attorney made a plea for leniency. Gallagher was fined $75, which he said he could pay. -A fatal landslide occurred on the new canal cut at: Cardinal Thursday after- noon, in which two employees were omght. One was fatally injured. His name was Wm. Ray, a native of Scot- â€"It has been aéoâ€"ertained that the earthqutkes near Smyrna, Asia Minor. killed 1,000 persons, inj and 800 and de- whole villages . News of the Week houses. including two To the enthusiastic shepherd. getting home the new ram is quite an eager 0c. casion. You take a quick look over the top of the crate and then get to the end of the crate to give him his freedom as soon as possible. Your first sweep of the eye takes in his general features. Has he. “too many legs," or is he close to the ground, stout, thick and meaty? Is be free and active, allowing for the stiffness of the journey, has he the marks of aristocratic breeding in his carriage, is he symmetrical, has he a dense fleece or is he scant? Then you get him in front. Are his legs set well on the outside of the carcase or do they both come out of the same hole apparently? Does his breast swing low between them as well as keep them well spread ? Then dnes his head bespeak his type and sex? Has he got suificient wool and is his head short and broad? 15 his eye interested in all that is going on .and does he show a persistencv to keep his head towards you and stand his ground sturdily, or is be weak, awkward and cowardly ? How about his scrag? Is it strong as becomes a male as pertains to a good fleshy sheep? Do you feel a. drop in front of the shoulder or is your hand met by a strong rising neck? Does his neck terminate in a broad flat skull or in a high, peaked narrow one? Are his ears lively in expression or slovenly? How does he feel behind the shoulder? Is there any sagging from the straight line in the middle of the back, undue highness of loin or lowness of tailhead? DOes his backbone lie between the ribs or extend anove them whether he is fat or poor ? Does he carry his width well to the corners, drop straight behind and fill down in the twist almost across from the hacks? Is he iound in the hock or does his ham termin- ate in a nice distinct knuckle? Is he thick through the hams and shoulders alike, has he a “might underline, does he stand erect and easy on short pins, is his skin right, is his fleece of proper fineness and length of staple and has he well-developed gener- ative orflfiufil He probably is not perfect in all these points. N o keen shepherd ever found abâ€" solute p rfection in any animal. The one who di ad lost the possibility of progress in his art. If your new ram is not perfect he should at least be better than your last one and you should be resolved to 100k a little better after him and after his stock. Better selection and better care go hand in hand to meet success, one without the fisherlés useless. -By J. McCaig in Family era. . =Frank Whiae, the 13-year old son cf Mr. Frank White of 327 Seaton-st., To- ronto, is lying in the Sick Children’s Hospital, sutl'erlng from inflammation of the lungs. which will probably result in his death. The little fellow is laid up as a result of swallowing a plum stone, which lodged in his throat. and which necessitated an operatim being perform- to remove it. Un Monday afternoon Frank was about his home and was eating some plums with several other inmates of the house. He had one of the pits in his mouth. when suddenly be swallowed it. When the doctor arrind he was in a mist precarious condition., Several physicians were called in and i: was decided to remove their patient to the Hospitol. An operation was resorted to just 20 hours after he had swallowed the stone. The obstacle was found near the end of the windpipe. where that organ separates and two branches connect with the lungs. The szone was rem )ved but inflammation set in and Frank is now very low. --On Wednesday night of last- week a fire broke out in Rossland, B C. A very strong north wind prevailed, and in a few minutes five or six buildings were in flames. Owing to the prompt action of the chief and the fire brigade the fire was confined to a comparatively small area. About nine buildings were consumed. For a time it looked as if the whole western portion of the city was doomed, if not the entire business section, and people were greatly alarmed. This is the first real fire with a gale blowing and the buildings hard to get at. that Rossiand has experienced. There was plenty of water and good pressure. The loss is about $5,000. â€"A despatch from Chicago dated Sept. 28th says : E. I. Brown lies a corpse in the morgue, while Mrs. Violet 591d”. with whom he eloped from Tomato three weeks ago is being cared for with her two children at the Harrison-st. police station. Brown shot himself in the right temple in his room at the Queen’s Hotel. In his cost was found a letter, in which he declared he took his life because he could not bear to see his companion worry over their sin. It developed after the suicide that Mrs. Holden deserted a. husband and four children and Brown left his wife and three children . --Fred Shunter of Glen Orchard, near Gravenhurst, while out hunting Thurs- day shot a fox. Immediately after shoot- ing be reloaded his rifle, but neglected to put down the hammer. He found the fox was not quite dead, and struck it a blow with the butt end of his gun, which discharged. The ball pierced his right hand and entered his right side, passing clean through his body jusc below the heart. Although in great agony he managed to crawl to his house, a distance of about a quarter of a mile, but expired shortly afterwards- Deceased was about 27 years of age and leaves a widow and one child to mourn his loss. ‘ â€"Mary McGee. aged twelve, of King- ston, was Thursday morning sentenced to five yerrs in the Toronto Industrial School for girls. In wholesale shop-lift- ing she was the leader of a. gang of little girls engaged in this business, and who were rounded up Tuesday by the police. The three others implicated were allowed out: on suspended sentence. the body of his four~footed companion. 'lhe corner was notified, but did not deem an inquest necessary. THE WATCHMAN-WARDER: LINDSAY, ONT. Your New Ram Cream of Spinach boup --One-haif peek of spinach washed and cooked in a cup of boiling water with one teaspoonful of salt. for five minutes 1n a porcelain kettle; chop it and rub through a Sieve. \Vhile it is being pressed through the sieve add to it one pint; of chicken stock. Let a quart of milk come to a boil in a double ketLle. add one tea-poonfu1 of grated onion, 9. blade of mace, and a bay leaf. Rub smooth three tablespooufuls of flour and two of butter and stir them into the boiling: milk; con- tinue to stir until in is thick and aluOOth, add the spinach and rub through a puree sieve. return to the double boiler and bring to the boiling point; than serve. Mrs. Rorer's Normandy boup-One knuckle of veal, one quart of White button onions, four quarts of cold water, halfa baker's five cent-loaf, one quart of cream, two tablespoonfuls of butter. salt and pepoer to taste, two tab'leepoonfuls of flour. Place the veal in a soup kettle and let simmer slowly for two hours, then add the bread cut in slices. Let it sim- mer slowly for two hours longer. Remove the knuckle and press the ingredients through a sieve. Run the flower and butter together until smooth and stir into the boiling soup, stirring constantly until it thickens. Add the cream, salt and pepper, and serve. Cream of .«Xseragus Soupâ€"Boil slowly for forty minutes one large bunch of asparagus which has been cut into pieces, in one pint of water. At the end of this time remove the tips and press the rest through a. colander. 'Plece a quart of milk in a double kettle and when it boils stir into it two tablespoonfuls of flour and one heaping tablespoonful of butter rub- bed together until smooth. Stir until smooth and thick, then add the aSparagus which was pressed through the colander, season with salt and pepper, heat, and add the asparagus tips, then serve at once, very hot. Tell How Mflhurn’s Heart and Nerve Pills Make Week People Strong. MRS. POLAND, Brunswick Street, says : “ My husband sufi'ered greatly with ner- vousness, complicated by heart troubles. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills have cured him, and he now is well and strong.” MRS. ELIZABETH BARTON, Brittania St, says : “ I speak a good word for Mil- bum's Heart and Nerve Pills with pleasure. They proved to me a. most excellent remedy for nervous‘ness, nervous debility and exhaustion, and I can heartily recom- mend them.” Cream of Celery Soup, No. 2-One pint of cele1y out into inch pieces and cooked in apint of water with a. teaspoonful of salt until tender enough in rub through a coinndar or sieve. Place in a. double boiler a pint of milk and half a teaspoon ful of parsley. \Vhen it: comes to a. boil add the celery and let; it; simmer for ten or fifteen minute-1, then add two even tea.- spoonfuls of butter and one teaspoonful of flour rubbed smooth. Boil for a few moments, strain and serve. LAXA-LIVEB Take one at nightbeâ€" fore retiring. 'Twill ”LI-s. work while you sleep without a. grip or gripe, curing Bifiousness, Sick Headache, Constipation and Dyspepsia, and make you feel better in the morning. Tomato Soupâ€"Add to a three-pound can of tomatoes one quart of boiling water and let it boil half an hour with a couple of bay leaves. Strain through a colander or or coarse sieve to remove seeds, return to the stove and add one teaspoonful of soda. and one quart of milk; season with salt and add a piece of butter the size of an egg. When it boils up it is ready to serve. . . .A pint of beef or chicken stock can be substituted for half the water and will improve‘it very much. Cream of Chicken Soupâ€"Cook slowly on the back of the stove one quart of chicken broth and two heaping tablespoonfuls of rice (washed thoroughly) for half an hour. Mix together one tablespoonful of butter and three tableepoonfuls of eitted flour until smooth; stir this into the soup and continue to stir until thick and smooth, season with salt, and add one pint of scalded new milk. Cauliflower Soupâ€"In a quart of chicken stock cook a. good-sized head of cauliflower (which has been thoroughly washed and picked apart), add one teaspoonful of‘ salt and let it simmer slowly for half an hour. Drain and add to the liquor one pint of new milk, a. teaspoonful of onion juice, a bay leaf, and two even teaspoonfuls of but- ter. W'hen this is smomh and thickens, add the cauliflower,- nicely trimmed, and serve immediately. Cream of Celery Soup, No. 1â€"0001: :1 pint of chopped or cut celery in water until tender, then rub through a sieve Add ooze table spoonful of salt, two even tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour rubbed smooth, and a pint of boiling milk in which a slice of onion has been scalded. Milk Soupâ€"One cup of potatoes mashed and seasoned with 38.15, the yolks of three hard bailed-eggs mashed and made smooth with milk, one-fourth cup of butter, one quart of milk brought, to the boiling point one large tablespoonful of flour. Stir quickly and strain. Two S'hatfmd Ladies A perfect soup must be appetizing as well as nourishing. Soups when properly made are wholesome, easily digested, and inexpensive, and can be served for lunch- eon or supper On a cold day equally as well as for dinner. ' Some of the most delicious? soups are now made of vegetable stock, while form. erly our mothers and grandmothers con- sidered meat broth the basis of all good soups. [From Good Housekeeping] A famous cooking teacher and chemist insists that no dinner, however simple or frugal, is complete without; a soup. Appetizing .Soups lHOGG BROS” - Oakwood The Clothing department of this “store has always been a. special feature, and there never was a time when stocks of materials were as complete in Worsted Suitings, Canadian Tweeds, Worsted Trousers, Serges, Cheviots, em, ELGTHING, READY Tl] WEAR UH Tl] DHDEB as at the present. Another feature of this is that these goods have been bought at the very closest prices for cash, saving all discounts. This means that you can order your FALL SUlT, OVERCOAT or PANTS here feeling satisfied the price W111 be as low as the lowest for similar quality materials. All ordered work is trimmed with materials suitable to stand ‘as long as the cloth. MR. BRANDON our tailor, has had the necessary experience to ensure a correct fit and to make Clothing up in proper styles. Prices range from $10 for a good Canadian Tweed suit to order up to the finest qualities of Worst- eds. You take no risk onthe workmanship or fit, we assume all re- sponsibility that clothing is well made, well trimmed, and correct fit. -7 ‘__â€"---"- “an“vvmfi 'v‘fi. Lall and see the custom wOrk done by GEO. H. ROBINSON who a'Iso has charge of our repairing. Bring your work and have it ' SISSON (:2. co, Next Door to Porter’s Book Store $1. 25 to $3 â€"Children s £10m 35c. up to $1. 50 â€"Men$:s fine Ba]. at $1.00, $1.10, $1.25 up to 5.50 â€"-.\Ien‘s Plough Bah 950.. $1. $1.25 up to $2 â€"Boy’s Fine 38.1.. 950., $1, $1.25 up to $2 â€"Ladies’ Donna: B31. and Bum, $1, $1.10, :91 nâ€" A A. CLOTHING READY TO WEAR is another branch the store is-ready for big business in. A special lot of MENS’ TWEED SUITS at $4 have just been placed in stock, regular $5 suits, also Boy’s heavy Fall Tweed Suits at $2.7 5 are a bargain. Boys’ Knicker pants from $1 a pair up. We have the better qualities in men’s and boys’ suits and pants at close prices. Why should you buy off- Call and see the custom wOrk MEN. QWPBEU’S, ”flow W e have placed orders for an efegant {all s tock of; ”Iain and Fancy Crockery. It contains These goods are going into stock this week They are beautiful, and will be sold at reasonable prices. waggon made. If you require a neat look fiing, easy-running farm waggom give me a call. I have now on hand 15 First-Class Farm Wagons of all designs, made of the best XXX Stock, Round Edge Steel Tire, with the Gan- anoque Thimble Skein, the easiest running SISSON CO. ? Our 256. damn Tea is fiiwaus a Leader Because it pxys you to look at: these for values : -I Crate of Grindeley’s Colored Ware -â€"I Craze of Meakin’s Dinner W'are -â€"-I Crate of Wedgewoofl’s Dinner Ware â€"1 Crate of Johnson’ 5 Bros. White “are â€"I Package Lemonade Setts Dressings, T ranks and ...Yalises... easiest running Kent Street, Lindzay

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