Fa. \w, 118 111 0d one or 80. Dency. \Y C .to his ‘ to 569 év £14 ’4? v n. 1. Q?! \V n heavy “'08? ‘r'ed I; DHUL UL: .nt tins 0V P? In 4‘. .Io’ ‘CA bi Q7 3‘URHAM. and aerwear- Hand- 1'. DOOI‘ ~\\ ,5 W71 1‘ '0‘]. r: 37 \\ %.«A S, $4..» (.1! .2 k cu 5g 1'“. \K». .\\o /‘_\\_ 7 6.7“ 1‘ II<‘\ I“ .'1 .‘Oll r1 s»?! \x ‘\ I} -03 '1‘; . 3. ohm k 5’? too 11 “‘38 $119591: Fe $1 $33; b Ft; â€he V1760 '1'"ch 0m; Ema She 133138 CARSON, ' Auctioneer for 18d Valuator, Bailit W831†and all ot- Iimded toâ€"highest ifreqaired. JAMES. BROWN, Issuer 0t Mtrriage ’Limsesflurham Ont. scam-and Licensed Auctioneer for the my of Grey. Sales promptly attended md notes cashed. "my amount of money to loan at. 5 per cent. 1mm property. Micaâ€"First door east of the Dur- m Pharmacy; Calder’s Block. Residencerhrsc door west of the Pa: Gifice. Durham. 'ofï¬oe and Residence at short distance 55; of Knupps Hot-81, Lambton WI. Lower Town. Office hours from 3:02 O'CJOCk. mBR .ARRISTER. Solicitor. etc. Ofï¬ce over Marion‘s new Jewellery atom, Lower â€39,31 Banking business transact- ‘. Drafts lssued and collgctions made me. Dewsxts received and in- fié p.ffl‘owed at current rates. 3. JAMIESOX. Durham. DR. T. G. HULT, L. D. S. â€.91 Authorized . fl . ° G. LEFROY MCOAUL, allowed on Savings Bank de- pants of 81 and upwarodzs. Prompt nation and every faculty _a.fford- 3. . . edcustomru's llvmg at a distance. J . KELLY. Agent. 9:861 0 I‘m 8â€,. ‘ a C1 ‘ ard Bank of Eanada Q AVINGS BANK. hâ€"4 5'] ER. SOlhith‘, etc. McIntyre: 1:. Lower T9WP° Qollecpion and omptiy ante. Buy Ofï¬ce. Legal L’zreclorg, Durham AgenCY- Medical DirectOIy . -. xasmania, amother Us. brought her son of #0 the Be 'ked after. ' 15’ taken up with bad Dd fallen into bad hab- 7 day his smack we" M“ Miscellaneous. J. P. TELFORD. Head 0“ ic in, 311 principal points in On- Manitoba, Uni d England. ted DENTIST. iSON, Durham, Licensed ' for the County of Grey ‘ Bailirt' of the 2nd Division . all other matters promptly ghest. references furniahed ukuvxntendent took m, and Promised to m if he misconduct. might come and cor- til-é gain, the diary-{1mg 'cases relieves Check; St ra wbcrry in such cases relieves the pain. check: the Inc-"4"“ Géttmi higdd ~usiness, and is prepar at of money on real ges paid ofl‘ on phe Fire and Life Insur- est Stock Companies Correspondence to r a call solicited scaARDULLE, Dd ice, Toronto. s-“w them Uniâ€"“Swler's '30! of “Wild Straw- led to. Searchéswmg-d; 5' “{nping this 8‘7 is the only? )ewsparer "1n: TIME W r0118 some- sham; tag; who intend f Perhaps too, it may not be out of place to here mention a decoration for the Thanksgiving table which the writer tried last year and found very effective. A small yellow pumpkin was scooped out, set on a round plat- ter and surrounded with green, feath- ery kale. It was then filled with fruit, oranges, pears, lady apples and red, white and purple grapes heaped quite high and let me whisper the secret, fastened together with hairpins to secure them artistically in place As Flummery.â€"'I’his is a very “old timey†tea dish. Place together over the fire .1 pint thick cream and 1 pint currant jelly. Boil slowly for 15 min- utes. Sweeten to taste. Add aspoon- ful of orange flower water and pour into a mold. W'hen cold turn into a glass dish and surround with rich cream. Serve with sponge cake. l Lemon Cheese Cakeâ€"Boil 1 qt. fresh; megs give a finer flavor than mace Emilk. Beat the yolks of 8 eggs and stir? when it is remembered: that nutmeg: finto the milk, cooking until a curd is? and mace grow in the same pod, and t - , i the mace is inferior because it is sim- Eformed. Dram off the whey. Place; ply the covering or outer skin of the the curd in a deep dish and mix with; nutfmeg, It 1-2 H). butter. Let 0001 and “181:1E Brass mnaments can be cleaned in add the well whisked whites of4 eggsf this manner; Peel 3 lemon. cut it in and 1‘2 CUP PC’de'ï¬d sugar. Flavor; half, and take out the seeds, rub the with nutme and the 'uice of 1 lemon.l . _ Line small gp-attypansJ with pie crust} ““019 to be cleaned thoroughly, then. and fill with the mixture. Bake a light: wash with warm water. dry with a golden brown. When cool sprinkle? soft cloth and polish with a leather, with sugar. fand the article will look new. Flummery.â€"This is a very “old! If you break a bit. of your choice timey†tea dish. Place together overé china. you can mend it so the crack the fire .1 pint thick cream and 1 pinti will show but very little, and so cur rant jelly. 30“ SIOWIY for 15 min-' strongly that it cannot be broken again utes. Sweeten to taste. Add aspoon-' in.’ the same place. by a cement made ful of orange flower water and pour as follows: Make a som'tion of gum into a mold. When cold turn into a arabic. rather thick, and stir into it glass dish and surround with rich plaster of paris until it beccmes a thick cream. Serve with sponge cake. cream. Apply to the broken edges Perhaps too, it may not be out of with a brush. hold together for afew . . minutes. set away where A. it will not place to here mention a decoration be touched for three or four days. It for the Thanksgiving table which the can then be used with impunity. Only Honey Gingerbread.â€"â€"Into 1 lb. of Isifted flour rub 3-4 1b. butter and add F1 teacup brown sugar and 2 table- spoons each of ground ginger and car- away seed. Whip 5 eggs and stir them into the mixture, alternately, with 1 pint of strained honey. Beat all together very light Pour into a shallow pan and bake in a moderate; even for one hour. When done, out in- i to squares. ! Ribbon jelly lends an air of pretty festivity to the dinner and is very easi- ily made. Soak 1-2 box gelatine in 1-2 .cup cold water for 1 hour. Add 2 cups !boiling water, 1 cup sugar, juice of 1 lemon and beat until dissolved. Then strain through a felt or flannel bag and divide this into 3 parts. Flavor one part with strawberry juice, the second with maraschino, the third with orange} and whi peach of the three parts until‘1 foamy. Put them into a mold ing layers, beginning with the lightest in: color. I g Thanksgiving Puddingâ€"Soak 1 pint gcracker crumbs in 3 pints milk for 1-2 ghour. Wash 2 cups seedless raisins iand boil in enough water to cover g'while crumbs are soaking. Mix 1-2 9cup sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-2 tea- spoon cinnamon, 1-2 teaspoon nutmeg and add 3 tablespoons butter; beat un- itil creamy. Beat in 6 eggs, one at a itime, and stir this into the milk into gwhich the raisins have been stirred “without the water in which they wereE covered. Butter a deep pudding dish 1 thick with cold butter, turn in thei pudding and cover it. Bake 3 hours. in moderate oven, removing the coverI the last hour to brown it, and during the first hour stir up the pudding from the bottom to keep the raisins on top. Serve with a hard sauce. Salted N uts.â€"-A dish of salted al- jalmonds, peanuts or other nuts will make a pretty aside dish' for the Thanksgiving table. All nuts that Ican be blanched are first thrown into boiling water for a few moments, then pour cold water over them and rub off the brown skins. Then to 1 cupful nut meats add a scant teaspoon olive oil and let them stand for 1 hour; then drain and add to them 1 tablespoon fine salt. Put in a shallow pan and place in a moderate oven, stirring frequently until they are a deliCate brown on all sides. n-ov. ‘Luu LU Lula 1 small cup sugar, 1 saltspoon salt, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon nutâ€" meg and then st'm in 1 pint hot milk. When the mixture is cold add 2 well- beaten eggs, pour into a paste-lined tin and bake. If you want a typical :New England pie substitute molasses :for sugar as sweetening. Select the heart of the celery to serve with the turkey and save the poorer parts for a salad, Wash it thor-l‘ oughly and let it crisp in cold water Before serving wipe each stalk dry and nlnnn 3.. - .. -rv Vutvu DLLLLA “I." place in 31.16;; glass or chfna dish. C‘A]; “I naps assist many in their plans: Cranberry Pieâ€"To 2 cups finely Chopped cranberries add 1 cup raisins seeded and chopped, 1â€"2 cup granulated sugar, 1-2 cup water, 2 tablespoons flour and 1 egg. Line a pie plate with rich crust and fill with this mix- ture, cover with an upper crust and 6 SIMPLE, SATISI For a simple, here is a suggest ell-browned turk sweet potato, celel sauce or jelly, pie off with cheese, 1 candy and fruit, TH ANKSG IVING DAINTIES. 'JE, SATISFACTORY DINNER. a simple, satisfactory dinner a suggestion: Soup, nice, gold- 'ned turkey, mashed potato, otato, celery, squash, cranberry r jelly, pie, and dessert, topped e, coffee, nuts, raisins. [S and is made. as follows: la sieve enough cooked nuke 1 pint Add to this sugar,1_saltsp00n salt, 1 linen table cloth of. .â€"-'l“h.is shouid be. baked nenu that would suit urse of an our readers, 1g recipes will be found the occasion and per- preserved, lend a bright '.he dining r'oom. impossible to give a make the choicest autumn leaves, if in better th of. fine A center- a bowl of In Beilefeld, Germany, there is a 1,560. The colony was established in 1868, and patients from all parts of the world go there for treatment. _ Brass ornaments can be cleaned in this manner; Peel 3 lemon. cut it in Ehalf, and take out: the seeds, rub the garticle to be cleaned thoroughly, then the quantity desired for iinmediate use should be prepared, as it hardens very quickly. It is easy to understand why nut- megs give a finer flavor than mace when it is remembered: that nutmegs and mace grow in the same-pod, and the mace is inferior becauseit is sim- ply the covering or outer skin of the nutfmeg. For the sake of wholesomeness more sue: and less lard should be used 113 the everyday cooking. \Vhen you suspect that what is being cooked has become scorched beâ€" cause you have neglected it for just one moment too long, lift the vessel ho'ding the food quickly from the fire, and stand it in a pan of waver for a few minutes. In almost every case the scorched taste will entirely disap- pear. ‘ 3T0 free the pantry and closets from insects, try the following; Dissolve two pounds of alum? in four quarts of hot water. Let it remain until alum is dissolved. W’ith a brush ap- ply boiling hot to- joints and crevices in closets, on shelves, c. Where cnoton bugs intrude, brush; all cracks in floors. Keep boiling hot while using. Carving knives and forks should never be put in hot water. It is best not to place them in water at all Holdi ng them oven the pan and wash- ing with the cloth will clean them thoroughly. Use a fine emery stone as a sharpener. _ - 7 â€" â€" -- - v H" or 11mm. Ornament Wlth lace paper or heavy embroidery. W'hen putting away fine china plates insert heavy white paper between each plate; cut round to fit the plate. Odd pieces and novelties should be placed by themselves. Use fine white paper or linen. Ornament With Inna rxonon Try wrapping a baked potato in a napkin as soon as it it done, and press slightly until it bursts open, and it will be sure to be mealy. .For a damp china closet or cup- sa-ucerfu-l; of quicklime; it will absorb all dampness and sweeten and disinâ€" fiect the space; renew as often as it becomes thoroughly slacked. Bread pans should never be heated before putting in the bread, or the loaf will have a raw, doughy taste when baked. more becoming beneath the face than above it." Vivid-colored artificial flowers are extremely trying to all but youthful cheeks. The flowers have not the softness of tulle, velvet or ribbon. Often the same color can be worn with impunity in these materials, where in stiff flowers it would damage one’s good looks. COLOR UNDER THE 1 Woman with faded c: shou'i (1 go very slow in pu cinthine bfue or corn‘ flOWGJ hats. This beautiful shade ness in the skin. “After ‘tw as a R‘DBat acfraqsz donlnrnn . ' . drawing it as smoothly as pOSSibIe before pu-Lting on ' a. The top 0‘. the door rest. may b3 covered: w.th patch work fancy. The sides and battcm should be covered wzth dark‘ colored material so the dust will not show. COLONY OF EPILEPIICS. An ingenious woman descr door rest which is a convenienc it is desirable to; hold doors 0; saves the trouble of putting against the door. TWO placed floor would also be. useful in 1 high backed sofas from marri wail back of them. It.1 is madn 'a centerpiece it gave touch to the holiday < forth a shower of adn assembled. Gingerbreadâ€"This n the skin. “After twenty-five," great actress declares, “color is becoming beneath the face than HOUSEHOLD HINTS , br'ush over the made of 1 teaspoon one oï¬ molasses min: )ER THE CHIN. fad'ed complexions slow in putting hya- corm flowers on their it! 18 made from a ut an inch of cotton brick and sew some it. drawing it as he before pu-Lting on The top 0‘. the door “'0 Placed on the from marring the ace of blue latent sallow- descr xbes top with. mingled to. appropriate ’ and called In frbm all I, October 19, 1899 N., G. J. MCKECHNIE. N .,G. J . McKechnie. UuL unauy cued from its wounds. “ When alive it came to the sur- face of the water constantly for air, but was for the most time underneath Three thousand persons have seen the animal up to the pres- ent, and not one of them has ventur- “'“J ï¬uhvyo “ The serpent was th n taken quick- ly to land and thrown into asalt wa- ter tank’ to keep it alive. The creature was afterward shipped to Vancouver, British Columbia, where it was on ex- hibition for four days alive in a tank, but finally died from its wounds. ‘1 "" -__ â€".vuuuv; “Ida GUI-“.1118. (11113013 for the boat, ‘VVhite-Frenchman,’ thought he would take no chances, and, poising his gaff, thrust it into the serpent’s side 'two feet from its head. After being landed in the boat the animal or fish, made a desperate fight for liberty and attacked the French- man who had wounded him. The old fisherman thereupon seized the canoe ll AS .uuaaflts Made to the ~Descrlptlon of Has the sea serpe tured? That is the question residents of Victoria, British Columbia, are asking. Three thousand persons have seen the monster. Not one has been Fact or the Capture the Creature. WAS N OT A SEA SERPENT. We take this Opportunity of thanking our customers for past patronage, and we are convinced that the new system will merit a continuance or 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.†vould take no chances, and, gaff, thrust it into the .e 'two gee}; from its head. “In- UV. Adopted by LOOKS pretty: girl say auty being only; skin deevp. On life’s highway everybody is not only willing but anxious to take the rich man’s dust. A sensible girl has no more a fresh young man than for c is stale. A grain of theoretical wisdom mayI turn out to be a pound of practical It is easy to see through people who make spectacles of themselves. Lives of great men oft remind us how easy it is not to achieve greatness. The chef may not be a Shnrnqhnnfa-p .. -_-..‘.u, nun. LHU Lluu- ble is that our time on earth is lim- ited. Contact with ap-t to dull one’ ity. a sharp man is very s conï¬dence In human- Troubles and babies grow larger: by nursing them. Artistic is often a synonym for ouse~ less and expensrve. Laziness travels so slow that pov- erty soon overtakes it. The Indians never use smokeless powder in their pipes of peace. Don’t get too swift; you can wall: farther in a day than you can run. at Victoria. top set, five in number, protrude, and when the jaw is closed lap! into the lower set, which retreat from the mouth. Behind this set is another combination of molars, upper and low- er, massed together in circular form. Evidently after the prey was torn by the front teeth it was masticated on the crunchers behind. The monster ,will be sold to the, Bri- tish Columbia Museum of Curiosities posed of a hairy substance, which will stretch owl: over eight inches. The body is some inches over seven feet long. It has two flippers near the head, which look like reversed claws more than a fish’s fins. The head of the creature is the most It has an enormous jaw, and a long tongue, which when the animal was alive, was constantly. darting in and out like the forks of a venomous snake. It is asserted that this tongue contains poison. The tongue is pointed, but not forked. "‘1... â€"u. 4 ‘ ‘ Time heals all grounds, but the trou- fighting used its two sets of 1 flippers as claws, and its 1 bofly snake fashion. “ SwBrn belorp me this 18th day at September, 1899. ‘ A. A. ANDERSON, Notary Public. “ SIMON RYAN, “ D. H. FORBES.m DESCRITPION OF THE MONSTER. ed ‘50 give the creature Clgsgify it. POIN TED PARAGRAPHS. 1 much like cats’ teeth and 7 set in the mouth. The 'e in number, protrude, and jaw is closed lap! into the which retreat from tho _v_ ‘- w its two se_tsf6f feeth, its ! serpent, although only and teqinchegthrpugh its SPF-k9 bPJY. a use for one that muscular. ., and Id 01'