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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1884-03-14, Page 3_ . • • ••••• 444 OUR/CENT TOPICS Be the will of Mrs. Stapleton.Brethetton whioli has been published,: the Pope'is not ,a legatee for two millions of dollars, tea itated. Prior to her decease .she ed that sum to her neer relative' . Mr. George Errington, in trust, to be appliedta the Pope!e hereof% -and.. the organ of the -Vatican states -that, while, certain journals were ascribing to Mr. Errington secret Mill- , dome- from Begland to the amulet Rome, - late business was bimply ;to arrange for this munificent .gift to theehead. of the -Church.: . By..the will Mr. Errington ao- gflres a_ large landed estate, and 1age • uestae are made to amither Ron2a atholuereiativee a brother of Lord.Gersed, audio the Rev.: Dean Kiernan, parish clergyman of, the .dietrict in-- which her . estates lie. - Tim electric: light is not everywhere clue sidered - fin _improvement upon the old-. fashioned modes - of illumination; One cif t the latest and bestsystem e was recently -. introduced- into . the -Court Theatre at Stutfgert, and it was euppoeed. that -the ,otoliestra would find it very satisfactory. Instead of welcoming the change, however, • they have just petitioned the management for et retina to the old-fashioned- oil- lamps that they had been, using previously.. They say that eleetrio illumination- has proved objectionable, beeause its brillia,noy, with many, unpleasantly .affects the nerves. They also assert that they now findinnore- dips cult -to follow the guidance of the leader. A committee of experts, composed of oculists and disinterested nfiesipians, has 1*- been appointed to examine into the matter. THE exiii-ation of the St. Gothard tun- nel cost many lives. . - coming„out of the tunnel the men deecribed the sensa- tion as being like a sudden plunge intoicy odd Water.' The hot, humid air affiliated the digestive organs very much., .and dined latestinaI worms, which caused the deathsofagreat number of workmen. Iloeiee were similarly affected, and died rapidly. Several eminent dooters whd studied therm peculiatities.pronounced them giebetng due to the want of aeration and the. poieonoue- gaies evolved from the blasting operations. - An& theyereported that during the Working hours_ the Men were always in a high state of leiter; whioh was, succeeded, whenihe Work- was doneforthe'-day, by bold shivers and collapse.: With e these experienceS to guide theme the engineers of the Simplon have necessarily made the.question of ten. tilation one anxious -and -anxious studY.• SWARII:le of - newly -born infante, Prof. aenziner says that the senseeot touch is developed from the earliest period, and: ee- flex actions- are readily excited by, the slightest -stiinulatione especially of the face,and then of the hand said the holes: Th.e- feting ot brain is only .clearly ex- hibited after et . or 5 weeks, before_ which time infants do, not shed tears. Hunger -and thirst are manifested in in- - • creased' general irritability, with reflex movements, ' cease after the first week.. - Smell and. taste are not distinguish- able to infants. Hearing is perceptible the first or second day of libel- They; are Very seneitive to light, and alter &few days learn to - follow the motion of el:ejecta by Moving their head. • Between the loteith and fifth week the convergence Cif the ,pupiliand power of coordination in vision ' are perceptible. A distinct perception of odor does not exist under 4 or 5 months," - M. Xoeitz Lemonenze in. the Yournat des' Debats, laments the Want of enterprise manifeated by - the - French industrial . classes,. as compared with those of Great e Britain and the United States. He 'says that Frenchmen are not onlirover cautions, but such great lovers of routine that. is impesinble to get them out of a -path they have 'once fairly entered into. As • an: ex- . of this stolidity of character; he instancesthe condition - of the .advertieing trade in .France- Although: Frenchmen know thatEngliehmen and Americans have made large fortunes by continuous -and 'persevering advertising,: few Frenchmen are inclined to seek fortune in that 'way. As for newspaper &lionising in France, it is still in its infancy, and is likely to = re- main° BO,. for Freud:Men will not - see* that, the presence of numerous- advertisements in the same Raper. in no way prevents the - public fron2 ming attention to an indiiid- tial advertisementee - Cierceeo'a-Martual- Trainini:School" has opened with eixty.fiviebOye. • Thebuirdieg, - yet complete, will aceommodat•e 350 p pile: instruction_ is to be given. in the • use of tools, With suoh.instruction as may be deeni-ed necessary in mathe- - 'melee, drawing, and the English brie:whew of a high school - The tool hIlitt110- gon, as at present contemplated-, - will • , - include carpentry, wood turning pattern. making,- .iron. . chipping and filing, forge • Work, brazing .and soldering, and the use of Machine .shop tools. The -course of study is to cover two years. , One hour per - day or more will be given to drawing, and not less than two hours per -day to shop work. Before graduating -each pupil will be required to construct a maiihine., Less 4 than one-third of those who havepresented. themselves examination have been ac- ted. The expense -of the building has bee provided for by members of *the Chi-. oag premercial Club, and -With mod.erate, eh ges-for tuition it is .expeoted that the -school will sustain itself. - Fuzee= tests made with the NordenfeIt gun . by the British naval authorities. exhibit the • wonderful capacity' _of that • weapon. It seems that a hardened eteel bullet of seven and one-fourth ounces weight, at a range of 300yards, pene- trated, at an angle -of .forteefive degrees), the side and boiler of a torpedo boat, as represented by ea- one -Sixteenth -inch Steel plate eighteen inches in front of -134 Wend - _steel plate one-half inch- thick. On being fired directly end on at a torpedo boat, the ebtilletspenetrated the steel bow plate, one- :* sixteenth inch thibk, at an -angle of ten 1- degrees, and four bulkheads at right angles. --and, striking the boiler; the bullet then • indented the half-inch steel plate repre- senting it, to a depth of half an inch; sub. sequently, under similar -conditions, ! the plate was pedorated. altogether. The - accuracy is also remarkable, the Mean slowly being '5.6 inches, and in respect to 1 PAYsic **4) rapidity, the trialsashore marked 108 shots • • egeme in the space of 30 seconds. uuxtybeyisegkdaancag - 3/EAlaa AGO. , 11Doctors whent,Prot. Stiady- of . that a feW (From the.Ni teeuth century.). -- • months. stnee- Workmen endployed... upon k It is now, I - am to atieeeomething . . 4 • ' some constenetiona oaths baover forty years si I began my medical. k cf the elver • stipliesLend at :that line the state Of affairs Dnieper, in:Central Russia'? employed the wee exteeniely sin ar. rshonldthink.ft. electric., light to enable them to haidlyiioiatible th t pould have -Obtained theirlaboes atnight. The brilliant rays of anywhere bat in ch a -Devout as Beg - light :attracted so -many militonsofteeetur- land, . which °hen s a . fine 0.1ci ortioad Eng - nal moths; beetles ..and othet insects that land, • se 4 ani.0 0 i oeb eteporo wino. At from time to time itwaa. necessary to stop that time there we tweity,•one libeueieg work and - set all hands to destroying the . bodiee—that is to s ,_bodies whose - oertifi- clouds_ of winged Vieth:an that .frequently t • tate was received ti the State as -evidence completely obscured the light. . This"sug., that the -persons wit posseseed that certifi- .. gested the idea of employing the electric) light - to . destroy ' nocturne' riinsects pre- judicial to agriculture; and experirnents in-. Wit. direction stele be: tried next spring; Not only to insects, but to fith, the light to the surface of the water, 'drew -together , proved fatally attractive. 'Itstrays, directed1g7irdsPaanrcYcoruptioirs.ve eyeeepief Centerbil at vast quantities of all the fishea found in the authority; there Dnieper, and when within the ' chinned' stupefied:- The workmen, improving the ehY- ?feethese lice. field of illumination they lIay 'crowded` together in 'masses, iieemingly blinded and. g!PPtauff:ilkiceilee detunile it thought might be a sham, t opportunity, made a notable haul of Ash., - e - : . • a eham, the certific • - . : said like anything 'NEAELY" all the recent Preiniers. of Eng- ether hand, the exe -land have enjeyeir the advantage of having` good. and - the ' di valuable; but ther 4twas not the eintilleet 'guarantee, except .. ' 4e personal -character otehe people who. ' posef the adnainis- tration of each of eta. hconsing •bodiese as to whatmighth en.- 'It .Was , poileibl feta youeg man to Kircieta London and to spend -two yeses an ix months of the time et his -compulsory i ree -years - lii Walking the -hospitals" ._ i idienetts or t-. worse; he -. could their,. „L, pitting himself in . the -lands - of :a .judicious "grinder , .for . the remaini six - months, - pass . .. • . eeToteer1 QS A SPENDTOBIFT. :"14. V;`,1:1A7,4,W..‘' g. . -'• A MUM who •illitde and ScotterciliFortime. Atter Fortune. . . Th4. shields of, _iiteeige. He :Fryer; ex- anthems:ire and epen'thbrift, die, talk not -Oily of the townebrieof. all theState.,Fryer eeme to Colotado in the- earliee. days, and since that tithe halt been! censideted one of -elee.leadiug •ettitelise Fryer Hill, et-Lead- ville;•Viii8 named after hien.- On this new, fienote billethelieheet in the carbonate belt,-Feyer biaide the -first iodation., "The New Dieeovery," *hiCh progrieed thillione. After Fryer gold it he wesToBe of Colorado's shrewdest mime; -and . was thoroughly • posted at .to -.•geological: formations. - The cate were medie eetperts.... How these Leadvillethoene was, at ireheight - when !bodies carnet° pea -Vas these powers is a Fryer Hill -wait net *Ogee, el ascontaining !very, ouribuil ohapt Minatory, on whit* it mineral. Mr. Fryer, after. studying the *did be outof p citi to eularge.. They. Mineral . formations, conaluded :Abet the had wives of great devotion IA considerei bid ability, to -whose tender care and syne71' pathy in their- ambition they have been largely indebted. The devotion of , the Countess of Russell, who is still living, and the Countess Of Beaconsfield, had some- thing of roiKance. Mrs. Gladstone, who is nearly theys ine age as the Premier, ac- companies er husband, as did Lady Bea-. .consfield, :everywhere, and - frequently re- mains in the ladies' gallery to the close of the night's sitting. Lord Pedneerston, more than perhaps any other first Minister, how- ever, wait indebted for his position and its maintenance to his wife, who was physi- cally' and mentally s.,- remarkable woman. Up to her death iii lfi69 at 5, four. years 'dr" on the Pale after her husband, shecouldread without to micluer," with law,- as a " qualik. glaie-ee, and talked with all the fire and en- emy of a young woman of 20. Her wiles difficult to imagmel wee _most cheery, musipal 'rase& Her 3 eyes were et bright blue; an in 44 ite of a very -evident wig she was a ery handsome old lady. She had , some. pebuliarities, al- ways shook handswithher 1' ft hand, and pronounced gold . " gould,' -kid china " cheeily." • ties, - partly medical carbonate:.belt . necessary_ .extended us, partly the Aroli- into the hill and, set a force of There was DO Oilltral Merl at -work developing.„„, -'His friends nOthing to prevent laughed at him, but he kept -on sinking and mg authorities from the result was . " The New jDisooverY," ny one upon any con- which _produced. furore in the mining The examination world. i3.inoe he hag. been m Colorado he curriculum Might he has -made and lost a ilaseit,fortunes, being 'might be tOtight and "etgaged in mining itf all 'pats of the -State.. a shop; or, on the He was a high liver, and one he -procured a nation naight be fairly fortune he did not rest tell he had spent it ma correspondingly all. In speeding Ms money he- was the "-Coal Oil Johnny" of the West. His extravagance and liberality_ to his friends caused his financial ;ruin; ror the past year he has .been . trying to retrieve his for- tunes in the minefe.but for once in his life fate was against him. - While he made money his beat days in, the mines seemed to have passed. Last 'summer he married Miss Cunningham, a belleofChicago. ' The - wife to -eight insane, caused by her -hue:- band's death. His erelatiVes live in -Phitite delphia and fit.Paul.—Denver Beyebtipati. triumphantly thick h the ordeel. of . one. *meg viva voce exa rination; which was all that WAS iebsolute fieeeissary to euable bim to1befutned 1 e upon the pubic like piss, conquering and ea full_ sanetion of the ;practitioner:" It, is t present such a:: date difficult to depict the cantle ,they would ap. Malignant caricathre; at there was never a - 'stem, which was bet- in the students who - degrade thcprofes- -.My memory goeii e When Models Oti . Sawyer '.. of - the ht have been 'drawn I re. -. 1- re- eourient in. 'reiy. yoring detyli of a greet Oaf physician .who was ttevelling with elfr d, hieueelf, bound . ou a•Viiiit to a coo . hinliee The friend fell demi .an edict fit, and the story nth thet the physi n -ranee& to bleed him because it was -con ry to .prefeeilional eti- q tette for a physiweeeto perform thatoper- etion. Whethet ?qriend -died or whether ) he ;Was not bled I -do the inerel- of the -StctrY1 $e other hand, when a ifiated by the preten- •!' 0, was asked whether ,Up his son to his Olin "he is such feel ysician of him." ofthe ' 66 ntiY been: written in oinalemnation or t " masher ",that few: words -on the other 1,jele Of thequeetion will not -be ainise W sent -the Masher as gest that the burd placed on the shot should bear it, B flirt -appeareehe w woman who_ciffete It would be poor S -‘ vita Attention all met- With no respo - the girls are to. bla the stieetie lett ing boldness of foohahly imagie but. :Which is a_ seemly. Such - iemarks from '1 .of things, still min Onsequencee of it, peer like a gross but it may be said 'system, or want 0! :ter ' calculated to came wider it; M. Ft -sion. as _ whol - back to . a Echoes ot the Griot Stern': • Itt-Heard county, Ate. log were whirled, Parers . f r whom' the into the air and broken Ala, they retie:led' were'anythin lent the ground, . 7 I' • - ! member a story w At Leeds, -.Ala., the feinted° ,depotited near the railroad e weod-Viorking 'machine which no one about there had ever aeen before:- - . 1 Three harass belonging to - Dr.Thomas Wright, near 33irminghate, Mee were lifted into the air, and . have not been Oen or .heard from since. - ' • A house near Birmingham,' Ala:, in whioh twOnegroes were lying sick, was pieked- up by the wind and landed fifty yerde away. NeithetO the men,wcia iniiired. • - - A. bale a, ton was blown half a mile away fro t .shene Ala. A chtirch was destroyed, and a large portion of it' was -found on the . top of the mcluntain three, arteks of a mile -away.- - Near Midwaiy,, C.; Martin' Mingo, .a coloredcolored Preacher, was lifted from .his teeny. the wind and deposited in' a valley 500 yards - &stay, with but Blight •bruises. - His house was blown ta.pieces. - . • . I • Gliffoid - A. Locke, of laver; Ga., threw hiniself into :a -chimp of undergiowth to escape -the tornado, aud ,Was,ao severely threshed about and pelted with 'hailstones 'that -his -clothes were torn into ribbons. . • -- - Upon aehill in the dentee of the. vilkige of Goshen, stood a new and well-built sphOolhou.se. Although not a stick of the building could be found after the storm, excepting the - flooring- not - one of the twenty...Sit initiates! was. fietalpr iniurede At Rookport, Ind.;a party -�f twelve, Tie bad been aorotis the 'river to attend a wed- ding, were caught in the tornado: The -ferryboat in which ethey were was blown aiileetee and 'lathed to pieoete, anditspissen- gere were left clinging to the limbs of the - trees against whioh-the boat was. hurled. *None of them were, killed, minas Almost Forgotten. • - • P • hie got hetter beim not remember,.bu the, BEliMe:. On :famous. surgeon, airs of the phereic -h -meant to bit' calling, "N�,".he. I moan to make it . How so Get- AL So Much has ref) not designing to pre - saint, we, would of street' flirtation be --iers of those w!ae justly e en as the male street nob often steak to a m no ' encou agement. of fun for him .to in. if- his invitation a. - It is manifest that ea for his presence upon tine lay aside tkeir dash- er, which they often tenotes independence angerous as l it is un - demeanor •provokes n and women whioh would make the e le? of the average maiden n could she but hear doubt that many girls . modesty which would ideration. With these frequently resedthig in ceereat frolic, but these a:moaner not character . could they .ehers See them: Very - considered fest, yet n recklessnese: of eon - places, easily -earn the may not be guilty of Will as certainly lose one 'whose . respect is ugh they were. This to women who have ,oeyond the age of 20.. over...Woke& in the not be 'forgiven in her tingle with indignk them.. There is e leaking in th entitle them to co the etreeeffirtatio acquaintance, is The fallowing occurrences in 1784 have very girls would s been copied from an old chronology: accord, with th • The first appearance Of a orth Arced- site themselves as can Indian in England.. few girls wish to they can, by a cer duct while in_pub appellation. Th any crime, but t the respeot of ev worth having:as particularly appl reached or passe What may. be r school girl of 15, sister of rneturer The -frost lasted 59 'days: _ • Miislins first minufecstured in. England. Sunday Schools first estehlishede. - Thieves carded off the great seal of Eng- land. : ' - • Polls at elecOons opened for forty days. - A tradesman in Dublin.: tarred . and- feetheied for importing . English .goods. Lord Muskerry's coach tieat din the tame manner. dutye.; -t-e- . '11‘ _Wheat, 5s 2d per bushel. ' Rye, 83 6d per bushel. • 13arIey, 63 per bushel. - - Oats, 28 per buehel. A large leer 16o. - 4 Man, whosenameis giVen -Pittiie, was tun over °tithe Grand Trunk RallWay yestetday, afternoon near the ---Gregory HouseeMontreale His lege-were out off by the oar. wheels, and he died alioetly- after- _ , . wards. . • t. - A large number of -coal dealers faniv riots • parts of . the United States :and Canada are in Montreal- forthepurge:ea Of negotiating for a supply of Grand Trunk: coal.' It said this year's Opiltraotwilrbe for halfa million tons. - - The llungatian patricit, Xpainthe'-'11 neer f. AD Sect • e Novae mothers of a ne .given several pr Rostov, on the middle aged nur .sen: She was V fond of the child, suddenly left the The child began lostite memory, tune& _drowsines without hiiiing b was, placed in th Jewess burst into on the dead oh said : "-The parte child. She was* she. has .murder g-Vhild. Killers.. mya warns_ Russian eligious keit whioh has s ifs' exidence. .1n e an ciffieer engaged a for his three.year-old attentive and -seemed. t after two mcinths she tnaticin and the town. the veep next day, . suffered from con- A - week later .died really The Corpse coffin, • when;. young e helm, threw herself 11, iknct- drying -.bitterly woman poitioned :•My 'muse before, now 81 yea,re of age, and lives quietly at woman 'your poot,boyl' The woman Spoke that,- uth. It his been found He neither believes in the alliance 91 the: thatin Rostov thi is a society of ehild Latin races nor in that of Teutonic. He murderers, who Peeson childten. by twang' fancies that Austria and Russia will, ere • long„he at daggers drawn, and f melee that,. as he his no Infirmities oaten -Abele. of old age, he may live to see it. A.correspondent from Japan wines of narcotics. Th by a fanatioat.; every woman's d 'life te as Many o make them share fore the earth' are instigated to do so. man, who says, "It is to spare the evils of ren as possible, and to the blies of heaven- be - contaminated their the strange custom of • en carrying smaller children on their • 410. "You willsee scores of children at. (lay, all ing these burdenabout (for you mu know the island swarms with babies), and as they rush along at a break-neok speed the head of the sleepinginfant May be seen cleviatiort, M 360. yards 'of ten . rounds -aied, Waving lathe breeze,: • - . tree yeek 'Any= einnS. :If You want to do it neatly, - Then you Ow your eyes brightly, once or: If you want to do it right and do it nice First you choose your. victim rightly, . Then yen press his arra-so slightly, ..Vetwryiosew.eetly., and. completely;.sa • • - - - Then, with eyes so *ay 'eyelike, — Yen look uti to him so dovelike, . As around his Atinlyneck your arms lott throw; When he'll Press you to his'heart, then You must Week -You ne'er part; then - You work your cards, but do it very slow.-: • • . Then you call hira.first your lovey, to him then tube your hubby, And tO hear yon - safely through earth's cruel strife; ,•• ' • . Hein -wasp. you to him Madly, And in loving tones' niot gladly; • He'll claim you as his pretty little wife. —The preferred oredior is one who Will wait lottgest for his pity. ' : —Arabi Pasha -dreeees white, but his clothes have the Feeneh. out. —President Arthritis little daughter Nellie is 10.years old, She is dressed very.sitciply. . . —The negroes of Jamaica; tear off the husk of the 'cocoanut with their. teeth.. —Well, powder is something like Money. IV'S 'awfully hard to hold after it -begins to go. - - . • . , —Queen Isabelle who IS vety. latge, 'dresses in light colors. Her children are thin. The 1.N; 13,11- at Ealifax. yesterday; andlanded her Mails and pate eengers, j • , • . • : . Women," it- is said, " pimp. ittee_one • • • . • clusionie" We never heard mice called by- • . : that name before, • -,., . riceat . your perviee, madam 1" said the polite burglar When caught with-. his arms full of silverware. • • • health journal seri that you ought to OA!) three-quarters of an bent for your dinner. It is well also to add a few vege- tables, and a Piece of meet, , _ • —The wife of the living -skeleton -says she will -tie her husband into a knot if he mete lesti her. Of course it ,would be a bone. -knot. - - • —She sang, "I want to bean angel," and he declared _thatehe*tie mie- already. To this she. bluehingly .demurred. 'Then he married her. Oieneurrer sustained. -ea black velvet brocade has the /rent of the -skirt of bluish ptnle. partly hidden by. black Spanish lace, thetelbow - sleeves end- ing in ink ribbon and blaiik lace: - • .-.: . - --Wiiiskey is made from corn - but You can't make wife believe when ,she smolh liqUor on her husband that he has tasted nothing stronger than_ grain. - • ----Women are constantly making a great talk about teniperince.. The beat way fcr them te encourage temperance -is to stop urtembur all or era atm rmitted, ex sue in place he Minister of- the In. he police authorities to efif either sex under 16 t at wedding festivitieii, public amusement. ". "1> AN tieasenaple e. • ee Oats; thsrtietbfee. Timathyeseed,. eigh bushel. - *UDE* nyral Bender* ft' per bushel. . ve iminds per et 14. la. in,Cee 1E3. j`diuois at ten el,6it beiegoo4oebethIess and immature.- that it Fee?, and ie of little valuelor feed. ' It is *good:zeds to things,-anciftherefore, enough of it—all the be: soil plough. poor ground easettrier_it: throw noir his seed npon it, e soWhig with an ap marryingintemperate-men. • Mezsachtisette, whichhet& example -0 for all the world, has - 35006 farmers who own dogs; and who don't care scent for the smaller number of farmers who own sheep. • —The Pfineeet3 Hoheielohe„ wife of . the: Carman Ambassador to • Peels; kedently wore a. necklace composed of seven rows of large pearls,: Over this:a Nag* velvet. ribbon supporteda large diamond English nobleman *travelling in - the west has offered his heart and hand to a servant girl, -.Perhaps he -knows What wages eervant girls get in thia countryand is after her Money.., : bad egg can be detected by the way it lies in the .water. .1t -Will float. Se with bed cheraiderse They lie soe ranch that it is not neceseaty to go below the itirfacte to • - detect therii. - • A ttiirdy•Old son of theplough • liad a genuine creamery kotrgh, But she took a bad cough -which carried her Ough, - And he don't run a creamery nough.. York journaliste is.. reported to have lost a •gelkui of rum fifty years old by theft o! a Pleunber repairing Pipet; Of 'his residence. It is only. New York that a journalist Can save a gallon Of itim, and -yet be wealthy enough to hire : . - —A Massaohusette min recently put .tt bullet into the -kitohen clock,- supptOsing that he was shooting a burglar; -He is the same man who smacked a string- of onions hanging °nth() wall one dark night, stip; posing that he Was hissing the hired girl.- - • • ---" 'Oh, for a lodge in some vast-wilder. ness 1"- quitted Mr. Splatterlyer th- other day, _when he was feeling a poetic *mood. "Should think you had lodges enough 1" Said Mrs. SPlatteily. *0 You are out now four nights in the week to lodge, and R- yon had another, in a vrilderneite I don't suppOpe you Would be,IOMe at all, except to eat" • ' tO the bottozn of reeeghing and m be a sub. not groW clover, away money to lie has preceded ;,tion of manure.. "Raw mabure freer.' the !Stable •111 injutiousle young- fru4.14rees. ;tin wood ashes as at fertilizer w teined in sufficient beuntifnlly &liar as the Cultivate only as mi* manure well if year lack Remember that exple; 'timers is conclusive ciee one acre of ground tletit f d well maimed wifl two seizes only. half -woe Poultry houses shout le they can be ob. -ntittes. Apply 0, as you pan thin and peer. :ooti tall Tgcmhaiiiti gtily pulverized ;Lee more than pared. toward e the 8911-th--should be whito' ..ec shed inside and , outside—the nest& shgpi% oleaned out once a -week, When potletrl:s,e•anned giavnenoeathea- - e nests the hens your chickens : umulating a fevr ened promptly to stonal application of sedes and bottom of t have been using. Gi chance to help you in shekels. They will re - every attention given ta , Now , is an excellexerl gear and harness on tr two good reasons why attended to at once. comparatively idle an set-U(314m and injur is greased.- Wash ell ,••• me to grease all .eire; There are '1E3 work should be e krm hands are Opre is noilust to 14etaher after it ✓ strap and rub 13.060buckle until it walneR like a silver a warm water are vr.eparatory to pot. -oil and lamp - Castile seep good for 4sleansing h an appligationofenea blaoAtki, r;t111..: . .ought.. to' • 'have' daily-i....teceeissto .04.4 T, t is: one of the greateetepeesetetatiereadig-- health. It.keepa' them ...clean, sound. a t,•? ,strolifisi, -10 .1*acelif - ..11p their .appetites - to p '-(y::,..r.AtAiMption- of :cleaner herbagethan yidnid- otherwige pat.. .For lambs, the ef • year .of their lives, :• add one-tenth :o finely pulverizede ooppereeaS,a-pre*.entfOstIgItin!At 010.112144e ous;blood-sitokinge 'rkuittes Which canoe papiirekin, • .1 -The ;p-ointS. 1 fav'YIj of . ateitYing are: First, a dairy farm - cort‘ 11) per cant. leas tie...Operate • than grai!eleoviteg or . mixed • ' agrioniture ; second, average's little more tee thirde-pricas are mor reliable, fourth,.deir less ;1, fifth, it is m changes in the& seasoti does not suffer so midi and varying seasons, dent, provide against average returns p other brandies; 5 adorn] and more c•ohatiets thesoil secure against isinee ttle dairying 'troth wetand fro.st -1.4s.e can, if pro. - A eth• .„ • , : Newest .Hetf ItIvs. 'Don't shakea horn ,.1 la egt;f0 see if any -ila k Of the family -are :atetoe • . - . : Don't try to take thole wat Of way from an express:train at Et -this 2oad crosaing. . v .Don't talk back to akficroan who:handles • the fire ihevel with -grlir ;and dexterity. f Don't go neara dpittk If a draft comes - toward You, run away4 e .A. slight- draft- is the - neosidangerciue.. g O- . • . Don't blow in the gt4t4-,?Cfar, grandfather carried in the war o...012. It is more dangetOwi now than it e ":then. . . , Don't hold a vhisp_bite e'otlier end while you thaw it out in freielt the Stoveto see if it is alive. It is g lly alive. - - Don't try to persue, bun dog to give •up -.a, yard of: whichie ' - iS in possession. Possession.to e bull d ' a ten points of the .law e . , • 6 : - .Don't eat . things er ysei have had enough because you 'T. they will go to waste; enah e • (mato -11. bring.yoti too much to waist patine ', . ". Don't go to bed withle' ur boots on. This is One-ot the most nuke lthy practioes that e Man, especially a ;tied 711E91, can be addicted to. : - -: . . - . , Don't call a . very e, sinewy min a prevaricator. - If you it ... liUre he is a pre- varicator, hire anothe4, an to break the •.e. F, news to him. .. . 1 -Don't Vit. an old boek4-kheil in the etove to amuse the -al:L(11(311430 You may not line ger here bedew-hit:alio' a applause, even if you should win any: Don't, when gunnite put the pipe you , have been sneaking .in.. be pocket where you arelcaerying- -yonie owder, unless' you have a very strong ceilOttitian, and another - quit of elothee. - bri . . ' iy- ' Don't allow the : \_. to drink the cop- .•• , ... contrite& . lye.- Conlifiterated • lye is . don • generous, even in vert'it ell doses, 'except - to a -man who is actomed to drinking Baltimore ilotn *his ee, . v .• School B andits: A Boston despatoh Is: A number of pupils of the Coddink,kin school, between the ages of 12 aid15,1- ‘14,anized themselves into it gang called :he Jesse James Gang," and -wore rib 00- WhiCh J. J."' was.inbcribed. The . jar was known as "The Captain,". and • a • dagger and a dark lantern. They ht_...„ 'pheir headquarters in an -rmocoupiedsta ' They :have en- tered_ several buildingo Quincyand stolen Various articles. - Sini.e.Q these have been 4 recovered. The mat as been left in the hands of the eclat,' a rides. At the laseeilectioni, York, Eiglitn- d, which Asa Matra Uvthe new Corrupt Practices• .A.itt, the 'kV tees of Sir F. Mil." rner, the Sucoessful T candidate; were V4,000, and of.- Locketti, e • Liberal, t3,500. Atthe previonie, el* _James Lowther - spent-625,000ln an v.zce8sfuI effort to keep his seat. M. N. Elliot, cIoe fatally wounded on Va., yesterday, by his. feud wasthe canoe. y four shots. - , r,• was shot and. inlet at Richmond, aged 20: An old e young Man fired Frank Tommy, a • w York publisher, was serestedlastenigV p the complaint of Anthony Comstock 'r reprinting a book entitled "Memoirs 0; Vreorge the Fourth," which it is claimekt4 fa injurious to the weave a thread of Wei so strong we morals of the comm - Habit is acable. it each day, and it' cantnit break% • r.j