NEW A>NI')V IMPROVED L. ])utt0n s. .` `BY USING THE-_-- THE JEWELLEB. .= o N B R o s., '.;,:;;;ma Manufacturers and Sole Agents for the County -of .~___1'1 `t % _ T And all Funeral Requisites F111'1.1.~}:B3` Orders by Telegraph or Otherwise, H: I`. attended to. fame G. O. DOLMAGE, Manager, Str 1:`: actiw COFF1NS:AND'C./SSKETS or ..\1.2. K _In stock or Made to Order. * STEAM WORKS Aim srfoiv In COLLIER-ST.,BAR LLI DUUVD UL ULGLIC LU \JLl.lL'L. `~~""~"" z11n :x1i ~'_' Robes Cra%p;.,1. :.-, I I1'1a 1 1\ 1 l)......' KILL,` LI. L953! Before the time shall come ,when it will be necessary to use the musket-. hall or-bayonet the opportunity -will be e:z1'orded to suppress the riot--perhaps at the saeri ice of a few broken heads or by the lmprxsomnent of some of its .'iea.ders'. _. 1___-._ ,,'A,_ ' II (io.9.: IOHN PLAX T0` 1.rr'r A rm: .LV lvu *~!co1la.r. "witty so-vii T graphs` th .2 Nickel pi .-..-`I`I.... J01 l The zellow. A.\.AI\4- f3.lhl_`I` v.d.active 0) `TCgrrm 2 ,fat`lmr " annular uu, vuuu nu IIVUULIJUD uau5cu.Uuu. Upon whomsoever devolves the duty of suppression let this be his first eort, check at the very beginning; allow no tumultuous gatherings. permit no delay; 3 few. stern, resolute Words; if these be not heeded, then strike resolutely, boldly; let there be no hesitation; if necessary take life at the outset. It will be more merciful to take one life then than to suller the mob to take the lives of many, or to be compelled to ` sacrice the innocent with the guilty at l the point of the .- bayonet, or in the dis- charge of musketry or cannon. But the necessity to take life will not. arise "unless there he inactivity and indecision at the outset on the part of the'au- thoritics. . . .Ll_1' I `I An 51Ct'(>r ;:4)ed off the nude tn Lmme`1i:1t,i'ij any John W gAlIal1l.Iii1+:. A .Al|\: .vij1`1l, 50512`??? 71}. ` Ilv_`.` l`inmthy. Snu.mI`.' n, .-\H'zm(* fonsumpti A cont ;0st-hnum Tum` u. rured '1w 401d by. .| Hamlin, .\ ii . _, _ Want, af `a. pair I ' 'ma am. Mr, V. : 76' that ' often ?" V-v`:2; fn , replied F :Mr.' 1% Why, 1 friend, I Lnuuxg Fngg 1 cu _. .-- - on - v. vs; .. xv. u-a `pea-vs nywu I-UV vnv vv . Mobs are cowards at rst. Crime al- ways enervates. '1 hey only gain cour- age as they nd that thosewhose duty it is to suppress them are themselves cowards. A mob is `not to.-be feared when it is first aroused. It is only as its passion tor carnage is whette by the tasteof blood, or its greed for pi.lage is grati ed, that it becomes dangerous. linnn whnmqnnvnr rinnnlnna Han Ann last Wcc " Vi` lwrn and 1 I mas, ai amid i 71 s1r !v 1 Februzj inva IV I Cuts, H1 ing and posed m recomun Gregor 5 Geo. M At 9. 1 Old Claw as he us an Jxv nu- Secnm and I either. Lady will you H(lW H Seven `lantlnun ' wake"; w ment. 1 ba1E].U(,'x`._| fiunily. horses. Q16-one ' Xv` 0 ford, M1 .-i`Jean. - .`If`r i .` lhat all men would be cowards iflethe dare, iinne men have had the courage to eclare. -[Crabbe. Han has. his will--but woman has herway! Whllo man s dull spirit toils in smoke and re, Womanh swift in tinct threads the electric I Cvhvn , _ Wm . C 2-1. 1880. I gut. a .....no- I I16 1: revale n `Moe 5v; u\_- valua cn4 1111)}: The cowardice of C:-lmo-l,)uty of Suppres- slon-Trained Police. ;F1tz-John Porter in North American Review.] `Il ..L.... .._- -...-..-...J_ -1. __.L 11-... - -'I II Ullulll`-` avuu In much uuruuua DLIU UAUUOIIU mre-- I Tho ma no bracelet stratchedbeneath the waves _ Beats the black giant with his score` of SlVe?. V --[Ho1mes. T Was it something said, Something done Waxed him? Was it touch of hand, Turn of head? T Strange! that very way Love begun- I". as little understand T _ Love s decay. -[Brownmg. Be wfe vliu speeds 11001 at forty is 9. tool indegir HOW TO QUELL A MOB. The Cocos-Koo I u.-u. ..-L -_..-_ L~ " ` ' -oau=1'wooo;_ LIUUUQ --[Young. Monkey-Shines on 3 Railroad. [Golden Dazrs,-l V The Niddivunda gangmen are `the queerest railroad workers ever heard of. They are monkeys, and they are seen along the railroad near a place called Niddivunda, in India. These animals, in gangs of fty or sixty, travel up an down the road, doing much damage. They begin by scratch- ing thn mu-th nnmv from Hm chin -5 41... vuv IMHO UNI I-IGD tlavuc Once `a. noteworthy incident took place. _ As the train drew near, the" monkeysgot otf the track, with their -usual Jumps, except one animal, which? showed no sxgns of saving `itself. But five or six other monkeys of the squad,- seein the danger, ran upon the track, seize their -,foolish `fellowfand borefit by main strength to.a':place of safety. '3 Luuvu ucuuagv. auuy uugiu uy scrawn- ing the earth away from the side of the 1 rails. Then they come to the bolts and 4 nuts, with which they can do nothing; 1 but they gaze. at the iron work quiz- zicall , as if trying to think out a plane _of pu ling it toepieces. When a. train approaches, they wait t_i11 the locomo-v tive is within fa` few yards, and then, with the utmost coolness theyrhop aside, returning to the otracic as soon"as ` the last car has passed. (Trina '11 uni-omnul-kn ...L:.:I.....4. 1.--`- vvuu. uLVl`lIIi.I'I> aprlngo M. Ja-min attributes the cold nights usual in` A 1-11 and May to the-fa.ct,`V which he d noes from the experiments of Mr. lzlaisher and others, thattho minimum of vapor in-the atmos hero prevails then, the maximum be 3 in LI uanu UHU VI (ID umuuvtuvu. The suddenness with which they be- came addled was almost startling. After having almost lived on them for a num- ber of days, having three or four apiece at each meal, our cook one evening said that he had found nine or ten addled ones out of a dozen, and thereafter not a single good egg was ever found, al-- though we kept on ho elessl `, testin them for three or four ays a. ter, unti it was evident that we. were only de- ,. creasing the ducks without deriving cor- responding benet. The way they were hatched out in the. latter part of the month was equally surprising. It seemed as if a showerof young ducks had suddenly taken place, like the ` showersof frogs in superstitious times, The Egg Season in the Frigld Zone. . [Lieut. Schwatka..] y Early in July we commenced to live on eider-ducks` eggs, the nests of which water-fowl could be found everywhere and especially near the shores of the i large lakes. They were a. delightful ? change from the seal and reindeer meat on which We had been living, or, at least, an acceptable addition,for we had no trouble nling them everywhere in the greatest abundance shortly after the rst one was `discovered. ` 'I`Ln .u.,`lA........-...... .._:4.I_ __a.- 1 Luauuuvlv uuxuv VVU Au uuvv UIULI5 DU III. For nine months in the year this island` is plastered over -with drying salted codsh. i The remainder of the season the natives devote,to salting other people's money. The soil is not to be mentioned, for there isn't any.- For the present the island is contenting itself with traveling to the northwest at the rate of about a foot a year. The gray old Atlantic is grimly grinding away the stately and pictured clay cliffs on the southern end} of the island. In numerous spots along the southern bluffs may be seen places where last winter`s storms have ground out huge cores of earth and swept them- around to the northwestern sand spits of the island, where treacherous bars are ever forming toward the north. T Footpaths on the cliffs that were popu- lar last year now end abruptly on the brink of ehasms thus formed, and new ones have to be made. Keeper Clark, at` the big lighthouse on Southeast Point, says the sea is surely eating; away the blulfs whereon the light is now perched, -200 feet above the sea" level, and it is simply a question of time when the tower will have to be moved in1and._ ' Sawing OR: [Singer-'1 Tooth. ' p [The Keynote.].` Mme. Pauline Viardot-,'the ever-to-be Prophet-e, hadone of `her incisive `r remembered Fides in_ Meyerbeer s teeth in her upper jaw longer than the rest of her pearly jewels, which some- what damaged the beautiful e pression of her physiogomy. A` few evenings be-A fore the production of the Prophete, . during one of the general rehearsals of that opera, Meyerbeer went into her room, and advised her that he could not I `consent to let her sing Fides. 0 Ira!!! uni, nvnfnhrnol` flu: nnvnof turf- Better Without Them. - lTid-Bits.l V Miss De_Garmo --I have a palette, box of paints, maul-stick, easel. can as, and -camp-stool. That. is the` `full artist-'3 equipment, is it not, Mr. Gamboge? Do I need anything else? l-Inlnhnrra Hhn nu!-;d~\ `V-.- ---_L L- A Shifting Island. Z Cor. Ne ;v- `. or ; Tunes ] Old Manisees is bronzing more loiter-' crs this summer than everbefore. There are 2,500 strangers" on the island. Manisees is Indian, and means Little God's Island, and if Mr. Block hadn"t happened along 200` years ago the more romantic name would have clung to it. Fnr ninn mnnths: in tin: `mun Ha I98 |Jtl\IOI U3 KBIIJUIL `.5539? DELL`! is it was the S1118 qua non condi- tion imposed by the hard-to-please meastro, Pauline Viardot made up her mind to conde her beautiful head to the dentist, who first chloroformed her, and with a magic dexterity removed the iobno ious .bit of` ivory. A few nights after that terrible trial Pauline Vial-dot won her crown of immortalit in the role of Eides, in which she` wil never be equaled. When the tremen- dous echoes of the enthusiastic applause and rappels had abated, and the artistes were allowedeto. leave the stage, Gia- cozno Meyerbeer, trembling like a child with emotion, respectfully took Fides` right wrist, to which he adjusted a dia- mond bracelet worth 30,000 francs, in the middle of which and surmounted by rubies, stood the small iece of tooth that for so many years 0 ha been promi- nnnf. in the nwxal: nrf.iafn'n f-`nah-nvnu uuuu av; nu uuwuJ Jvoun uau UUULI pl.` nent in the great artiste's features. uuuauuv I.U LUU LLUL cuss xsuvno How so? exclaimed the great art- iste,-stupeed at such a dreadful revel- ation. ' Am I wrong in the interpreta- tion of. mly part of the drole? If so, you should tel me sir an Wil correct myseltl". Mada1rie, you are a perfect l:ides,`andI could not dream of A any gragediezln songstress to siggthanchglgsy e er an you answere e . - tro;' but-but- you can not perform Fid{>.s,dun1ess--Unle;s -what? quickly rep ie Pauline Viar ot bursting into tears. Unless you submit to a painful surgical p1perat,i on.` ` atnd dl think you wont, ma ame. at oyou mean, sir? Simply this, madame; you must have that overgrown tooth sawed to the `level `of the others. Oh, sir, it must be horrible. Not at all, mad- ame. I have just ordered the dentist of the queen of Prussia to come to Paris for the express purpose of attending your operatic magesty, and. you may rely upon his unsurpassed skill. Asit '39 the same mm. nnn nnndi. ::_ Cold Nights in, Stirling. vnhn ll-In:`-I`-nL-A L1.."-_ lb` 0 anuvva ucstbuuu uuu Lugu UEVUTBQ, At first the old bird should be conned in the coop till the young brood feel their strength. Feed them on chopped onion tops, chopped clover, cracked corn and coarse oat- meal. When they are old enough to run at large -they will mostly feedthemselves till fattening time. Turkeys hatched in May` will Le ready for the Thanksgiving and Christmas market. Crozier says that corn` meal and oatmeal `scalded with'- hot `sweet milk make the best fattening food. '.lha hrnnzn hn-`.u'ava` if PA.-I ........1....1..`- ._n. Some poultry raisers are accustomed to use chicken hens to hatch out the-young turkeys` and mother them. This is not wel!. They sit around the kitchen door in that `case,.and grow avorless and 'stupid. The turkey mother takes them far and near, roaming over. _ the farm, and destroying in- sects hurtful to the farmer's crops. T Grass- hoppers and potato beetles are their natural food. Left to run with their turkey mother, they mostly find their own food and their meat grows delicate and high avored. " AI`. rnf. fl-in nhl hind nhnuh-I In-. ...._n_-.1 1.. { ...-........5 -a uwnau-Jus xv uus l.1!`Q. Ill pl'0- L portion to their cost, the bronz.-s pay be ten` than any other stock raisel on the far.u. glurkeys that roam over the farm are less aiable to dLease than th as: that squat arouul ' the back door. prize turkey at the New York Tunciers ehow is u spiendld bronze g01Jbl6l'.'- nu; u too nvlvvvnu VVUI LUI U] puuuua. . lEhe young ones are very delicate. Care must be taken to shelter them tenderly in cold and wet weather. This is just `what their own mothers, the old bird, will not do. A turkey has very little sense. The wild instincts of thespecies have not yet been thoroughly educated out of them. The hen will hide her nest away in spite of every- thing, unless vigiluntly watched. She must be followed up anl spied upon until the nest V ll is discovered. .u.u.l.nu.-. uuu uuuu LUL LUUVL. 'l`his~-count1'y_ has been more `fortunate and` wiser. We had room and work enough; we pro ided education before .:-.lms, and, especially among our native - lioru population, have checked pauper- tsm asiit never was checked before in any civili ed community. No one can magine, who has not been familiar with the lowest classes, how entirely de- graded a character may become where there is an uncertain dependence on public and organized aims. The facul- ties of the individual are mainly bent on securing support by other means than industry. vul JIUJ 9: Now, that is not the way. The right way is to look back carefully over the career of the unfortunate toms and find out whether they or she made "the mistake. In either case she should remedy it and try again. The bestbreed to raise is -the bronze turkey, of which'webg'ive a picture. .Mr. Crozier says, indeed, in How the Farm Pays that 'the_ bronze turkey is the only one worth `bothering with. It is a cross of the wild turkey with the common domestic blacks ivariety. Sometimes the bronzes are so large as `.0 _weigh over forty pounds. 'l1u.;n Ivnnvuo nnn: nlin `nun... l`l\`I.IIlI"I\ (V--- _ Raising Turkeys. 'n the last yearor two turkeys have been more `profitable than any other kind of poultry. There is 9. great knack in rais- :ng them. Sometimes the farm wife starts off with a ne ock of forty to any in the spring, but they bring up in the fall with perhaps one solitary turkey for the family Thanksgiving dinner. Then she vows in disgust that she will try to raise no more turkeys. ' `l\Tnm 4-I`.-.4 L. .....J. L1-.. ....... mi... _:..LA. ...-.. AID BVLU I-LUIVJ nu uanaywva JV Mauve Morning glory owers in _these wintex hanging baskets are not so large as in sum- ,mer,b1_1t they stay open all day. If you `pinchback the vines they will grow more ` bushy, and the blossoms will cluster closer together. V Our artist has madea very good repre- ysentatiou of 9. morning glory hanging l basket. There are various kinds that will `do well, but one particular variety, the convolvulus mauritanicus, is the favorite. Its soft, dewy trumpets are blue. ]'nuon{nnr nnvv Hnvnnvvn in (Juana ny{v-nfou Ill uuarr.uu- vuuua AIJUU ULA.) uuanuu. The new fashioned morning glories are much handsomer and more varied than the old ones. Several kinds planted together will make a bit of beauty that the home of 9. 1 queen could not exceed. It will -make a. hovel look like a. fairy palace. Here is one point we muat never lose` sight of : It is our duty to crowd as much beauty as possible into this life. ` Make the world prettier for your being in it. Wherever you can add a bit of brightness do it. Then you will be remembered like a. sunbeam a_.fter you are A-...I Lllillo That woman, or man either, who is not touched by the soft beautyof owers is a. grumpy old slouch, who is not plea.-ant to live with. T _ ' A Winter Hanging Basket. Morning gfories are used with striking efect to make winter hanging baskets. jThey will` bloom plentifuily in any sitting. "room in a :ou;h or`ea.st window. They must Le protected from freezing in the cold nghts. Tiuis can be done by having solid ~bon-d shutters to put upon the window, out- side or inside. if the weather is very cold, blankets or woolen cloths must be hung M around the basket in addition. It is best to sprout the seeds separate in a. shallow box in a sunny kitchen window. f After that transplnntthem into the Lasket. Tkn non; Pon1\;r\v-bar` rnnnnenrv n-1t\I`I7n: DFD GEN ._____.._.___-___a 154m 61:` nndnzm Vumxnvs. MORNING aLoans.A - uuvu nu] uuxua V150! Ualnboge (the artist)--You want to. make a social success among. your- iriends as an amateur, I suppose? Miss De Garmo--Well. yes. Gambogc-Then you have everything necessary, To be `sure there's a trie 01' tWO'-' Miss lie Garmo (winkningly)--For in- stance? ' T (-3amboge--Talent ' and knowledge.` - But they would only cramp you as c an `amateur. THE %NOITIwIERVN _ ADVANCE. A Ne man ht to have charge of stock who is not kind to them. Be careful, then, whom you select for this business. Stockmust be comtortablein order to succeed.` - A manis now making and selling eggs. They 1ook_like the genuine article, but the `yolk is made of corn starch. and the `egg has not at all the qualities of the genuine article. W A Minn` sL.:-'...=;'L_A. -u_: - W. M:ze`sa.ys the fed to h They are crazy to` get them. ' fore burn three or to VA VIII? 5:11.: ` _ t charred corn cob: ogs will keep them in perfect health. One bushel be In 1 . Feed every g is enough for 111- weeks. lirail; seillolfyour peach orchard, if it I is stall inclined to hold water. Peaches e do not like wet feet. 1 - e I An old farmer seys that he has had re- markable _$i1bcee in"corn' raising` ,by simply` selecting the seed corn grains from the mid- dle ef tjhe em-5. V - ' 1;rofesso-r ;11"oop assures us that the troublesome wire grass makes very good hay. Spring lambs were advertised in city markets in J enuary; This seems a little bit previous. ` A Don`t bny any of that other`. new ` tangled oats that is oered for sale in small pack- ages. It is as great a swindle as the Bohem- ian > ' " - cow rather low rations for ten days. before she drops her calf, `and for ten days afterwards. . . 1 .... 11.55 uuu uu uvcu pl'UlJUUUlUl.l alga Ills` changes. Contrary to former practice, young cows are nowadays quite frequently milked nearly up to calving.` With old cows it makeslittle di :re:1ce; but great milkers, especially great butter cows, are in danger of having milk fever, and it is thought that there is less danger if the ow of milk does not cease. Cow stables should be warm; sheep pens, on the contrary, must be airy. As ewes approach. yeaning, increa'~'o their rations of roots, separate them in small pens from the ock, and take care that the early lambs do not get fatally chilled. It _is well to `cut the straw used for litter into` foot lengths. Breeding sows need -close, warm pens, with plenty of litter and good feed, in which cooked vegetables, potatoes, pump- `kins, turnips and raw apples may well be mixed. Horses need` care to prevent colds when used on the road. -Am, Agriculturist. `Lay in a good suppiy early. T ' Thing; to Do and to Know. They now make articial eyes for horses. ` Clover seed is going to be high this spring. `l\..-J_- -,. 9 (heoklng Pauper! m. [IIoward`s Letter.) i 1'he worst evil in the world is not poverty or hunger, but the Want of manhood or'cl1a1'a.-;ter which alms-giv- mg directly occasions. The English ;ha.ve- tried alxns until the kingdom seems a vast poorhouse, and the prob- Zorn of pauperism has assumed gigan- tic and almost insoluble form. The na- tion have given everything but educa- tion, and the result is a vast multitude of wretched persons, in whom pauper- l.\T[[l is l)ll`lTlf.P(l liln-\ n. (Hanan n9 tkn Farm Stock This Month. The 14111 of Februarvvis said to Le the steel: feeder s midwinter, and so, in fact, it is, very nearly. The last; part of the winter is, however. really more trying toblive stock than the rst, and they need more careful feeding and better protection against ajmnn-m:_ (`.nnt|-nrv fn `nil:-nnm .........c:.... u.-...u u. uu.; 1.411.; 1.} .u.um:: Luna )1! luu _y'Ull. It won d beta good plan for our farmers to experiment alitt1e witl1 raising their own new varieties of po.ato. They have only to plant the .contents of one of the seed balls funnel upon a potato vine. It will produce 8.-lurore number of tiny tubers. Select the largest of these and plant` them next year. You can tell the second year of l the tubers what the result is going "to be. You may . thus happen to produce a. very ne potato. The tubers are-not at all apt _to be like those of the parent plant. which makes the experi- ment more interesting. Try it. Not much time will be `required, and it will be some- thing tie boys and girls will especially `enjoy doing. A ` I Seed Potatoes. ` Imt spring there was considerahle trouble caused by seed potatoes not sprouting. The - Late Rose was one against which this charge was especially brought. The fact is that potatoes run out, and new varieties must be started every -few years. There are symp- toms that even the favorite" Early Rose is beginning to run out in some localities For these places the Early Ohio, Early Sunrise and Lee s Favorite are to be` recommended in. tend. They are all very early. Try themyif the Early Rose fails with you. If. \xr nn .1 lxn n nrnnrl ulnn 4' n _ . . .. r.__._.___._ vuv vuux IA. She stopped churning when the butter - globules were about the size of a. pin s head. E Shetthen drained 011 all the buttermilk from a tap in the churn, allowing it to run I through ne muslin in order to catch the _ escaping particles of butter, which she put ` back into the churn. She drained out every possible drop of T buttermilk before begin- ning to wash with cold water. She washed four times in cold water, and even a fifth timeif the water did not run from the butter in a perfectly clear state. The but- ter should be thus washed immediately after buttermilk is drawn. The different wash- ings should neither be hurried nor delayed. The temperature of the water should be about the same as the churning temperature. She "worked the butter as little as possible in order to prevent it from becoming greasy. During and after working, the butter should be gradually reduced to the temperature at which it should afterwards be kept, say about 45 degs. when it became quite rm. J wuvvvn vvnuu uunu VV_aUUlu Referring to the Normandy or unsalted } bu ter, she said it had driven the very nest `English butter out of the English markets I owing to its good keeping qualities, it being` as pure and fresh from the dealers as from the churn. e V LUl'l.l.1U.llDul.lUu LL! ll lllnfg quau luv]. VI. u-I--In V- 5 ream. All the other utensils should first -be scalded and then thoroughly washed with ' cfrld water. If this were done imeniiedtiautglg . ter use, and the utensils remain un ll for some time, then this Washing should be t I repeated just before use. In further en-_ ' forcing her methods of cleanliness, she urged that the human band should not touch the butter in any of the stages of manufacture. There was always a minute perspiration ex- i uding from the cleanest hands, which in- \ juriously affected the butter. Wooden utensils now being procurable, there was now ` Ilsllclrexcuse for using the hands. The churriliing ould be commenced slowly, and the c urn . should be well ventilated. if there were not . ample means for the air to escape, the but- tering process would be hindered, if not prevented. . The cream should be put into ggedchurn, as a rule, at. from 58 deg. to eg., and a thermometer should be used. if the cream did not show this tem- I perature, she lled a tin cylinder with hot ~, or cold water and stirred it in the cream , until the desired temperature was obtained. i She repudiated the use of salt, but as this ' drug was required to please some people s , ta tes, she usei brine in preference to dry `i salt, made by_ mixing one pound of ue salt , with a gallon of water, adding this liquid to ' the butter before removal from the churn, 1 just after thoroughly washing the granular ` butter with cold water. 13..L'..____:..__._- `L- \-.v,,,,, 1 , q. . .1..-.___.,.._.-.. s I ! . - lfdel `I3-utterxillnklng, Among the English authorities on prac- tical butter making, Miss Smithard has dis- tinguished herself. She explains her methods in the show yards and delivers lectures on . the subject. Above all she insis;s `on strict cleanliness in every detail, remarking `that neither a rst-class quality not a long-keep- ing article can be obtainel unless this rule be rigidly adhered to. the attributes, in a ' large measure, the lack of keeping qualities in English butter to the failure of thorough cleanliness; All Lustermilk utensils, after u~e, `should have three washings; rst, well 1 rinsed with cold water; sec-on'l,'thoroughly 3 scalded with boiling water; third, washed again with cold water. These washings are necessary from the fact that small quantities ` [of acid from the buttermilk become lodged 4 in the minute depressions of the utensils. i A very small quantity of acid might set up fermentation in a. large quantity of milk or All Ilsa AI-lanes -1}-Ant.-`Ia ahnnl Hrnf. lI`I`o\I\ av` GROSS CUT SAWS AND AXE5 ~...__._.__..j.._..\ . . BK 1% Q1 gt) 4% ` hQR\ \; _j------.--;U : STOVEES 2 STEDVEEQS v `ALL THE MOST APPROYEDMAKES. WITH THE LATEST AND BEST Tm-:fTT: as` AT MANUFACTURERS PRICES. -T T 1 T JOHN rL.~..\`f '. u5.\au\.Lau\.A 1JUL_t3Ul`lo3, au VYLIULIJ. pUpUl"' xsm 1s blunted hke a dlsease of the T bIood -\'vho cannot be anything but de- ' poudcnts and idlers. _ Ingondon alone :':::'.'.,u(J:), pe1'_annum are expended in organized charmes, yet till the year t.~.;1 no gellernl system of popular ed-V acation had been formed. rm..',. .........n..... L... ., , ,, *- BARR|EST0%VE&FURNAGE Em? G- G. s M I T JUST ARRIVED? uuv vu II suuvssulv nvvvv VI. vuususuu UUUIL DIJUVU. It is the only cooker with perforated Adisheseso arranged that the com.` steam will -not mingle with the food as it passes down from one apartment to 3; WA fn nnnlr nnnnbn urn-u1rl:nn.u turn:/xv-In llU\lJ ALLA- ....n.nA..1.1 nun uuu u.nu.|;.":U vvxuu. Luv .I.UUu. G3 LI: yaaaca UUWU LIUUL UHU l1P&l'|:l.11UH [0 3:1 `mu-u\iVARRAN'|`ED to cook meats, puddings, onions and other vegetable, time without emitting anv unpleasant odor or mingling in avor. The zxvemg of the Cooker will be about One Cent per week and w1ll sage about i1f[_yt'uL. much.` ~ . o.o 0 1. . ~.. . o. . . l'\ - l 5 VIII II-Ilvvl. ublauuo It is the only Cooker that has a safe regulating safety valve that needs nr, 1 attention and cannot possibly get out of order. ' It is the only steam cooker with an escape steam tube that is equally ada:-_ useon a gasoline stove or common cook stove. ' V ` n :. u... ...n.. ......1-..- ...:.L .....:-_-L-n `:::-L-- -- ...J 4: n -tight covers that prevent steam and odor from escaping, without rubber pm" The HM JAAU All vnu \l _ Three kinds of meat, four kinds of vegetables and two puddings may be, For .\'ett1 at the same time and over one hole in the stove, by the steam of one Juan ,,,-jvorm Erup consequently about one half of wood is saved in preparing dinner, v.}1ich,`,3f- LOW, about onethird less time. _ ' " Pennsylv - The Diamond Cooker is constructed on a common sense princlple. It hakll mother- useless machinery. ` A - V Itis the only Cooker that has Stationary Steam Signal. ' It can be heard -},,-0,,-,.; ' V part of the house, thus absolutely preventing the possibility of any danger` of D t l . t from forgetfulness. . l he M) has I1r,.i0l'S, tln y ( oI>onf_;nn Oh!` nanr-nn'l> nnngnnlu tit\"(\I1`- ls` .\...l.... I._llrIVIlVl!IIIIJ U I Innlll uuunn Amnm ' ,_......__A._..___._.._______.._.__.,._ 7 _ have a, min N6 Steam in the House. No Offensive Odor. No Burning of;30$f,e,.S1f,:`,? NoFrost on Windows. N o Dampness on Walls, Dr. Im-5 No Tough Meat. W` W - People W ,his year, 11 g IIlI.`_.I.IIl_ LI_I__- .Q_...I.I._. j!__.. A__ _I 31- _ A "Better. Cooking and Less wc ...unu vvvuu-ILUU I 1:6. Ithas just come to light that the Cocos-Keelings, in the great Eastern archipelago, are go zerned by a. Scotch- man. He is not known as king, but his power over the people of those sum- mer isles is an reme. Steam -en Ines andcforges have on introduced t are; _bn_t_u`1`oney, igh our lx3eaning`ot money, 18 un no , . t` hm ovznoomoeps nepau ng eurren .vn.-. u . 1 V _ s _ ,` Na.ti-nual l ` ' ' K Stomach, Li .' - V ; ' T A man 111 have a min- cooima mum T` A . SOUTH SIDE DUNLOP STREET, , NEXT DOOFLETO THE_mCAN_'|'-LON TEA STG 41%` I A A I D u c an . '__.i_ _ - -:-_u-nu I`I T T11.-'1'- I U'II`l'IU"~`=-" on at short notice. A full stock of Iron Pipe for steam. Water and Gas.Globe V :1 1 as T and; Check Valves. Steam Gsusres. and Water Glasses. All work in this line . promptly attended to. TIME, LABOB L__M9NEY SAVE; "MS & PlA!!I9!!?_sn..=t!:B==I:-_TE= ruanm n it iahnv-tnnthm A I h L %% .-SKATES, SLEIGH: BELLS, rLA'rro1z,n AND o1'm'-:11 scams, ` ` % "J. HENDERSON` -Hausa. It has oftenibeen fohnd, in the his- W'Iory of the riots of this country; that when the soldiery have been brought in 1110 face of a. mob, even the ofeers were .so`unac guainted with their duties as to v`:\ illUe the most ridiculous ignorance of what was re.1uired of them and of their men in the cxigeney; and T they and aheir troops have been driven ignomin- ieusly from the eld. They would have Known what to do, without hesitation, had theybeen in the face of an enemy; hut, surrounded as they were by a 5 Eruntic mob, they failed--and for lack `at the necessaryedrilling. has received twenty-seven State prizes and ten priies in Canada. ':U11,.;l;'1 Patented Match ]st, 1882, and November 27th, 1884. AGENTS \\',\_\'1g FM. `W hich we are now selling at :1 G|'()at. Discount. BARS OF DINGMANS 'I".'I1' "I"!'II\Il'l11%'l'\| tun` . -- j-_ STO UK 01` W A L 1` H A M .:.- .:J4..;.1uI.|.u..cJ..|.V D `:'i'.':"rI1C"'1*RIG SOAP FOR E`! BE l||.I.8 USE, WILL. OLOSE DOORS WITHOUT SLAMMING. o -1- -1- O N Bra. 0 s ., L{`. ;,`:Vf j\.{ .% Mnn..`-AL.-_-_- ......J 5.1. A ._-_L_ I-.. LL , f1 - \]]nn.! ' 1:. A. DOUGLAS, BARRIEA AND smou D. in every large city--in fact in every city where a police force is employec,l`--,- is perfect drill should prepare police- men to meet the exigencies arising from any tumultuo.zs assemblage of the peo- ple, so that, at a moments warning, these conservators of the peace will be ready to act,and to act understandingly and promptly. lt will be found that a few determined policemen, placed in the eld at a moments notice, will prove one of the _ best and most direct methods of quelling a mob.` lhese, by -skillful maneuvers, can take amob in tlank, or in rear, or in front if neces- ear , and so employ themsel res an thcir cl u bs that almost be-; fore the mob would know what was impelling them they driven from the field of action. This drilling, advised to be used with police- men, can also be used to excellent ad- gfvantage with the militia of every state, so that in case of emergency they can be used with as good elfect as police- `HIGH . ' ' would be `