: prepared to do all hint custom work. IATMEAL and FEE SAWMILI ne : Cures the â€" “,mmon everyday .s of humanity. mi Y'ee. wnClUCl'uu I‘I'v '. enable. (‘ummutm-uumxa ï¬rm We» one (or securinivh szsaxe a’Wsslzmgtgm 06V; '0'! through Mann a (0. not! y in the ITIFIB AMERIOII. “muted. lament cimï¬â€™n‘ocu‘ anal. weekw. tern‘nggflind ‘ be. Specimen cvpl ITISTS not. free. Adda“ HINGLESAND TIA PLAW in: a sketch and 4 jn. flee, yhetbcf! .e modern stand. min. I- â€odd“ notico and “ti-hosie- D SHOPPING ay on bad. LLS it . MCKECHN. V nun: In! DESICUSO comment? ‘ 3MP." Ill ‘ o"'t [Mud guidance 3 short nuance oi McAllister's Hqtel, Lunbton Lower Town. Ofï¬ce hours from m 2 O'dwk. wtiste of the R0 - Edinburghfalsggmnesao 0?! “a Residence, 0 ' 30min. ' pposnto Temperance ARRISTERS, S4 ) LICITORS, SUIARIES, Ct ).\' V EVAN C- ERS, ETC. u Loan a. Lowest Rates hay Terms. 3. LUCAS, )1 ARK DALE. XHAVRIGHT, uWEN SOUND. 1.x. BATS‘A, 1) L‘ R HAM. ° business tun-nets ‘ no!“ md oollgctionl 1|!ng , in“; Deposits received and m- gym .t current rates. ES BROWN, Issuer ot Mï¬rritgo mmJMhum, Ont. at? JAcrltsom' "“m‘ C mt. \' omy k abuc lnsnruoo :9, n :cmioner. etc. “.‘ An) DB, 1‘. G. HOLT, L. TECARSOX. Durham, Liconlod “0500! :or the County of Grey wand. “31“: (,1 the 2nd Divinion . .‘ W H matters rompfly :‘f‘hlgheu r‘fexencea Kirnilhod ‘0:in Licéï¬ge'd A uCLiJn;;;?orv a); " Grey §ales promptly “tended O “A. AAâ€"L â€113505" “H ““KAY, Durham, Land anl MDEXClâ€"Middaugh House. hintsâ€"233.111. to 6 pm. lbw the Commercial H otel, Pricevillo, ‘flmday in each month. INTER. Solicitor. etc. Ofï¬ce over 0. Lï¬mta yore. Lower Town. Into! money to loan at 5 percent 6|th Medical Directory. R. Solicitor. etc. McIntyre Lower Town. Collection and mm attended to. Searches ma do buy Ofï¬ce. HIPROY McCAUL, Legal Dtrcc wry. :ol . manor)†invented for . bought and sold. J. P. TELFORD. wnklnde m ‘ “We 0M did. Such“ that will now 003.1. Mr. The dealer aid first door east of the may, Calder's Block. mâ€"First (war was: . Miscellaneous . u Wimp.“ Mama} mm. points in On- ba, United Wight 81 Batson, DENTIST. at the Commercial Hotel. ï¬rst Wednesday to each a short distance l. my dear, did a stove to suit To make the famous gooseberry pud- ding, cut the crust from a large, thick, slice of bread, and reduce it: to crumbs. Mix to a smooth batter ten tablespoon- fuls of sifted flour, half a saltspoonful of salt and a pint of milk. Pour this batter over the crde bread. Add four well-beaten eggs. Beat the bat- ter again and stir in carefully: a quart of green gooseberries that have ben â€headed and tailed.†Put the pudding in a well-buttered and thickly-floured square jean cloth, and drOp it into a Pot of boiling water of sufficient size to cover it. Bring the water in the pot back to the boiling point‘ as soon as possible after putting in the pudding. When the water has boiled half an hour turn the pudding over and con- tinue to turn it once every half-hour, while it is boiling, for two hours. Keep the pot it is boiled in covered all the time and the water replenished as it boils away. ihito o: The water must not step boiling once until the pudding is done. 0n taking up the pudding dip it for an instant in cold water to insure its turning out easily and serve with a rich sauce of any kind. A strawberry sauce, made of half a cupful of butter and two cupâ€" fuls of sugar beaten to a cream, with a. large cup of ripe strawberries; makes a delicious sauce for this pudding. 6. it slowly over the it. imam. bright marble Slï¬b- Gooseberry tarts, or pies, as they are known generally in this country†are excellent. Line a, pie tin with pastry. of sugar and mix the three tions add the juice of a. qua lemon and a few draps of spin to tint the ice cream a. delic: color. Freeze it and serve in glasses of pale green crystal. “Head and tail" as many tart goose- berries as will be needed to fill the pie dish full. Stir in aptipfui of sug- ar with every two oupfuls of goose- berries and fill the pie, heaping the gooseberries in the centre and leaving a clear Space at the edges for the juices to run. Seal up the fruit in a cover of rich pastry fastened firmly on the under piecrust. Bake the pie about fifty minutes in a quick oven. Dredge it with powdered sugar. Serve it with whipped cream it you wish. .1! L_I£ .. v- .‘wâ€"â€" A novel iceâ€"cream is made of half a pint of rich, well-sweetened, boiled cus- tard and half a pint of rich cream. Sweeten the cream with half a cupful of sugar and mix the three prepara- tions add the juice of a. quarter of a lemon and a few drape of spinach green to tint the ice cream a. delicate green color. Freeze it and serve in delicate HOW TO ICE CAKES. Housewives will be glad to know that in cooking schools the tedious beating of eggs for icing or frosting is not taught. The directions for plain frost- ing are to put the sugar into the un- beaten white of the egg, and! beat a few ' To make nice frosting that will not crack, is an art. which is worth one's while to learn, for a plain cake nicely frosted is more attractive and appetizing than a richer one not thus decorated. A ‘l----An The icing used by bakers f1 and plain cake is made by powdered sugar into cold milk very stiff paste is formed. quires considerable beating t enough to spread smoothly. '] should be warm not hot. andi il the sugar runs off, beat in a O more . To make lated sugar, mel . with 6 tablespoons water. Do not st.1r after the syrup commen Take a cold spoon, hold it high, am! he - . . u- ......u alnurlv 111w .___ D 7 cake is made by stirring sugar into cold milk until a mate is formed. This re- for buns Napkins used for dish towels. Towels used for wash rags. The face of flatirons used to crack nuts on. Cold potatoes allowed to sour. The kerosene can left Open to evapor- ate. Cold fish thrown away. Cheese permitted to mold. Lemons left to dry. Fat put in earthen dishes. (1 The mustard eruse remaining open to ry. Canned goods left exposed in cans. _ Breadpan left with dough sticking to The cogs 10f the egg beater allowed to gepwet. Silver spoons and forks used in the kitchen. Tea. and coffee pots neglected. Corks left out of vinegar and mo lasses jugs. Spices exposed to the air. Preserves opened, forgotten and left Left-over vegetables thrown) away. Too much starch made and thrown out. to Pails and washtubs left dry to fall to pieces. it. A Sight Brutal to English [Eyes-flow Poor Prhmm-rs are Slum “awn. To witness an execution in the Phil- ippines is a sight most brutal to Eng- lish eyes. The rebels, taken on the slightest pretext or suspicion of revolt, are, after a summary trial, shot in batches of twenty to thirty, and for years past the mournful sight has been familiar to residents in Manila. On such occasions, at 7 a.m., apro- cession, consisting of the condemned, escorted by Spanish regulars and Guardia Civilia, may be seen issuing from the Fort Santiago gate. The col- umn is headed by the mounted guardia a single drummer, then the prisoners in single file, with arms pinioned above the elbow, accompanied by sev- eral priests, flanked on either side by companies of Spanish regulars with fixed bayonets, from which are drawn the firing parties, for the condemned. the native troopS, and not from the drafts from Spain. These troops are mostly armed with the Remington, while the Spanish regulars carry the Mauser magazine. LIKE A GALA DAY. To give colour to Spanish character, it may be said that these events al- most assume the aspect of agala day. Great crowds follow from the City, which includes numbers of Spanish rriages. A hollow is formed by the combined the centre-rear being occupied by the colours, guard and massed bands. An officer preceding a group of drummers, whose purpose it 18 to beat the drum on arriving at each cor- ner of the square, reads aproclama- e of the SQuare. on‘ which line u the firing party. faces the sea, the grgund selected being the Lunetta, or public promenade. ROLLING IN AGONY. The open sid Soap left in dish-pans to dissolve and Bits of meat thrown away. EXECUTION IN MANILA. Badly damaged in the Bombardment of Santiago SPANISH TORPEDO BOAT FUROR l-Ivlls and Beneï¬ts of an Invention Just I’m on the Market In Germany. Some modern inventions are aboon to humanity and others are not. The phonographic clock which has just been launched upon the market in Germany belongs to the latter category. One must admit the alarm clock in the theory of modern life, but aphonogra- phic clock adds insult to injury. If one must be wakened, one must; but how can one turn over and take the final luxurious forty winks when the depressing programme of a busy day has been shouted into one’s ears? Things that seemed natural and prao- ticable the night before present an appalling front in the early morning; and the breakfast hour, announced in strident tones, is much more insistent than when suggested by an impersonal metallic clang. N. 8., J. McKechnie. Some valuable possibilities the new invention does possess. The housewife needn’t laboriously explain breakfast details to the servants at night, and find the next morning that all im- portant points have been conscientious- ly forgotten. She sets the phonograv phic alarm for an early hour, talks di- rections into it, and the next morning the cook is wakened by a stern voice telling her exactly what is expected of her in regard to breakfast prepara- tion. Paterfamilias, too, can work the com- bination. No more will he sit up until his pretty daughter’ 5 caller goes home and resort to time-honored hints to hasten the departure. He will not slam shutters and noisily look doors and bid the other members of the family good night at the top of his voice and drop his shoes on the bedroom floor with a force that shakes the Cash Svsten THE PHONOGRAPHIC CLOCK. We take this Opportunity of thanking our customers for past patronage, and we are convinced that the new system will merit a centi'nuance of the same We beg to inform our customers and the public generally that we have adopted the Cash System, which means Cash or its Equiv alent, and that our motto will be “ Large Sales and Small Proï¬ts †Adopted by m mm mm mm.†Tau: memcu: will be ntto :rldrpsc- free nf muxgo- fur -(fl for each subsequent Insertion. All advertisement: ordered by strangers" .. br In advance. Contract rates for early advertisements 1" application to the ce. :1 All advertise nents, to ensure insertio: week, should he brought in not later that II POW "IIY 'I’IUURODAV â€DINING "I‘M mu «mam m The Chronicle Contains . . ““3 o . . o yur, payable in advanceâ€"3|. my be charged if not_ sq paid. Th: dateto whic every subscription is ï¬nd as denoted by the number on the uddress label. 0 paper disc nun-Jul umil ï¬lm are paid, except at the option of the pro-primer. u“ "U V" ' ' I: completely stocked with DEPARTnENT .11 NEW TYPE. thus an. {carding {uniï¬es for turning out First-ch.“ Its Local News Is Complete: and market reports accurate. parlor chandeliers, and call down to the daughter that she must be care- ful about turning off the gas and locking the door. He will never be goaded by a sense of parental duty into walking into the parlor and making a scene and reducing the daughter to a point of tears. Oh. no; he will simp- ly set the phonographic. alarm for the hour when he thinks young men should end their calls. Then he will'go se- renely to bed; and when the fatal hour strike a specimen of the old gentle- men’s finest irony will be hurled at the offending guest. Exit young man. The maiden wrathfully weeps alone. cam. A Cleveland girl had a quarrel with the young man to whom she was en- gaged. Now, what} they pass qach qt!!- er in the street. he stares at her with an expressionless, glassy eye. And no wonder; for when he sent a request for the return of his engagement ring. she forwarded it to him, with a enrd bearing these words: “ Glassâ€"with Each week an epitome of th world’s news, articles on the household and farm, and serials by the most populsr authors. Em'ron AND Pnopmnon. Tu: Cunomcut will be m. {0 an, addmc, frog; of povttagcfl’ foxy.†>ub‘i:hcd till forbid anvl chars-ed ac- sient noticesâ€"“ lost," “ Found.‘ 59 cem§ for ï¬rst Insetuon. 35 cents to ensure insertion in cunem m not laur than Tucscav must be pzjd "truished on one ingl},