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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1889-10-31, Page 7The Christian Pntiner'r. Pr'aps 'you, Wet bean ce toeniety the'ye hitched, tee ettnrcetea °roue& W11109t Tegatii to tte eons& or eo' cree_but. a view tb' PlaPewbere they'r bound? They don't newerpertepe t' be Gleristlalle, they're only mineity'rea" iewe But he way our demi= pates or 'enz matter re wonder to me. For a town o' fame smenish pretensions, an' a Ourela tnet, was rather cote. We:cereely got an awaltenhe when th"Olaxistian Andeseer toter hold. - RriSt go they waakitieer s'ifirge-iseee a en, eeet tie ewers teemed castL feo ern Oiz young.folks for giviIl 5. supper Met got th' -„derinne's wife a, gewe; Bet ele tabeued box they pe.st aroued 'froze tee aeakine weed -cold's aq ieyeie sT• was. "drop a (loiter in tle Oct au' See ti' doreinieride hia W041010 deekins hies' tbo' ttesaokriledge, but tlaet tie young Imes couldn't seee Jut tbo dicta's; pretend t' be Gbeistie.ne, but only eneeaY'zed. to be, 'Our denliefe was a deal worn out," eo serape his senno.ns Wrrn't all afire. An' us' youpg folks e seems they }.zed their views on eettue tie wuth o' his biro. W' deakine they tmet two was uppish in an. 00 they iebored vote their vaew., An' talked re" years" "cbs.,ige ce scene," see hinted seine le "disquiet in tn' pews 1" seeaeleree, tle' boxes t bey get bored th' dollars 'bout everywhores they past ; SQ clotoiolo rideS bisickle, ea' Paye blefl 0. grOWitl" yoaog fast. They'll en tte week night reeetilea full, an' ig speekifee heieneekindsr glen. They doceetio snigie minnit pess yz'tihrett thee up anti say a verso or so; An it spure ta' or folks mettle t3 see he young folk, try eareet bells, an"relet tte wane, an make Of . itemizes spry .An' aischom their bein" Cleristiane, a0 e 547 (bey only efideev'r FrOY0 t4St creed in. US detel tliet shall teach fey MAIM; forever. ger0. Owe ce geole smellieh dirneueloug, ate ebarch tbo V* Mulder eid, Tire offrenly got turewakeultS when the Obristian Etuleaver tok bole ; Ver 01' hilliare bah ' lies vaniseed elate, an` Pomo rknownew got' th' °heron Whe *olden ha' -dreamed bow plenot it seemed te have th' ealoon" In tte levee; Aze ree atboy eweety or us whe luented the tome, telt me Elo dide't dere Mink he'd boVbrietian, but he'd etirleev'r t' be. Mg 4 tgYlil finch eruclielt eontentloe V piny eiget o du, , Wo certedy got an Awake/ale' When tlie Chrietian Budeeter eteeeed tee • elowenn Loewe benere. Buoy 04 Silk. Silk is au agreeehle Anotholkhy aetiole, Ikea in dress it retrains the electricity at ohr hod_ tee; itt the drapery at oar rooms and foraiture (Meese it relleete the euu, beguile* gAvieg them a quicker brillienoy, and et beightene coloze with a chunking light. It paezeeeee all element ot cheerful, nese, at which the doll serves ot wool end linen. are deatitute. It oleo promotee eleatilineeia will not reedily imbibe dirt, •and awe Isok harbor VerA234 as kindly as wool doe& Its continually growleg use by enan. eoeordingly, is beneficial 411 many myth Grate and beauty, even, owe sense - thing to eilk. (menet etiffen it like thick woolleu or linen without deetroying CI Ill g101e and Vain°. The' MOro °ilk ribbons, theretore—the more eilk kerchiefs and xebec; ere mod Wowed of linen and wool—the more graceful becornee the oat - weed aipeot et inenland. ,A. number at etrange, grotealite feehione arigineting lu tale nee of linew would never have been in - 'vented during the more general employ- ment of flk The flattering of ribboo, the ruetling and Bowleg skirts ot Hint, the eilk kerchief loosely knotted roma the neck, have materially oontributed to make our customs room natural and pleasing to the eye.--Rzchange. Oir Edwin's Tribute,. It was obaraoteustio at Sir zavtin• Arnold to turn hie ,facb toward the East when landing be tho Golden Gete and bid bie hosts of friends gooa night in the fol. lowing Unas, withal, he has sent to thapress tor prtbliestion A veretnetet, arrierIcalat tbistby Golden Gate, Newersvelled frees hay green atlantic coves, Padilla—I make my reverence' t behoove:et With backward etepe to quit a queen in ateto. Maud 1 of thl lauds most fair and free and great;— O couutlese kiudred lies, wherefrom I board *Sweet speech of shalteseeare—retwe it conse- crate For noble uses! Land otFreadenes Bird, Fearless mid proud 1 fio let biux oar, tbat • stirred .By generous ley, all men may learn of thee e, larger ; and Europe, nude ,orred By ancient wreaks, dare coso to be free Body and Soul ;seeming Mine Eagle gaze undateled upon Freedom's Sun, telt-blaze EDVTE/ Anxox,n, San Francisco, ono ieth, lass other Senses -Than ours. The President of the British Ames - tion, Prof. Flower, endorses Sir John Lub- book's idea thet the field of inquiry is limitless, and that there may be "fifty other senses as different f rom outs as Bound is from sight; and even within the boon- elaries of our own senses there may, be endless eounds which we cannot hear, and colors as didiereet as red from green of whiob we have no conception. These and a thousand other -queatioos remain for solution. The familiar world which sur- rounds us mey be a totally different place to other animals. To them is may be f tal of music which we cannot hear, of color which we cannot see, of sensations which we cannot conceive." Johnstown's Plood a mere Gill. The amount cf water pasaing over Niagara Falls varies with the height of the river. Professor W. D. Gemming esti- mates the average amount at 18000,000 oubio feet per minute. Allowing 62e pounds to the cubic foot, this would give a total of 562,500 tons per minute, or 251812000 tons in forty-five 'minutes, of which somewhat more than two-thirds putties over the Horseshoe Falb. Other •estimates place the total amount passing over both falls as high as 100,000,000 tons per hour. In comparieon, the flood at ,Johnstown was a gill. --Iron. A Precious Bouquet. fr The Qneen of Holland reoently surprised ter husband in a very novel manner. On bis birthday she presented him witr'an .enormous bouquet of flowers, of the kind utied on benefit nights at opera in Italy, eo 'heavy that it required several serving men .to ovary it. Jis it VMS brought close to the throne the old Xing stooped forward to •examine it, when amidst the flowers the .bead of his little infant daughter peeped • out, to the surprige of the monarch and the amusement of the whole court. Ent used to It. First Brooklyn Man (on street car)—Yon I/levee:it lived in Brooklyn long, have you? Second Brooklyn Mn—No; only a few -weeks. How did you know? First Brooklyn Man—I noticed that -when yott said yon lived in Brooklyn you blushed. John Madison Merton, author of " Box .86 Cox" and numerous other plays is lying at the point of death in a London hospital. One of the anomalies of modern civiliza- tion is the man who persists in ehutting the office door in eumneer and leaving it 'ajar in winter. A girl has been hugged to death at 'Salem, Ohio. It may be an easy death to .die, but it looks like a waist of raw material. AMMON1111, MILK AR FOOD. Au Investigation Into What Constitutes Good Milk. „ ITS RELATIVE EOOD yam. Diseased imint—fhts Discovery of ryrotoxi_ cen AS a Specifie Poison—Bogus MOAK Pr,rervatives. The dhiOUSSiOn of the milk supply of the citywhich has /seen going on in the columns of the Tage has net been without inieregt for the thousands of consumers of the city, MalsY ol whom era probably mystified` by the contradictory statementa pet forward by the partiee to the vontroveray; Perhaps pn examination into the. milk question apart from the special case of our own eupply %via be useful itt. enlightening many upon some matters of ireportooe to the Fhldic loathe. . 0041) MILS. Teohnioally speaking there is no etendard of locality of Milk in Ontario. Tho law film no arbitrary scale of pementages to whieit the dairy predoot must Oonform, although a penalty is preload for adulteration or dilution. The molten for this apporeut leek is to be found, in the widely varying results of amilytical testa of milk made under eiremetenese :which left no room for doubt as to the honesty af the samples and the correetrone of the teete. Engliele tete beto ellOwn 0. rouge 9t qualitiee extending from .4.82 per cent. to 4, 40 per mkt, at fete in teats extending over a month, while the total Nolide ranged from 124 to 14,3. The 'Coital Steins average °Motel tests, aceerd- teg to the American Ptiblio fiealth Meade, goo, eheitir water, 07,5; moo in, encialharlieo, 3.5; fate, 3 6 ; iIk auger, 48; eehe0-7, The average reetat of Anapest of 0010U -ere (the Auld which the cow yields direetly after calving) shows water, 7347 ; albinnen and awl% 19-21; fete, 444; milkeugar, 3.00; ash, 1,18. Milk :a to be judged se well by the qauttetity of selide as by the fete it contains to cleteeminiog its teed value. A fairly geed milk and one rich inlets and =genie salts ehoeld show Water, 874; ate, 4.0; znilk, auger feeet eelehle Otte, 5 0; casein and insoluble aka, 8 4, Mille of thief quality is rich in fees and oontelim all the toorgaele melts nisieeeem tete° body, ettpeolelly the alkaline obloridee and calcium pluaspholtee. A Mum tee% ot :nth raft proves nothing as the reaction may be either add or alludirie, and in many ewe goodzeilk ghee both revenue, turning blue litmne red; and red litneue, blue, mum= or rettt oh etims. The dairyman should regard his cows au so minty meothiete for the oonversion of food into milk. Ile would not expect A roechine to turn out a first-claes finished product from poor material; he ehoold not look for raore front bloom. They should have kind treatment, generous foe& pure %Aar and comfortable go:torten. The eanitery couditiene should' be ceretally guarded. Insufficient food or dellelency in quantity memo poor rnilk and little et it, Slap food mewls poor milk oven thoughthe quantity be 'ergo. Foul water and ire - proper food, badly ventilated ;tablet*, tilthy guider% ail ehew their effeete on the'reilk, Wilk has been spoiled for cheese =eking by' the scent ot a dote can whioli lay unburied in the field adjoining that in which the owes fed. nue= MD ueetermot. The cow mud he kindly treated and gently handled. The natural proms of transforming food into milk is not com- pleted until the fluid is expelled from tbe udder, and any improper treatment ot a oow will not tail in, having an effect upon the milk. The oow meet he in & quiet mood. The milk taken from an aminal which has been chased into the betnyard by the dog and milked in a quiver of ner- vone exeltoment, probably beaten or kialted to make her "lot down,' is.unfit for food, The milking place should be Olean and airy nd free from bad odors. Caro should be aken to see that the cow's udder and este have been 'washed thoroughly and dried clean and all loose hairs brushed away. The hands of the milker ebould be washed in hot water before be begins bis -work and no dish ehould be used which has not been thoroughly scalded with water heated to boiling. As soon as the milking is over the milk shotdd be placed in an airy room and cooled. - Under no circumstances should it be sealed up in cane or bottles while %hove 600 Farnheit. /1 should not be loaded into a can for the route tuatil the cooling hae been effeotea. In view of recent demonstrations of edema 11 18 a qttestionwhither Government ehould not make the sealing up of newly -drawn milk a orime againet the public safety to which a severe penalty should attach. Bat this will be referred to later. Wherever the milk is placed let the air be pares the isarroundinge sornpulouelo clean, the pans well scalded, tete smoothtin or well -glazed earthenware (never use pouts dishes) vessels and keep the temperature low. Never nee zinc, copper or brass Tinfoils for milk, 'as the chemical processes always going on aot deterionsly upon them metals rendering the milk poisonous. CONTAMINATED AND DISEASED MILE. Never allow milk to spina exposed in a living or sleeping room. Milk absorbs impurities readily, and the oolder the milk the more rapidly the absorption of foul odors goes on. Milk that has been exposed in a dole room should never be drank by any person. Nothing More readily takes up specific germs or is so welladapted to spreading disease. Our Health Ant wisely prohibits the ode of milk from premises upon whioh infectious diseases exist. Unfortunately disease may exist in the dairy oow, even to an extent deetruotive to the health of those who drink her milk, without the knowledge of the proprietor; and indeed in some oases it may only be discoverable upon disgeotion. There is at present a growing opinion among investi- gators in that field of scientific" research that to the milk of unhealthy cows the modern scourge congumption le traceable. However that may be, it has been amply demonstrated that thamilit of a oow suf- fering from diseage of any kind is unfit for food. The milk of cows suffering from • simple inflammation of the udder has pro- • duced inflammation of the demob an in- fants. As soon as a cow shows symptoms of' sickness of any kind, the milk should not be used. Unfortunately it is impossi- ble to detect all oases from the cow's appearance until the unhealthy milk has been drawn for food. Sometimes the first intimation of anything abnormal is given by the appearance of the milk itself. Milk which looke ropy," and which sours in a few hours, should be eschewed. The animal has been over- driven or worried or suffere from udder disease or indigestion affecting the nerve centres. Milk whose cream "blisters" and has &bitter taste; " slimy " milk, and milk which becomes oovered with a blue -colored scum of micro-organisms should not be used as food. No matter how rich in fat or how high in percentage of total solids the milk may be, the knowledge that it comes from a siokly oow should condemn it. .Even boiling, useful in seine ,lessee, ehoold eat be reliecton. 91%4E/0 POISONS IN MEWL Texioologisle hive but reliently turned their attentiob to the study of ladle poisons, and the teld is found to be one ofepeotal difficulty. The ley reader will probably be able to recall Ogee , which mysterious instandes of poisoning,' by ice-cream and light- ening by ebeese have been reported. In Borne instances considereble nt1,1104 eirellthowonsly cleveloped symptineil or 1)030042g.. The rapidity with, WItioh, de, octropesitien progressed andAhe abeenee of appropriate suety heel formulas for the dis- covery of the toxio constituent, even when eert ot *leeeuppesedvisonoue food was OOL inik•tio, baffled for a time the efforte of beyeeseeetors earl often the soda weter founts...let Buffeted vicariously. Sciehoe, Oitileever, is not always heeled, and repeitted failures never conclude her followers in the belief tbet a peoblein has no eolution ; only that the percioular experiments ,hare not been conepoted on the right theory, or have been inetlicieetly made. They per. tieveresi, and they have in a measure 012Q. ofeeded itt throwing light upon some hitherto myeterions pelage:atones. Gar food swarme with baeilli meny of them defying the ronet powerful inieroftoopes which soience produces in her ettiesivore to define them. These hecilii are not always, productive of disegree ble Changes, but ttkere is sometimes a. remelting alkaloid or ptemaine ea the result of their work, whistle le a e9urce, of danger to haelth. Thio ptorneinz is formed foga the food protium by the exerolse of the organienan life functione. and contains whatever may remain of the beeterie iteelf. The Vaclerium tweet (or tactis)iewhieh con- verts milk or auger into laotto acid, and, the Beeflitie elbatfe, whioh 'brings About the producticin of but rile load, aro in effect all hat innoolteue. But there 30. 0. third fere mornetor; Feeteritem Off, when tidelioge to teed on Mille anger 419110, bet*thrivee on it when avbito of egg ie Added, developing lactic, formic end ;teeth; aoldfieend „whose, preeenee slaty meagre*, for itetne. Of the mysterious lee cream poleonlogs of the pet. It has also been diecovered 'that a germ les eolnetimee found id •milk vihioh produces e disease similar to entlefeet In 1883-4 the Olichigthe asuitit Board reporteil• 300 owes of oheeee pc/laming, witiela although not fatal, were in einnel ioetenees eaffieleatly eeriona. Seenplee of tile cheese were awned. A dog wee offered A pieee, areoug same" other. dimples, and xejected ie, eating the hocepoilionotie plow.* Prof. qacylten ettee elaborete analyses, fixed the poison itt Catholic extrema al * tatty acid, but oat resolving it to an aqueous aclution tor eveporetion lost it. It oast hinatwo yeers of patient study to fix is itt etystake as tpledeXiC01.1.111 1686 a Long Breech polsonlog vete investigated atteltyrotorietne fitted ite vim come. Ira three fetal eatiesett Minn; Mich., the poleou'a , preselect wee traced to cieoeying vegetable matter in the Milk cellar. In the other gases mentioned and iu many whioh space faibicle referencia to, the oeuzang up oi the,utile while hot led to the development of the poleone° No milk should be canned up before it has been veutilitted in a free, pure atmee- phere, and cooled to below 60 ; and it attould.oever be exposed to contanatnetton of decaying or lout vegctobio. or animal .matter. 8 lrOW memo= Ana icrtrars The epeoiflo action of tyrotaxioon upon °Whiten hes been proven axperimentelly to be dueller to, if not identical with, ;het ot choice* infenttine. The post mount con - anion of abildren altringof thet dieetkeeis mad by Prot. Vatoghan to *agree exeotly with riot 'anew' by tyrotoxioon ipoilkoniug. In view of the tact, then, that thougands of children die of tbis &seed' annually, and the other feet that thousands (and among them those in whom the death rate fro`ni 'cholera infattena is the highest) etre fed on cow's milk, much of which itt. put uti in hottlee oe dens et the dairies; za not the profeesorle statement startlingly auggee, tive ? •Dr. Booker,,Baltimore, report*, that 'teventy-three vorietielt of bacteria were found in the intestines Of infants Buffering frozu whet had been supposed to be " sim- mer compiainte' 3 „lam YnESEBV.VOVOI.' There is no milk preservative. Peaple who add biosrbonete of Sods, salicylic add and (Aber silts to milk with aNtiew to pre- venting deornespohition blionld be aware that the micro.organiams workop jest the same. True,„ the blearboriate of soda neutralizes theeeid, but the breaking down of the conitithente goes. on, whiles product dangerous fee health.—partioularly to the health of obildien-elsotate of soda, is formed by the tilieMical reaction. There is no safe milk freeervaave slave pure air and a low temObritme. - To recapituleteS Good milk is the pro- duct of liesIthy, well-fed cows, cleanly stabled. It musk be drawn from a cow while the is in a Viet- mood; the udder, taste, militir and vessels xnust be clean. The milk must then 'be plamenn a clean, well -aired, cool place for ventilation and °doling, arid tenderise oirounnitanoes muet it be bottled Whileamarm. If meet never be expolgee t� a bad atmosphere, or allowed to stand ha a sick roolte or living room. Should it have been seemed tecontarnina- tion of any kid it should not be need as -food. - Mesenneen. .A mathematicaluttzzie. A furniture dealer has on hand at the beginning of the year furniture valued at 14 935,55. He bought 'during the year 47,428 40, and sold • during the year $8,420.90. Fire destroyed furniture costing $1,049, and he recovered insurance 0825. His stook book at the close of the year showed furniture on hand $5,620. What was hie gain • or loss2--Wade's Fibre arid Fabric. , • ' Clever Mr. Virlman. ' Mr. Erastus Winsan has oondtituted him- selfdelegate extraordinary tram the Do- minion. Hie capture '�f the °engrafts at the entertainment' given lbim at 'Hiegara Falls was a clever bit of diplomacy, and his improvement of the opportunity to Rut the Cenadian view of Pan-Amerioen affairs before the assembled gneste was equally clever. --Philadelphia Telegraph. . . An Awful mistake. Bessie—That newly mertied lady you . introduced me showed me a lovely me. pitcher. I asked her 11 11 was a wedding present and she seemed quite hurt. J'ennie-eNo wonder. 1 forgot to tell you that she eloped with her husband. A Real Perplexity. Prospective Father-in-Law—How do you expect to get along without a salary if you are going to get married? , Young Smiley Baker—That is not the point—how am I to get along if I don't get married? "What was the meat melancholy sputa- ole- you ever witnessed 2 " asked Fangio. A man with long side -whiskers in swim- ming," replied Cures°. Jenkins and hie wife are out. He seed he "bit like a fool," and she said she didn't see any reason why he shouldn't. De0ZW`1401'9:00if SVIWPW., Ito But.),4. talci Oy7DT44140ii1 AD1M411* and • 4,1 ' 'loam Hares. The clizioussiou of thh great London strike by Carding Moaning toed the labor agitator, Jottp, Borne, bee. .already..been •mentiened be the liendoes Despatches. It forms the • leading contribution' to tbe October' etteabeeeVehe•Nevelieviete. Both writers, apparently by a coineideno, begin With bailitery allusion.. " 141 trothe: nye Cerdteal Kenning, a etrike ie like a battle. Nootte who WAIS .111 it tem give an eocannt of it- Baehillan.knOWA3 only the evette on the SpOt 5E4213E0 he stood.' And he intimates that, aware oateider, he is all the better able to fermi 4 jusli, opinion of it. The Cardinal thinks the 'strike has deo harm. It hos inflicted, great Offering en women and children,has brought ruin among the leaser tradesmen, end been * bet fit the importation offood. Eie thioks that it has permanently injured the port of 1.40ZOQUA which with difficulty aowleolde its own against Southampton, Cardiff, Liver, pool, Glasgow, ansi. even against Antwerp and the Ftellell porta. . And he hopes that a result of axe strike will be a registration of laborers and an organizetion of baton The °dela of this organization will be to clear the doles of a great number of nn - skilled and indolent persons who year by year come into London. Cardinal Man. .teing ectutinnes by remarking tIPOIE the self, restraint which lute been shown upon both sides, saying; I era bound to beer wit - nese not telly to the self -commend of the Men but also to the measured leneeage and Palm *courtesy of the employers." John Aurae hegine hy.remarking that he bee been ha the thiok ot the battle, and by admittiog that he is therefore not all ,impartial witneee. But he coneiders that he can epeak with earns ant/malty as‘to whet he has to say about hie own part in tho aVene. It was eaid a. few awoke ego by e writer who knew Berne that Barns ,htel told Mel that be expected to be beep% Ile is evidently a courageous; and • etteagOtio num, end has aomewhat the tone ,of a fanatic. Ilo meets the charge ot eeertif conspiracy by showing too* hold and anett his inetigations to thedookers •ilaarvaetbaelungtgreYd4arAolltheistaFaOtbek• makingki eul°arsol ye speechesi to the mere et down before his work „end, theira bad begun, "1 myeelf with my wife, tut eeye, "have frequently lett home at 3 or 4 Want* irt the morally, winter and adromer'tramped to the deaf., matle Speeches at three different wale, and reamed to begin my day's work m the Week end e07 or 8 9'4o*. These speethea were nude sitting on walls or standing astride of pains. The somas of the strata WAS due to the avail:Wilk of the publle. It was phyeloally poseible, because Borne and his aseociatee ted money enough, to feed 260.000 'people while the make bated. The various track* sent Urge oontributions tind promised more. The oompositorit sent 4500 end the engineere MOO. A glit of 425,000 came Atistrallas A sualloient supply of money boldly been &seared, then, SADAO the diffi- cult questionot the administration of relief. The VOrriMit$Sell bad recourse to the system ot haning tieltete, presentable to the Beet End shopkeepers. By withholding money drunicenuese was prevented. But they wore greatly assisted by the good balmier ot She people. " From Bret to lost," says Alr. Blume, ono man asked me for money for beer. I have been in tie° thick of smelly men with hundreds of pounds ehout me (they knowing 101, and not a penny have loat. I have sent men whom did not know for change of goia pine, and have never beau &este& of a. penny," Mr, Berne SUMS up in a, few words the results of the strike. The dockers stock bemuse the diremore of the dock companies refused to give 'hem toroth= 501 all hoar. This they considered poor wages, because tbe work was, hilts nature, not continuous. The wegee have now been Advertised to 64 AU hour. Three pence an hour more than the former rate is paid front 0, to 8 p.m., and 2e1 per hour after 8. Contract has been abolished, and with it the sweating system. He Claims, also, that the benefits ot the strike hey° been felt by other trades. Tbe certmert employed by tbe post -office hsve secured /lees of from bete 4s a week. Workers • itt the chemical manufactories along the. Thames, engineering laborers end some two hot:lead London tradee have gained a 10 per cent. advanceon their ola wages: As might be expected; Mr. Burns dm not agree with Cardinsl Manning 108 10 the conduct of the representatives of the dock companies. He saga that they never seemed.to know their own, bueiness. The sympathy of the general public was manifestly with the strike. The feeling seemed to pervade all °lasses. The Ease End pawn -brokers would not charge interest on the goods left with them by the strikere, and the East End landlords and lodging-lionse keepers ranged rent as long so, the strike lasted. Nurnberg of men marched inthe processions who were not dookers sed had nothing to gain by the i success of the strike. But t is evident that the strikers had on their aide, not only the workmen area the small shopkeepere, but the middle and upper °lasses as well. Not only did sailore soldiers, policemen, fisher- men, and the blind men of Southwark send their subscriptions, but choke were receiv- ed from noblemen, clubmen, and clergymen. " I remember," says Mr. Burns, "the half -sovereign which an officer of the guards gave me in the park, with a half - uttered suggestion that if he were called upon to aot against the striker° he would give them blank cartridges.' "—New York Times. A useless 'Expenditure. Cheerful Friend—Well, you're all ready to dart—baggage checked, insurance tioket bought, and all that. If you're killed, old boy, you'll get $5,000, yon know. Traveller (gloomily),—Stuff and non- sense! No such luck for me. I'll go through all right. —Prinoess Louise, who has joined Lord Lorne at the Duke of Argyll's shooting lodge in the Island of Mali, will proceed to Germany in the course of this month to visit Frame and Princess Louis of Batten- . berg at etieenhelm, and the Duke and Duchees of 'Edinburgh at Coburg. • Are you almost disgueted With life, little man? 1 win ten you a, wonderful trick That will bring you contentment If anything can, Do something for somebody, quick; Do something for somebody, quick. Though it ritind like the ram Of the flood, little man, • And the clouds are forbidding and thick, T01.1 can make the sun shine In your soul, little man, Do eomething for somebody, quick Do something for somebody, quick. Postmaster -General Wanamaker will re- commend in his animal report that the free -delivery system be extended to cities of 8,000 inhabitants. IN Trfn WTEOT. one shirt -stud unto the other, "11 seems to me, my dear twin brother, Together we had best condole For by my life, were in a, hole," —Alfred Setter, a Somerville, Mass. hunchback, has won a bet of 1)1,500 by beat- ing his way to San Francisco and beak in firat-olass coaches. He was put off from trains 180 times. WIIITZWIAPE114 xis*. A, Heeler 0,,ke_Frokek .0-qi1spitriOUs Allearderl • The London edition de the New,York Heretee says r: There is one man in.Landoo who knewei mare about Jaen. the Ripper" titan all the polieenrcen .snel> detectives in the metropolie. Thite keatlemant who. poesesses suffecieut Mitered and °mein- etantial evideelee to hang ten• e Jack the RiPPere." is 411 secret dommunicatIon with Dr. Fettles Winelow- "Jack the B4PPer is known. Ha is to the police, end he le known to several other 'Pigeons. The latter have supplied the- former with fell descriptions ot his personality, manners and laftbitet and at eertate VW.* there has actually bede uses doubt!, wet° bie ebente. The inviethility in which. ie enveloped is vendee thinnereeod teetherie Who have "follevetteT his murderous wive - matte it is certain that Neectetaiteieeflosing upon him, and that within a period Seat may bo meastired hie capture end identity will be effeote3, A gentleman living at Brixton; called upon Dr. Forbe; Winslowseveral .4nees to gee° 'information anent * Whitechapel murder, but Unfortunately every titete ho coiled elle doctor was out. The doctor is on the murdereeiltreolt4 Ile posessaestsugi- ble tweet of identity, and is coaxial:sea that he could effeot hia arrest in a week. Ile means to see upon the cluesupriliedtolaime sod he does not intend to °Win, the assiet- once of the polices - his temarneble story: A gentlemen, whom ha bed peevie mealy blown, oilllea upon him in refeeence to the Whiteohapel mordere, 4ok the Ripper " hedged in this Toro)** bout°. He knew that it was " ,Tack the " by putting two and two tdrctlreetOnceetegether, Sucipicions were firat emitted bythe ledger eartuog home about 4 0"010;11r 0130 morning. Io had expected to find • everybody in hid, and he be able tee get to his moon unobserved; Teo Ion our- priee, hie landlord,. Dr, Wieelown informant, had been kept neecieettog forbid* wife.' who was on s visit to gouts Mesas, Tjte lodger Wee excited and incoherent in hI talk. He said he had. been bettiog rough time, that he had; been sneaked, awl had his watch stolen a and he geverthe name of applioe station where he bad Ida ooroplaant.- Upon inqnirfes-thice story was found no be entirely devoid of foundation. He hied.made no compliant, sua the police had no knowledge ef * street disturbance. The mtua a. shirt and randerclothing were nn found boy over elleire. They had been weelletdAnd had been_put out to dry. He in the habit tetkingabonttize women of the'streete and wrote " loog riguistoiss" about the= His writing, In minute per- tioulare, resembled that of the lettere °out to the pollee purporting to come from Zaok the Ripper," He had ze WAX& robe as extensive as a &diet/. It included eight ettite of olotheseeight pars of rhoote and eight hats. The Mall oan epeak several langaegee, and when be went out be always carried a black bag, lie was 01/TsteutV well eft, and never wore the SAMS hat OA two eneeeseive accordance When he tete his lodgings; a quantity of boars, feathers abd flowers and other aril. oleo, which had belonged to the lower class of women, wer° found in, hie room. Ile also left behind, him three pairs of boots and three pairs of goloshes, ono of sub of which is now in the posseesion of Dr. Winslow. The bootsotre ordinary leather lathanp boats, with thin sone. The goloehes have indlarobberbottom ana American cloth uppers; ana are bespattered with blood. Upon this and other material a most important due is thought to have been discovered, 4. Schoolboy SarLker. The strike of Scottish 84°01 boys whioh began he Hawiok has spread to. Glasgow. Govan, Greenock, Fort Glasgow and other please ta the west , of- Sootiencl, and also into Ayrshire and about: Aberdeen. The boys have formea regular labor -like wader, with banner° and •orieti for "aborter hours." The strike has also spread irtto England. The other day 100 malcontents paraded the streets of Barnet, demanding " abolition of the cane, less hours in oohed, lees. parsing and no home lessons.' The Advantage or Being Literary. Scribbler—When is that review of my novel coming out, Soother? &ether (proteseional oritio)--Well, to tell the truth, I have not read it yeL Scribbler—et, when I brought the book to you, you. assured me that you would lose no time in reading it.• os, Soather—So 1 did i , Well, I have lot no time in reading it yet. He Got a Negative. Amateur photographer— I've got her negative, old anon. Tripodde-4 thought yosti. told me she wouldn't sit for her picture. • Arne-teat-photographer—I asked her to sit with • me through life, and she said ss No." ToteWretch. Mrs. Oldboy—Oh, youneedn't talk, John. Yon was bound to have me. Yon can't say thet ever ranitfter you. , Oldboy—Very true, Maria, and the rat trap never ram after the mouse, but it gathers him in all the same. Tare About 19 Pair man.' "1 see that SOU20 of Henderson's clients are 'reeking very • serious charges -egainst " Well, turn about is fair play. Hen- derson's grown rich Ott hie charges against them." . • Revenged.: Returned •Traveler "1 have often thought of that youeg Mr. Tease, and how he used to torment Miss Auburn about her red heir. Did she ever get even with hien ?" Old Friend—"Long ago. She married him," A. Sweet Refrain. She (et the piano)—Listenl-,-how do you enjoy this refrain ?. He—Very much 1 The more you refettin' , the better I like it. Correct, Framer of Journalism—Mr. Smith, hove would you answer an unanswerable argument ha an opposition paper? Student—Call it • a ," -- Cornell Sun. If a man Works 100 hours in 0 days he entitled to a seventh day of rest. 'He is entilted to this much, riot oney because his body end mind demand the relaxation, but because industrial conditions ehould be such as to enable him to earn a • sufficient livelihood in six -sevenths of a week. There is scriptural warrant, aa well, for the day of rest; but for purposes of the present contest, into which se many and so different classes and °reeds enter, religion may well be set artide and the question urged seloly on menorah% grounds,—Chicago geralel, Mrs, Langtry has leased St. James' Theatre, London, recently wetted by the 1 Renaults, for ono year. THE COOK'S BEel FRIEN4 ifentexitmecu oBoxior. She eraiUlped from a Wi4doe044.41445 Irtuas"-- lou AfOlum.'• ' ' Early this morning °etherize Tif 0X4Oughe - lin, en inmate of the Regiepolite Asylum, • tuteped torn, one of the , vilPflOWO Of the - seeond story and killed herself. ``. WI* aher ‘. committed this s,ot ha mysteree Off she watt elwaye considered harmless, Itrifeet Ed* • was allowed to go on tbeetreet-or any' she wished, For a long time before elle • was removed to the Itegiciptilie iletylano Oho wee in Hamilton Asylum end wee con- taidered go safe by the imperil:40404A aill *0 ' nurse his children. When, walking on the street no one would think of ber otherwise - also Asa sane pereen. She even was allowed, ° elie key of her Or41 rQ1141. She was seen • shortly betore Idle committed the deed and cweare aotileZish ninoth:r:oin supaliomn.;a..at wDbilr. 'eploo rzwti. by out of the window the thought *struck • her to inmp mad. Oa did. lile, °maw* account for it in any other way. He did not bold an inquest as there was nothing to be gainedby it. She wonld haves been releadel from the asylum years ago only she WAS Without reletives or friends Melaka °are Of Iler. She was kept AS A helper Moro than an Mateo. Dr. C. IL Clark eel's:she wee transferred. from Hamilton itaylam when the.ltegio- poles broach was owned, She WAS &large stout woman, about 50 or 60 years of Iseei . She wse ouiee end inoffensive, ima whde Pdr"1:4043$1:tfiva afew trveah ei a Elte;9: "ta i ellbotteen abtll a ineene or thirty years and diming ell that time was never knovre to be boisteseue or at all Suicidal in her tendencies. So aorta-. dent were the antboritiee in Isr gootinsea and attentiveneee that she wee giventhe • charge of their children to nurse and cone trol, Tisis morning wbile bmakfent-wast beteg eerved Out wee *bora aa pleas*** as uena4 Then ehe dieappeared and wee litter terinti, lyingan the ground at the rear of • the Imildity with her neon broken. Art • ?pen window ishowed that she hiendevedently auto out, Tuft whiciow wss protsi)tott as la h as any of the others in ithe lattildips- - Dr. win made a °lose investigation antra the matter, and deelded that all the mom - 5 nay Pteeentiens to, prevent ouch accidents btgs.bekteonL'tad.siskelaPtibny oahanze"Ittoll°thfo4tie: bellraell ' out Will ever remain A mystery.—Kingstort., Whig, etanufactare of Catsup. OAS ot the meet wanderfol mutunfactures of recent growth is that at estsup. number ot fectories have originated an the past ten years, end competing brands are as plentiful aa those in any line of manu- factured articles. Tomato catsup has eon- quered, the world. In our younger daya cur mothers used to pat'ap it supply about • this time every year for ormeer nee, eud it was is oonolimeut oeceigiontilly served at t,he utble, Now It lute takeu its 040044th eat and pepper in deity eerie Some people eat it three times a day, and many ;milliard of gtelone are required tat supply the *urinal demand. 1 Ina popularity of the °steep boa . made tomatoes us profitable a crop wheat, and many. fen:neva talent *area of vines every year sot 'to supply the catsup !eateries, eet 20 cents 4 bushel an aoro of tounttoes is always profitable. The farmer ettoply Os his woon bed with the ripe trots and heals the Wed to town. There in no waute, ior the riper the fruit the Ifetter far the cadger, and the trade is always meg the Ittoresse. Sweet Ye:ewers. The fairest bade are often the first to wither, and the ravages of dines° make /etyma with the beauty, as well as the strength and beppiliss of the fair sex. The prevalent disordirlik• among American women ate those of a most distressing des- oription. Theee 4° weakneases," as they are . suggestively termed, inetchottaly sap the health, and the patient becomes pale zuta emaciated, the appetite grows ficskle and feeble; ehe lona strength ea the attache berme in severity, and is in despair. There is relief for all such sufferers .in Dr. Pierois'e world -famed Favorite Feeacriptien, . which cures all "female oompleintee, Its use is followed by cessetion of the "drag .ging-down" pains, return of appetike, and, in due corse, vigorous health. 0. A Disogreenliloidart-‘. "Are von still taking painting lessons,, m?::go - e21 qnit yesterday. • I donitteike mye teacher" " Why not 2" • "Eo has such a disagreeable way of talise. ing. He tola 'me that it I keep, on for - some time longer I might beablef to white-. wash a fence." •/fends of clinsate.., We hear a great deal said abette the. beneficial effeot upon invalids of the climate, -of Colorado and other western lobalitieee but when a man changes Ids place of real, deuce in the hope a improving his health without first trying Dr. Pleree.s Golden Medical Digeovery, he makee a great ads, take. In nine cases out of ten he might, gave hie time a,nd money. This great4 remedy owee its power over all afIectione of the throat and lttngs, brononitia, asthma, catarrh and even consumption, which is, lung scrofula, to the simple fact that it., purifies and enriches the blood and in- vigdrates the debilitated system. It if1, - guaranteed to cure ireall cases of; diseases ior which it is recommetdee, or money, paid for it will be refunded. The ProotWas complete. He—Do you know, Miss Brewstet that X bad made up my mind that you were from, Boston? You havean almost perfect eastern. oneent. She --Yes, s.nd when did youdiacowz thals I was from Chicago, niey I ask?! He—Just, five minutes ago when you.iittea, yourekirte out */ the mud at the laet moss,- trig0., 40 leprh1.1 yet has e'er forecast . The moment that shall he Cue last, but Dr, Fietoe's Plessaant pellets have fors ever settled the question of to corafortfeblis existence, antil that too:lent doe % arrive, and put to flight the melancholy forabodi ings of sufferers from bilioneness, hersdaohe, inaigestiou, constipation, and kindred MI5 mots. _— • Stranger —What in • connection with bioyele riding strikes you most forcibly Fetes' ole Rider—The road. DONT. 44.89' A GENTS MAKE $100 A MONTH Wit11010. fiend Mo, for term. A colored rug RTT,tftinhecla60 colored designs. W. dr S le one