Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 25 Feb 1886, p. 6

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It is certainly `Valid t0 be infnr `Live prompt and . .u'er1ng- \`uch unntn .1... 1lllLI\lIlluI5' vuru ellow Oil. adu we in all ordiuu soreness. I t on ,lo1_'e -throat, c J Hlitms of wo1;ld Hwy 8 ki1M Advertis~-um Franted. In th Ax/luv. A I palance of Alla lax: - . ad cause, E T116 W01`: sble d'(mt : 4 For Netti. In, , 17. A` xuu. Awvuuw .. Horm ETD )Y.iHlI4 3 rof. Low .~ >121 V0 soon-r_x~ hat is a gt mug 1;u1: uoking. FOR 1>\~s-1 we a punt. n1oh s' \ H4: Juli` amlin, .-\H:l `Ages will `L .)t be pet-fx .~ (33 tt-(l.'}1< 1e may 1- 7 '_lCk hair. "Tun R 1d.. any VCS to .` DOWD i we sbci ` .rIs you .'ennsylv.~ l\V'\ The United States Army `Gun - Elelonoy of the Piece--Five Forces. . . [Cox-. St. Louis Globe-Dernoc`ra.t.]` Any intelligent man, with vordi-nary. attention and perseverance, will nd that he can, after a little practice, hit an object the si e of the present. mid- range target at 4-00, 500_ and even '600 yards with a degree of accuracy that will positively astonish him. ' The guns are all right nowadays, and will shoot straight enough if they are held prop~ erly and sighted correctly. It is, in nine cases out of ten, the man behind the gun who is responsible` for the crooked shooting of the weapon. Most warlike nations have adopted repeating ries, or, as they should be more prop.- erly called, magazine guns.` Ours is the exception, andl suppose we can not, therefore, be classed among the warlike i nations.of the earth. Other countries seem to give but little attention to the individual, merely striving to get the nest and most destructive ries manu-` factured, only to lace them in the hands. of the stu i est of men. -Now, with our own litt e army, although `we have no magazine gun regularly adopted, yet so thoroughly drilled is `the soldier in the handling of his piece that it becomes a most destructive wea on in his hands,"eve`n'though a. sing e-loader, and I do not believe any army of the size in the world, howe -er armed, could stand up before us at any . reasonable range for any length of time. vv '1 1 .'-A 1,, ,_ ,'I .1 A NM \ I, ' Shiloh s 4 )Id by -J` amlin, .\` hen they u- VVHY \\ I H. 111 give Hum s.,a.nd .~".. Id M; J. .:..,,, .v.u._ .n t be u `ore busri 'ES1m.0n - me for cu` )1d by .' namlill, _-\i In seem Se man w 11: we fr. .me with Archm 11: some \Vaiat. of tin: .3csSar_\ Booksy ` February I wvu.-\. had b ty Sayings graphs for `. the S rndl-:i5IeNcY in nine TPaAc"I'Ics. -Lojwxq w. %"{.`&i"ce ii} gs; . I9. wxtm ea.n.~1` A htuins L4 -71 1. A shrewd W11!-Taker of Long Ago. { [Con Cleveland Leader.) John Randolph, of Roanoke, was a slaveholder, but when he died he gave -every black he owned his liberty, with money enough to; urchasea home in the west. I?andolp_ knew that his will would be contested, and, to insure his slaves their" freedom, he left large legs}- vcies to prominent white men`, who, he argued, would go into court and fright all who attemntnd tn nammm. 1..-.3 ;.. ul-suvu, vvvuxu. 50 xuw COUPE ana Ilgllt .who attempted to establish his. in- sanity. The idea. was a shrewd" one; and well carried` out, for an endeavorvwas made to break -the will, butthe slaves want free. - When Ireland Was Scotla. ' lB1`0ok7y:| Eagle.) Scotia now means Scot-1and,-but it once meant Ireland. Irelandwas known to the Greeks as Juvcona, about two centuries before the birth of `Christ. Ca sar-calls it Hibernia, as does Ptolemy in the map he has. given of the- island. ' It is said that the Phoeniciaus first gave Ireland the name of Hibernia, meaning thereby utmost, or last habitation," for beyond that land, westward, the Phoenicians never extended their voy- ages. Toward the decline of the Roman empire the country began to be called, Scotia, a name retained by the monastic writers till the eleventhcentury, when, the name Scotia having` passed to modern, Scotland, the ancient name of Hibernia `began to be again _'used. . I mlghuie s of an Object. | Richard A. Proctor says. no optical contrivance whatever can make `an ob- 3'9 1.00.1` ,b!`iEh`5.f1.` than it .1`68l1 . is} W8}-Part from absorption _which iminishes light, we get exactiy the same "bright- ness, neither more nor less, whether the obgect be magnied or puried; &\JLD L LILILIII-I5 GWGJ But those Caucasian Cossacks are men of " quite another stamp. They. gave the Russians an innity of trouble before their mountains were conquered; now they serve Russia with awhole soul and are the hardest, stanchest, and most ruthless of ghting men. They shoot well, and do excellent work as mounted infantry. a They will `charge knee to knee as regular cavalry, and odds make no odds to. them. In temper- ament, as soldiers, they resemble the Goorkhas more than any other soldiers who serve under the `British ag. Like them they kill and spare not; they have -no comprehension of the meaning of giving quarter to an _enemy, who they consider deserves extermination, to say nothing of `rather freehanded mutila.-. tion in the course of the operation. The Cossacki as Fighters. v - `_Archibal1 Forbes.] -The Don Cossack, with- his pug nose ` and tow hair, is a. fmud as a.` ghting man. Ifehas a genius for plundering, and makes a capital scout, but he has an instinctive disrelish for anything] rhke close ghting. -He innitely pro-V] fers running away. R111 1-hnca r`n11nna:nn I"'.\nn..,_1... ....- | I-IAN!`-l\l\-A III \Ill LLJU KI\J\lJ I-ULDDL VULlllS. This practice, which was called in- .uncfion,i has been revi-.e~;l recently with happy results. ihysieians even go so far as to introduce oil into the sys- tem by hypodermic infections, that is, by perforations in the skin. 3';-.ny. _ stomachs rejeet oil, but the system will oftenabsorb it when rubbed on the body, or ejected" under the skin by the llypoderxnic syringe. ` The good effects of cod-liver oil for. consumptives and `delicate persons has long been'recog- ni ed; Diabetics, who call not take sugar, ndoil very strengthening, be- cause probably of the _fact that it sup- plies the same chemical constituents to the system that sugar does. Another point with, regard `to diet` has been ' brought out at arecent `conferenceof physicians in New `. ork. Delicate pe1'~ sons with weak stomachs will some- times nd it_to their advantage to eat but little at a time, -but to take food. often. ` tfix and even seven meals a day ' are not too much if the food is weli _c`.-ose11 and the meal is not too hearty.. Somwtlii`: g Abou Foods. - [Demorest`s Month1y.l V V Some physicians say that `the valu of oils as. food ' are not as well under- stood by the modems as by the an- cients. olive oil, mutton fat, and` other oleaginous substance formed a large part of the dietary of the Greeks. Romans, and other ancient nations. Chemically, the constitution. of oil is the same as sugar~-_they are both hy- drocarbons. and in the animal a econ- omy perform the same function. The ancients not only swallowed oil, but rubbed it on the body after bathing. ` Thin rnvnnno nrhinlu moo nullnzl :11 yu lllbllblv ul. l|"\J\.Il\.IL t The tl'El_,L'tOl`_)' is the pnth of the bul-V let` through the air. A bullet red from a. vine is ztctedr upon by five different forcee. 1. The projectile force. 2. The resistzmce of the air. 3. The force ofrgravity. 4. The resistance of the sides of the grooves. Th_e`fr'ic`tion against the surface of the bore. A" V2u'iation in the intensity of either of these forces wlil eiieet a corresponding .c1mn;;e in the path described by the bullet-. (jeography has also something to do with the trajectory, as ` both alti- tude and the condition of the atmos- phere work a slight variation in the elevation ` a r|\|__ 1 n o I `- -- ' till! -l\Il-53 LJULUU LIIULU "DIV `-J|-llJVuIl\u\IQ VJL names, occupying considerably more than a column and a half, and it is no exaggeration to say that fully ve-sixths of , them were entirely strangeto the ears of New Yorkers. ` . L VI! 1 know that this statement will not be accepted, because it is the general im-~ pression thatiwealth opens the doors to so-iety -in New York; still such isnot the fact. There are hundreds` of million- aires along the avenues who live mag- nicently and spend enormous incomes, yet whom nobody" knows or cares to Lnow. Not long ago a list of the num- ber of men who were worth more than $1,000,000 was published in. one of the papers here. There were hundreds of nnnnou nnnnrurinm nnncirlnrohl n vnnrn .L\ U W I U173. ' In thesame way we observe that if a man makes a great fortune in Chicago, Milwaukee, Lleveland, Cin:-innati or Pittsburg he~comes here, for many of the magnicent palaces on Fifth avenue have be;-n purchased by men from other cities who made haste to_ come here as soon as they,had `made vast for- tunes. I don t know whether they like New York or not, . but they `seem to stay. It is true that a man does not amount to much here unless he is a good deal of a man, but still the azlvantage of life in the most popular city in the ['nio,n'are too nu- merous to be overlooked. A man worth V $l0,000,000 is of importance, if only on account of his wealth, in Cincinnati. But $10,000,000, unless it is backed by social graces and other advantages, will do little or nothing for a man in New Yorlr. . W11,` 119 A I ,n,AI1I,,AI__ `New York. The conceit of New York. _ , mlokely Hall; in San Francisco Argpnant.] V- -To men who were born here and have lived here long New York is miles and. away . so superior to any other city `in America that he never thinks of utter- ing them or -mentioning_ them `in the same breath. ibis may be the subli- mity of conceit--pe'rhaps it is--but the fact remains that New Yorkers consider there is but one city in America. They may travel all over the world, but when they return to America. they live in __-__ _. .I......_. A.L..J. it A V I ~ Select Farmers Clubs. . i The` Iowa Register, says that `a dozen , people is enough .to form a. farmers club. , . They should be men andwomen both. They 3 'the'.i1e5:t faiiner _w:11,_ try: to rival: the last should meet at one another s homes, where 1 nobody will come who is not specially in- vited. - Once a month, the year around, the xheetings should be held, and regularly at tended. , Those_ at _who~.e homes the club meets for the_mo'nth will. teke_are ,,to_ hgyei `the-house and fax-min the best:.order to be - lool_ed_2_1t`by _ cri`.ica.1_eyes.~ The next month : one, and so improvement will be 'st`eadyi,and constant. The Register editor `adds: . ' Rih `I"1`n' `.I II |I\IPAUU|p\u~L:- '11.. L --_ -2 5 ' u land szock, selectlclub nsystemsl bring to- vvu-Jvcouu. _ Auu 1I.CE',l3tUlV'U\llllUl'_au(--ls: Besides the improvements `in house, farm 4 g`e.her persons who have condence in each `other, and there is more freedom `of: expres- sion and action. \ The men and women soon begin to feel the same freedom to talk and l act; that they do in theirown family circle. One of the .gre`atest',draw11ac_lcs to the `farmer andl'1is pnbllcrelforts is his backwardness in communicating his iidelas before public as- semblies. He soon loses all tlliSV`!1'lb&X`aS`1- menu in the seclusion of 11s select club. VV have known intelligent farmers, who could ` not be induced to sa. : a word Lefore a pro miscuous audience, vs he were soon ready and anxious to talk freely and to the rurpos, beforegthe club. And soon the pub ic be- came aston shed `at. his freedom-and famil- iarty"in conducting pu lc meetings of hi: party,` or for temperance, agriculture, Ol `anything so frequently demanding actin and clear-headed men. The priva:e'club :~ the place to educa.e farmers for such po`. tione. ~ The , ground plan explains itself`. The ! nes-`Is, it will be observed, all range along the I center :pas~~agew`ay; At the rear of each is a . little slide door in the partition to admit the ` hand to collect eggs or catch the hens. Or 1 this may be a trap door to let down. Each ' compartment` has a single door near the : ground. at the top of the stone foundation, 3 for the fowls to pass In and out. This can T be shut at night and in cold weather. The ' `earth oor is the best for the compartments. ! It is the natural thing. The manure should , be cleared'away`i`rom time to time, sufficient g ' ly to le;._ve the floor a dust-walow for the . ` hens. A pile of fine gravel should ,. bethrown upon each oor, too. In winter the house can be heated by hot water pipes buried just below the surface of the ground." The water is heated by a kerosene lamp, which willxhurn all night without replenish- ing. By means of this warm house eggs can ' - be had lentifully in winter. Chicks canbe .' batched) in midwinter also, ready to make! spring broilers. The separate compartment: l ' will make it easy to rear them. They should be allowed outd oors` of warm days, after , the first two weeks. i . 3 The house is divided into , four icompart- I ments, for different breeds of fowls, if they are wanted. Thisvsuits the purpose of poultry fanciers well. But ordinary farm` people who rni e chickens for prot will not? care to keep breeds separate. The four separate rooms will bepa 'matter of con- venience even then,however,` enabling one to get at the nests without tramping in` among the rojosts, and to put sitting hens by t ! themselves. For farm _. purposes the ' Ply- mouth Rocks and brown Leghorns are the best ibreeds to get. _. "A. cross between the . two would probably be of exceptional ex- cellence. The partitions between the apart- ments are boarded up to the bottom of the windows. From there on they are con- tinued with wire netting, to let-light all` through. The V\indow sills` are two feet six - inches high. 1 u . . .. -_ .__ I _ _ SIDE. The house is built upon a. stone foundation 8. foot high. The front and sidesare mostly windows; . Above and below these the house is covered with ma`.ched boards, ornamented with woodwork. In the center of the build- ing, the cupofa shown in the picture is really a ventilator. It may be covered with open- ing and doing slots 01' scroll-sewed panels. This ventilator is immediately above the passageway in the center of the house, so that the cold air will not (16.-'(,`G1lL_l upon the ' fowls. . It is opened and shut by cords hang- _ing down overlthe center. l I I n l I I I l n I l 1. FRONT. The structure has four gables. The front one is meant: for a colony of pigeons. Each gable is oruamentged with representations of some of the feathered tribe in scroll sawing. The building is 25 feet long by 16 feet wide, though, of course, it may be of any size. The above forces, in whatever lati- tude, are seldom or never the` same -at any two different times, so that two bullets will rarely strike in the same place, even though the piece. be. held perfectly, or placed in a vice when red`. The resistance of the air and [gravity- are the mains forces which affect a bul- let after it passes the muzzle. The former decreases in proportion as the speed of the _ro,`ecti1e lessens, while the latter acts a ways alike, no matter at what rate the lead is flying. Therefore a ball in `ight does not-, as is generally supposed, describe a perfect are in the air, but -rather a curve somewhat sharper at its endingthan `in its begin- ning half. ` V r[\_ _,__,, 1 u 1 u .. - ' Herewit-h are illustrations of a picturesque fowl and poul ry house. It will be a hand- some ornament to the farm landscape. - Farmers with hands on them can do much `of the car; enter work themselves. t(-JMA. u. 000/: `V A Poultry House. _-11,, ,4... ;____ -3 _ cnofxb PLAN. THE iwRTHERN%L ._. .. .<._.4..>....n.np.::m.>,'u3\lx-at-1:3u%`'\7.:'fJi .' fr` ` V The Best Insecticide. b b 4 u | T VVe have several hen houses, each located ' in a different place in the orchard. They are | double boarded, with tarred paper between, l and with large windows on the south _ side. -Ineach we keep a. stock of hens, and by rais- ing several broods of chickens in each there is no trouble in keeping the hens and chick- ; ens scattered all over the orchards. - WA `mono. nnwnn F4-u....I A I....LJ.A.. .L_ -0 - - I I . I I r I ` Things to Do and to Known , .- Young chickens hatched even~'as'late. as, :`March. I ring tteen to twenty cents a pound. -Hatched-in i-Ianua.ry.and February in east- :.ern cities they sell for seventy.-ve cents a I .pound, ._ Du(.=_ks bring $2 gzpiece. The incuba- iVtorcu1`;b3_'1,191_?Q;g,o0d advantage _or win- telf hatching. '. , W . , _ . ' B9118 cc1_1,,b'eeasiV1y kept in..alot fenced I ,y_v1't:_hV,l9arbed,wire.A___n1c [ , ;- V; W ` 1 .'.)`_3 V IIIVI X The gun which has the cor-rect length of bore, the right number of twists in the grooving`, the proper char e of powder for the length of the barre , and bullet of a weight in proportion to the amount of powder behind it, is apt to gixe the best results. Iiqualize the ve forces, as nearlyes possible, and the gun approaehesnearest perfection; A great `deal of the poor shooting of our modern ries can be traced direct-ly back to de-v fective ammunition. pl! Angnnl:-o- --------~"' ' " Lvv1u_.I,yul l_)Cu.Wl.1'Uo . ,A.n -Ohio mun, bed .5 hen thatelaide daiibie :.yel1;'_e_c_l egg every othergday, and [on the tween day. _s.h9.1a.id W0 6338; on.;o_f whieh had a shell while the other had non-.e Ove'r'600,000 miles-afibarbed wire fencing were made in this country in 1885. It has `been deojdeddn the ;cou1:ie' that'wh'ere: it is ;11a_ed~for.`the roa.dside_te1i<-iug the owner can- [nob beheld responsible for injuries done, to L animais alongthe roed. ` . . `I___I I ,_,-_c u-w ovum: A-bushel of beans, rich in thenitrogenoua elements` for which beef is purchased, at any reasonable `price will do more to sup- port life and labor in the family of en labor- ing man will tour timeg or ten tixnep. the same amount expended in beef. .Let those to whom economy is an objectoto this wel`. Tho. c$st ot cultivating. a farm, and tilt _cost'ot sickness in the -family, can be greatly reduced by drainage. ` ypna 31.1.0!-V01 cu. an uvux luv urcuuras. We have never found a. better insectieide for all class of insects that ever come to the [ground than an old Then with a brood of -chicks, -unlessperchanoe it be a-clutch of -ducks. :And our orchards, so far as the hens r roam, are entirely clear from insects. --Rural '-A New `Yorker; ` - ' . Keep the Cow's Clean. If the cows have ther anks lined with manure, as too many of them h ave at this time of year, you should select a warm day and secure 9., few. pa-ilfuls of hot water to carry to the` barn and wash off those flanks. Soak the manure well,: using a sponge or rag, before` you `proceed to scrape it oil. or all the hair will come with it. Remember that the rstpoinet to be attained in S6. curing agood yield of miik from q. cow` is to make her conifortable. This c,:n never be done so long as she is compelled to carry a large weight of manure on her anks, and then it `looks so abominably. No one would ever _ buy milk coming from such an animal if -they knew it. '--American Dairyman. ,, ...v--.-w ---u -4-xv-uvvnvxl A.Ivuc_)'- } Mr. C. F. Muth, talking of honey raising, ; thought that Florida might be the Eldorado _of the beekeeper working for extracted honey, but that a peculiarity of the climate in the mangrove L-ou`ulry--dam pm-ss,--n1ade the raising of comb honey impracticable. This led to the subject of what kind of honey, comb or extracted, was of greatest demand and the most protable to the pro- ducer. The facts on this subject would indi- cate that there was 8. very great difference in the kind: of honey demanded, depending `on locality. Extracted honey could be pro- duced at less than half the cost of comb honey, but beekeepers .should produce both kinds, being governed by_ the demand in their own markets as to Whichykind they ._should lroduce the most of. . T `- _ .....-..,.. I A sheep improves in avor with age, and , they are never too old as long as they are healthy and fat. V In fact, they must be two : years old or more before they make what is called red mutton, that is, mutton which when cooked done has red gravy. It is best before killing to let the sheep remain twelve hours without food, having plenty of water. Then, everything being ready, cut the sheep's throat clo e to the jaw and head to the bone, inserting the knife into the spinal , column of the neck to insure quick death. , The hind quarters should then be skinned, as they are easily .reached; a gammonstick ` is then inserted into` the sinews at the hock, .when the sheep is su~pended and the skinning completed. intestines should he quickly taken out, which prevents the wool tasteso often men- tioned by haters of mutton. This taste comes from an infusion of the excretions in- to the circulation after the vital powers no longer prevent it, as the sheep has the long- est intestinesof ruminants. In killing game experts always take out the intestines at once for the same reason. The carcass of mutton may then be wrapped in the wooly side of the s,heep-kin without harm, as ex- periment will show. The sheep may be hung up at once by twine around the hooks and the gaznm on stick, and the same opera-_ tion gone through, but the rst process `is the best.-Toronto Globe. Next the ' 41.18011, I The farmerstask is indeed a diicult one. . To perform it thoroughly requires qualities i that partake of the heroic. But the Amerl-A `can farmer, fortunately, has strong, alert _ mental faculties. A good memory is one of , them, for one thing. He will probably not , forget Senator Evarts idea. of the farmer, how when a- man was too utterly a blessed down" to farming. fool for anything else he had to come ` 11 `IRA \Il WWII`? \I\I `VII Iv\I JZ:I_IuIL`I.I5O . Senator Evarts should derstand that no "man comes down to farming. It is at * . once the mo it useful and most exalted of all ` . occupations. Any numbskull who has money -4; ' can get into the United States senate. `A good many men who are there now bear wit- iness to it. But to become well-to-do at i farming requires brains, judgment, industry, and practical intelligence of the highest 'order. Not only have farmers to contend I against drouths, wet seasons, rot, insect pests | and all the evil forces of nature, but they `have also to bear up against the annual eruption of idiocy of the average congress- I`I`IIII`I Coming Down to Farming. T Senator Evarts, of _New York, must be i careful what he is about and mind his ps_and qs better. In a late speech he said that when a man made a. failure in everything ~ _else. being a politician included, there was nothing left for him but to go to a better I world or come down to farming ? nnrnnfnn wwnnfo n`|t\uI1A uunnnafnn #1-inf an ovvuavv GLLIIUUUJDIULI. By defective ammunition I do not mean poor powder and poor-lead, but the mistake which is made in not having suifcient powder and no more, only enough to drive a bullet of a certain weight through the air true to the mark. Man cartridges have toomuch powder for t e weight of the lead, while others have not sutlicient. The present service cartridge. which is com grains of quick pow er and a bullet (`weed of seventy- weighing 500 grains. -comes nearer to th_e`tr_ue. qualication o,a perfect car- trid e than any heretofore adopted and lnoti by the government. ' . _. Fox-5these'-c and various other `reasons we " favor smallpand s`elect;"clube - for farmers. ' '1`heywork better together. There is more lharmony. The migratory system or meet-` i I ing at each .other`s houses adds. a much-_ needed social feature to the socie'y. It be- I comes a monthly day. of recreation, soon ! lates to greater exertions in improving and , adorning the home and farm, a desideratum .great1y needed. The_select number throws `more responsibility on each member to be ` present at each me.ting and aid in making , it a success. If VS e had two or three of these ; select` working hives `in each township there would soon be a marked advance in the productive capacity of the farm, in the neat- ness and arrangement of all of its appoint- ments, and more taste in the adornments of yard, house and the family. The sad, tired and wan `appearance would depart from many faces, and there would be fewer cases I I I society in the towns and cities. ardently sought hyyeach member. It stixnu- . . q seeking the comforts and renements of I Comb and Extracted Honey. I `D `M'...1. ..n_:._.. -2 Lu, Killing Sheep. Put I0 BARS OF SOAP FOR NEXT ooo'i:5 "iris CANTON TEA ST: ;2.zb;`tI3c`L2`f.1'." T ---'-"-`=03 " 1e crust - STOVES 2 STOVES 2 it V L THE MOST APPROVED MAKES, WITH THE LATEST AND BEST F[':.'=ib:.13m`35e`* AT MANUFACTURERS PRICES. _}f1`j;.`f_ ' A ' JOHN l E_.\ ` '1i0ns ?" 3 MILLS & PLAX'l'0N S cnesnnrsa |=unnAcss::::3 ; Put 1: at short notice. A full stock of Iron Pipe for Steam, Water and Gas, Globe `\'.-.`;vc.` M Wm. ( - and Check Valves.-Steam Ga.ues.a.nd Water Glasses. All work in thls hue 4, In . . . V promptly attended to. A gnt,;;1) BARRllESJTUVE& rummcana T " V - `r )t per - n V _ - I I ` _ V 5: may 1 w G GSMITE-g i - ' ' ' ' " hair. UNDERTAK%% . _ V ` ` ,4 nst;1pati- . `J km W 5" " VBARRIE AND smougn. 'l.l1etra,;ecL01`._y has also a great deal to do with thu cffci. ucy `of a title. The gun having the fattestl t1'zy]e(etl)1'y will not only shoot the ylosest, but will also make a bttlu" grouping of shots.` Hence` it is that all gunners vie with each other in producing a weapon that will send a- ball froin the muzzle to the object; red at in as straight a line as po.ssi.ble. A. bul1.t.1ired from a gun with a. low tra- = -jectory will oftener reach the desired spot. tllaI1`011_0 red from a gun having. a higher Lra.;eclory. - 'Pl1n fun n..4-nun 1... Olxn u\l~.4L I3 4.1.... 1...} JUST ARRIVE Bl -. .. ...... um, vuunvs vuuu yuxxuzaucu uzuutss so a.rra.ngea.Lnan Lne cr,n,},.c11p, Wm steam wil not mingle with the -food as it passes down from on t t t. 3" V WARRANTED to arm]: meats, nnrlinn; nnirmc. .-...,1- ,31?P..af...[E.?4n.1,1)-aL]la.ndz\1v. nvvuul nun. uuu uuugu: vvuau. uxu '1.uuu (:5 LI: passua uuwn IPOID. 0116 apartment 14) a[ ` `'u ' . WARRANTED to cook meats, puddings, onions and` other vegetablesa:and1"' time without emitting anv unpleasant odor or mingling in avor. The avcra-._-. Worth. of the Cooker will be about One Cent per week and will save about fifty tiring rumm- . much. -\ o- L... .r vn. vn much. a Three kinds of meat, four kinds of vegetables and two puddings may be , ;`;:_I`_`;'; '` at the same time and over one hole in the stove, by the steam of one quart of. A td"' consequently about one half of wood is saved in preparing dimier, which (milin 03-11 ` about one-third less time. '1 in 11 W<>'?-` V The Diamond Cooker is constructed on a common sense principle. Itnhah Destroy ti.- -tigght covers that prevent steam and odor from escaping, without rubber pacpe 0hi1d""- useless machinery. , `are, thvv I It is the only Cooker that has Stationary Steam Signal. It can be heard:. The Mt'I~' part of the house, thus absolutely preventing the possibility of any danger of {Lid the t`"" from forgetfulness. ., _ `iality of .\i It is the only Cookerthat has a safe regulating safety valve that needs no, T110 U3 attention and cannot possibly get out of order. - `orld is {I M. It is the _only steam cooker with an escape steam tube that is equally ada}._`1'Ha. V v use on a gasoline stove or common cook stove. ' ` sm1,r.n'. It is the only cooker with perforated dishes so arrangedthat the comoiip, '5' Htefn WI" nni . minala SIG `H . nnuuna Al\I19r\ `nu/\v\A A...-. ..........A.__..._AL . `ii Jnhn \` No Steam in the House, No Ofbnsive Odor, No Burning of p,a`:`,`3; No Frost on Windows. N o Dampness on Walls, `Dr. No Tough Meat [Better Cooking and Less Iv |Il-Iv. VIA .... lass. It would .<~.~->1 Ll` Lil|:`l1 ms, T ' SOUTH SIDE DUNLQP STREET, TV ~ C NEXT DOORTO THETCANTON ST.T?.b` b;.uu UL uL).uAu\`V [1u.`.1u\U1_y aDLUu1Dl1_ll.l5. The c-n_ii1.2ei' and riding of a gun have a great deal to do with the efliciency of the piece. h'eretofo1'e the inclination has been to\\'a1'i.l;~s large calibc-1's.i In- deed, some foreign g0\'e1'n1nent_s use 50- calibers now, and we believe in one in stance. is. bf;-ca1iVbe1' is p the standard adopted by one power. Some of our own state urlitia are at the present day armed with -.0-ca1_iber Springficlds and iemingtons. These bores are much too large, and the tremendous recoil and shock from such a discharge are apt to make even the steadicst of marksman inch- I"rom]on,r:Ve periment it has been found a mistake to use heavy cal- ilsers. i1`o.1'ty-live is the standard of the regular amny, and the leading ex- erts claim that exen 45 is much too arge, and tililt l..~ctter results are got`- ten with small. bo1'e.`~:. V l[1__ L__K'_ A _,,_ I, , , 1 V ' l `I 1 Vlh WI ma H -at.-%|al_n.1 fof fhg Dlafnond Steam com For orm ` , C 1 TIME, LABOR & MONEY SAva":. _ . ? "When SI-IEIGH BELLS, ;roiter,Wl PLATFORM` AND ornnn scams, AT .1. HEN DERSON`8`???` has received twenty-seven State prizes and ten prizes in Canada. '. Patented March 1st, 1882, and November 27th, 1884. AGENTS W.-\.\'T3 VUE LU Whlchwe are now selling Ext :1 .7;T;.m,j}{;`,,% IT , A Newuri 0 SUCH BARS OF DINGMANS 5",? ELECTRIC SOAP FORE" M giwrrza MI fHIi>132`5r; " AND IMPROVED "3 ralid {V9 1 -- an..- .`--_'. __--_ , ` Ian I! S '1` O C K 0 F VV A L '5` H .3. pa nus use, {WILL ems: noon Mrlioir summmc, V Chic'ago"Su,n`:, My son, if anybody Imokes the lthy weed, don't _ohew.' V C'I"I'C)]Nl' TIBE.()S., l:f......:....a..-......... ......J cc/,1- A ___._;_ 1:-.. n__ n ,, R.A.DOUGLA% ]) utt0n s. THE JEVVELLEH. jjjrj-, _Manufac_t-ur;rs and Sole Agents for the County of 5.3` -BY USING THE----- COFFINS A_l\`D_ C-ATS KETS 01: - In stock or l\'Iade to'Ux' F T `Andvalf Eurfeill Requisitc-s Fm! Ordersby Telegraph or Otherwise, attended to. ' G. O. DOLMAGE, Mmlangexg 51: n.--.~-..__ .-.-.._,-, STEAM WORKS Aim) s1~fo.\\' `C OL L I EVR-ST., B .A 1:; Ill CIr|vUl\Jl.llLA\/I.-LL57: t-civilians or any others interested in the subject could he present at any of the governme1;t '1'i:'1e-1`an,g=.-s (and there is a target -range at eve1'y fort. arsenal, and gu1'ris0n in thevcountry), he could then see fox; l1Vi1ns-cl! otcers and solciicrsulike, almost any day dur- ing the ,tzn`get season, knocking out bull`s eyes at H00, 900, or 1,000 yards, ' and at even gi'eate1' distances, with a de- gree of am"-uz-;u~y positively astonislng. Thu :-nH1~.n:- nnrl 1-Hlinnr n? n mun `-\nI7n Robes, A,_1 1113 1 (io-9; February, 251agA'%% ".. 3" *4 . JOHN PLAxT0`f5$t..a L ? CUl1Ilt}`;\` ..)ituary-. V ` ` . ` 1"`U_ea1 of hm E-4. F-oituary." '"- Mercham ' ) tTe11_ '11} p[bsence. -51>` Porter- "ou_ld1'1 t : Er I \IlDUa I . '1e one bot'.;. av C. H Iv lxlford, Ii`-n? rrofessor ou, sir." ' Student In slittle in d ]W6l' 80 as to gl `nation fur u lm ` Guibollard til is intimanm, - low of f()HI 2 Why, then, `lemands a. frim V Peuh !" mu td, "a. propos d Detahi '*Wt,hen I lived ;roit;r-, vavh() was` _ gufce a. 1 It1LLlUo The United {States army gun is the Springlild military ri"e, caliber 45, and has the ordinary front and rear plain open sights. which enal le it to stand the roughest kind of usage on the front- ier, and yet be always ready for in- stant service. It would be amistake to put other than plain open sights on a service rifle, as the wear and tear of active service would before long knock any other kind to pieces, and soon ren- der a- good rie as worthless for shoot- ing purpos s as an old piece of gas-pipe. ' 1`erhaps ner results could be gotten at longer ranges with elegant peep` and \ globe sights, such as are in common use ` at Creedmore, Walnut hill and other crack ranges; but the sights for the re- cruit and soldier should be something thathe could not easily disarrange even if he tried to do SO`, and the Springeld rie is now blessed with just such sight- ing attacliments. lg .n;I1n:nna nu nvsn Al-lxnun :nl>n...nn&-A.`

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