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Yates County Chronicle
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Yates County Chronicle

   Yates County Chronicle (Newspaper) - November 23, 1882, Penn Yan, New York                               VOLUME NUMBER 47 PENN N. NOVEMBER 1882. WHOLE NUMBER 2072. County Chronicle ry bj IX VatcH V. mude on all TO a A reduction bu yearly subscriptions paid in TO The lias now the c of any ill and of. known at BUSINESS GEORGE A TTf V V A V1 y f i J O J It A W. over Main C. OFFICE OX MAIX He i3 competent to put in gold and to out broken in a manner reliable o benefit ami not to tuu interest of M K. MAY UK FOUND AT Dental i ami Kim Wlim or an for doing goo without SMITH THE of the 13 1'enu N. Y. M. U. 1741V1 W. W. U. C. SIGN AND Shop Maiden Lano opposite Orders left on the prompt II ive F. AND eo III our i lately tilt in Maiden Gun Ou found at both day HOOK MAGA JL or Hooka to bind can have work done promptly arid by tho at his residence on I tt ork can be loft at and will bo at- tended without THOMAS 11. Jan. 1S7D. JACOB to attend personally to nil o my in Oils 1 will prompt o Wans and will bo made or those who wish thousand any work in tho of and Stair that may be desired Commercial Dated 1 J. ANALYTICAL cimbu hla aa Tuesday Uie of 27ih of National the 12th of August and N. Principal Office Franklin where all letters should be Those wishing answers of letters treats successfully Hip Nervous Female Diseases of the Heart and the Running from the of the and all forms of The above diseases wo mako a Onr practice is founded on truths of and from nil with life by Wo when wo examine cause of and remedies to not by but bv Consultation BEST THING KNOWN jb JN HARD OR HOT OR COLD SAVES TIME ami SOAP nml .No rich or should without it. all of imitations well deigned is Iho ONLY ami always of JAMES new Thirty-Three Years By Gen. was nt 1 ty foil I r t M-i C f iv 1 1. i Mi- f fully in. I1 IV I'll I V.t. t' i t. mi i. 1 il n tat A A. i Y j for I1 on of nnd IL N. V. a fill and It is a and Is of railroad at Van to M. THOMAS H. Cheapest Hn authorities to its delicacy of For Mlo by ALL ALL AT Also a full lino of AND Picture 40 Main 3G-tf N. Y. HEAT A HOUSE 15V USING in FURNACE Sold by 50mO I We nro displaying in and at sat PRECIOUS LINE OF Watches and Jewelry a the most extensive in variety over in our IS Slate I r f. HEALTH OF WOMAN THE HOPE O LYPIA E. PINKHAM'S A Curp for nil nnd and Ihc 1'KO- It n I ir n i t pf it In 1 1. I1 for o. u 1' df V r. v r. u 1 ii K-r 1. 1. ft f uy nil Drus PROVED COST for TRAVELERS YAN POST JT New urn including p. in. and of ulbO a. in. Way and Southern intc p. 1.1. a. pouch N. Y. C. K. Mail arrives n. P. m- Thursday and Saturday Arrive A. M. A. M. TVo to act tho United and to obtain ents in and all other No chargo for ol or by mail Patents 113 aro noticed in which 1ms tho largest and iu the most of iU kind published in tho The every patentee largo and splendidly illustrated and in admitted to bo best paper devoted to engineering and other of iu any by 10 A of are certainly been so U decreed at World's In- for Sixteen no other been found at 11113-. Stylo and bt si for lar und music in or tit only Onn other at to und Tim uru hy any other the ture of introducing im- portant adding to power mid ol tone and Will not tuning ns much as 1'ianos. Circulars Thn MASON 1IAM.LIN and Tinno lol Wabash 71w-l GENEVA AND TIME 1SS1-'. 7 arriving al at nt at at al a.m. arriving nt at nt Dundee at Hock at Center at Leave p. arriving at at lit at Hock lit Center at Cilen at at p.m. arriving at Earle's nt nt at Hock at Watkins at p.m. Leave at Watkins at Heading Center lit lit Dundee at nt at 11.-I5 a. nt Watkins 1-j Center nt Hock nt at Dresden at p. in. Leaves Corning at a. arriving at IJlen ut at Hock Stream Dundee at Dresden at Geneva Leaves Corning p. m at Glen nt Center nt Dresden at m. LAKE STEAM TION no longer from want of Appetite of Strength lack of Intermittent BROWN'S IRON TERS never fails to cure all these N CHEMICAL Co. years 1 have been n from 1 no relief tried was act ing on the advice of a who had benefited by Inori I a with most 1'rcviuus to IRON 31m every thing I ate distressed and I suffered greatly from a burning sensation in the was Since ing all my troubles are at an Can cat any time without any disagreeable re- 1 am practically another Mrs. j. 30 Maverick BROWN'S IRON TERS acts liko a charm on the digestive removing all dyspeptic such as ing the Heat in tho etc. The only Iron Preparation that will not blacken the teeth or give Sold by all Brown Chemical Co. Sec rll Irwi arc made by vl ti BEWARE OF S Autumn imo TWO EXCEPT leave Sundays A. and M. usual nt at i. ami p. M. at A. M. and 1 p. ing at Geneva at A. M. and M. sure and at and Carring United Mail mid American Ex- Freight anil carried aa low ai tnv other Through passengers and their transferred J. D. N. all Acute and I INVALUABLE FOIt STINGS OF SOHE etc. For Bleeding or it is tuo greatest known stopping pam mid healing in a For timed mid Its effect upon delicate SB pimply ft it All 3 yield to its wondrous For or Open upon is moat Kilos of Sure are certainly cured by USED IN N LAKE ERIE WESTERN of Time Adopted January all run between New Minium Detroit and without 1CL111KA. EXTRACT 1ms The tho words oji ether is A imist on CT. Take no otUr 11 is cold in bulk or IONS COM- Wll II I UK 11UUCATE JOll POND'S Calru i 75 50 25 Up Toilet Soap DO Nasal 1.00 25 25 No. f I I 3.lTA M 7.1-1 I'M 3.J1AM A M A 31 11.WP r M r Jl I S r jf A M Fulls 1.1R A M I A M 6.110 1.15 US 1.81 LOCAL VEhl except 1'osl arming at lie at 5.wi p. in. Junction Dig Flats 9 Painted Post Milli Adrian 11.Jl .si at Ii tin 13 arriving .it Hoi at p fmm at Turning an at p. m. p I i in 1'dM eron Mills t Adrian nt at 7.10 p. in. FUOM on Jen j I I 110 Hi i 2 uj 1'jSI I v I 1.0CA1. tHAINS 11 11.nil 1'J 1.00 Union 3.-17. I 4 liend at p. in. On stops it all cf nn i Flits part fa 1 1 IN in hill I 11 Hi 1 n I 4 at 11 et Bis 11.51 at p. BIT in. I I it. 4 ST. u ton ii O ft T 1 itt at p. X Y. CENTRAL rn l I r ni V p M for the south must be at tba freight corns tor the north at V3 M. Medicated Family ami in Hunk uf OUT mi TO y n A C C A ks t 1-1- West 1'iui Now full of Die In Pond's Extract Show on at F. Wheeler corner of Main and 2050yl ALL KIDNEY THE KIDNEY AHD LIVER MEDICINE KNOWN TO twenty with ily two i was now Hint I was on 1 u with to liv Hunt's Hi my Dis- t iM ill at I I wag M. with kidney dis- anil without In I ni liem by lite use of Fur and is A. 11. in to tlm virtue of In fr. in K I from bed an attack of The lioi nut I liy Ii with kidney dia- r two was to F. A Hill el nf ihe 1 1 1 I A P T P s il il U 1 Jl U b. Ije bv a by Send for ti American or ARTISTIC A A n. a sky like So so so clear and The untroubled azure arch Which not a cloud is sailing A smile of a festive As though she woke from And entered on a Might one half to dream of Except for trees whose glow is Except for withered leaves and That rustle underneath our And make a woodland of the as I I turned to see The vista of a climbing With leaves It was a forest road the branches softly And scattered still their brown and The sunshine to the pathway The glamour of tale of To-morrow morn the rain may The clouds may the day be But I must still remember all That makes this day so This unforgotten scene will bless When darker hours must do their This still Autumn This sunshine in November's OF It is a still and glorious The last sun's rays lingered lovingly among the branches of tho old oak and their kisses were very even than on our as we stood on the bank and watched their reluctant The twilight came down in ful and one by one the watchers took Cheir places above The which had been somewhat quite too much for lulled perfect and the mountains and the forest seemed to re- pose serenely in tho still Only the brawling disturbed the calm and quiet scene but aa tho night grow tup softness which night always brings to sounds of water lowed its and I caught myself sleeping on thn flat which is my favorite In I havo been all day enjoying I'm and can assure you that it is ly a sweet pleasure to one wearied with long It is at to the thoughts havo They run riot like boys let out of ing in sunny or from old or lingering on tho banks of or babbling music to the ing ripples of the Fairy fancies wile and win Butterflies or moths attract them to wearisome chases over hills and through and escape them at the Then they kneel on the margin of some cool and drink rich draughts of re- and leisurely and lazily stroll happily nesting length in thain tho pleasant night winds blow over and they How very like our thoughts are to schoolboys 1 I never thought of it Happy he whose truant fancies have one one voice of love to sing them to sweet slumber I have been idle because the wind has been too high for comfortable I did take one good fish for dinner out of a well ed by The basin in which I took the trout I spoke of is one of tho loveliest nooks you can well and is made still more winning by a legend which Willis has connected with I doubt him but he has always assured with a most serious and in tho approved that he got it of an Indian whom he met a long time He has begged me to write out the alleging that it needs much filling which I can better give it than I doubt for I he has the whole of his Indian historian to the contrary I will give you the outlines of The basin is not far from our and has long been a favorite resort for its coolness and The stream falls into it over a hill of impassable It is a spot for quiet The golden sunshine hardly steals through tho branches of the old already and those rays which do fall linger here longer than You can not enter but by n narrow path at the All around is rocky the top of which is loaded with dense masses of The basin is nearly and may be twenty yards in with a of a few yards carpeted with and and Near the on the north this border widens and extends in- to an angle of the being roofed allows a ing some fifteen feet running to a point at twenty feet We havo laid poles and branches across this and have in former years spent many a warm night in this cool It was in a year long since forgotten by the natives of these and unrecorded save in tho innermost lines of the oak tree of five centuries or that steady recorder of the storms of was in a year which must be since we know nothing of that a chiof of tho wander- ing on a far came into tlm ful Tho homo of his triba was on the southern bank of tho whore their thousands owned a royal 1 not long on tho grave of their with reverence on the great mound that pressed on the giant forma and stout hearts of tho mighty I had entered other but I shrank from for strange reason that I can not ex- avoided penetrating into its silent and called away my workmen who were with and turned their spades into a smaller in which we found but a few and an and 1 know not but that was the grave of the chief who figures in this But I must return to it. The stranger Indian looked with ing eyes on the brown neck and ruddy the light form and beautiful foot of the the daughter of the old in whose lodge he ate dried son brought by her own hands and be- fore he had completed bis first with the haughtiness of one accustomed to he had asked her in But she had long been promised to a chief of her own and I hap had learned to love Ah says leaning over and catching by the glare of that last pine knot the flashing word that I just if I could find an Indian with heart untaught in de- and eyo that haa learned its light from the itable I could win that love that bubbles up in such n glorious I might yet be won dear Joe Ah my companion and my you have not to be won back to Your hair ia growing but your heart no evidence of age 1 I remember an eye when we were a sunny my tried old that you have not Where is its light if not into that all-absorbing brilliance of tho blessed land I forget my legend in these She and her father alike refused the and he returned to his tribe in He came and it was with a thousand warriors at his to take his One of those long aad bloody wars in which tho Indian tribes lof our country BO often It lasted through the winter and the and as the summer sun grew tho stranger had mado his home in the ot the old But his bride was not yet In it's as many men have to nations than win an unwilling Somewhere in the forest lingered yet a hardy ing with zealous trust the maiden ter of their slaughtered In vain the invaders iu vain sought trails of their The latter never left their fastness but for and then concealed their trail with a skill which was In the which I have described were gathered thirty and tho few female attendants of the guarding her The ground in the angle of the rock was covered with rich panther and wolf and tho little HOOK was roofed with Iho same and the whole so covered with brush as to defy Trees lay across the outlet of tho whose dense leaven wholly con- and the only egress and en- trance was by swimming through a row From this opening every night more or less of the guard swam out into the down the creek into tho and up or down the river half a mile before they touched tho thus defying all skill to find a trail to their A sitting ono night on the bank of tho saw something in the water which did not look any mal ho had before lio watched it closely as it turned into the and stealthily till ho saw a man's hand grasp luo limb of a tree that lay across tho Tho as the first man issued from tho a hurled with unerring en- tered hia with a yeil that woko the whippoorwill that slept on the dead oak over he sprang from tho fell and Ins body floated down the bloody An instant a dark object entered at tho same opening from which the slain man had The chief of tho few stout guardsmen saw tho red feathers in the tuft of the and waited till ho reached an eddy in the then struck a swift springing into the grasped his and drew his stone knife around ihe It is marvelous what a passion Indians have always had for those and and another lowed their leader into the and followed him also to his The yells of cho combatants rang hideously in tho but the cry of tho attacked far surpassed the cries of the and latter shrank from tho fierceness of the wolf at bay in his deu. But the sequel was No mode of attack and the Wyandots sat down to besiege and starve out the lant little One by one they ed to the grim death that was now Their mournful were heard day and night in tho dim forest and ono by one their giant bodies floating down the They met death bravely in those brave old clays 1 At length tho maiden and her be- trothed remained with but ten gaunt and yet in their Then they devised a plan of The girl was a bold as are all Indian and was accustomed to being long under wa- It was supposed that the besiegers would not trouble themselves to regard the dead body of a warrior floating by while the ten old warriors chanted a tho young chief lay on the and tbo grasping his hand with one of swam under him as his body floated out at the and down into tho A with a low grunt of threw a which struck his breast Lut he was and so those faithful two floated away in the solemn and to a lodge among their distant Ono by ono the remaining warriors adopted a similar plan and when the silence of the hold was so profound that the ers concluded death had dono its they and finding no bodies on the knew at once the and their yells of rage aud disappointment again scared the birds that were ing their second brood in the branch of the oak the An array of mailed including the with hia drowsy demands In no in no other insect do we meet tho tion of vocalization seen in tho hoppers and their And with the beetle we approach more clearly to the region of aud and leave that of specialized such as we have been metaphorically hearing in the To pass from the latter in- sects to the and their appears to be a transition almost as wide as that between the ar- language or arithmetic of ture and the scanty vocabulary of tho savage or the primitive mathematics of tho tribe who can count ten as ed on their fingers and but ask in amazement why there should bo more things in tho In the beetle the sound-producing organ is comparable to a kind of which moves upon an adjoining The site of the organ in question varies in different In some the rasps aro situated on the upper surface of one or two of the tail and are rubbed against the hinder edges of the wing times the rasp is placed quite at the tip of the and in some well known tles as the the rasps may bo borne on the wing covers and may produce tho stridulating sound by bing against the edges of the joints of the Among the sounds produced by tho weird noise the death watch stands Tho sound produced by these beetles re- sembles the ticking of a aud they may be made to respond by placing a watch close by their Tho female watches are known to tick in re- sponse to the sounds of the male The noise is produced apparently by tho insect raising itself on its legs aud by its striking its chest against the ing Thus the simple explanation of an insect call explains away tho expressed in Gay's solemn death watch the hour she Butterflies and moths are known to produce which in one or two cases at from a membrane analogous to that seen in Mr. Darwin indeed tions that one species n liko that produced by a spring which can be heard at the distance of several Among tho and other insects the production of the humming forms a fact of interest in tho history of the And one or two species possess a power of emitting sounds of more definite which correspond to the of tho grasshoppers and their But it is a well known and at the same timo inter- esting fact that bees aro known to ex- press emotional variations by aid of their humming tired says Sir John on and therefore vibrates its wings only 330 limes in A bee humming ou a on the other increase its vibrations to 440 per says Sir probably in- but the change of tone is dently under the control of tho and thus offers another point of similarity to tho true A bee in pursuit of honey bums continually and ly on but if is excited or angry it produces a very different Thus the of insects do not merely serve lo bring tho sexes they aro not merely but also liko any true to express the PALACE Instantaneous in its more familiar supposes motion of the objects but another foi in ot it is that in which it is the moie motion of as in photographing from balloons or Tho practicability of photographing landscapes from the dow of a train running at the rate of even forty miles an hour has been ly proved by Dr. who uses what he calls a gyrograph for the The apparatus comprises a copper tube similar to that which carries the lenses in ordinary but the are placed on opposite sides parallel to the Within is a shutter similar to the box of a it presents two quad- according to the position of the do or do not let pass the light rays in making a ter of a This movement is obtained by means of a spring liberated from a An exposure of only one of a second may be haj With a little practice wonderfully dis- tinct it is can be obtained with the Detroit A Peasant who was driving a cart along a country road had the misfortune to get in a In this emergency ho slammed down his cracked his heels together and loudly called for Hercules to aid Old leisurely appeared from the est and when ho saw tho row was ho bit off a piece of plug and observed 1' Put your shoulder to tho wheel and boost her The gods help those who help seo you in Texas first replied tbo and he sat down to wait for tho mud to dry While waiting for this event ho made on a dog up three lightning Bold a washing machine for and got his board for At the end of four days his old mule walked off with the cart without and tho Peasant figured that ho was about sixteen dollars ahead of that Don't break your back for Hercules or any other old THE IS THE A Dog lay in tho manger and when the Ox caino to oat tho nine and snapped and tried to rush him you going local that asked the you won't let mo cat my laat do exclaimed the and ho the Dog a horn which sent him way up among tho If your neighbors don't like tho way you pound your old lot AND TUB A Shepherd who tended a flock of sheep near a cried one and all the old rushed out with pitchforks and to find that beast was all in tho For three or four limes the lad played this trick on tho villagers and they finally camo to tho conclusion that he a liar who deserved to bo made aii Indian Oje day tho Wolf really but when tho boy mounted the fence and gave the the villagers refused to move off nail kegs at the corner saying to each Henry can't work that string on IH As no ono responded to tho call the Wolf set out to devour the but be- fore he had secured a taste of mutton the boy laid him out with a bullet from his little toy If you feel like lying don't let a whole village discourage It often pays 20 per cent. If the steamship of the future lus not at last been a climax of ty has at all events been A flying machine is hardly more disturbing to our conservative ideas of means aud modes of travel than a craft of tho model hero in regard to which a considerable degree of public interest has lately been The inventor claims that this or runs over the water as a wagon on It is simply a wagon or tri- The rows of buckets or flanges on both sides of wheel sphere or spheroid aro at water line and catch the water by the revolution of the wheel like a finely feathered Tho three wheels of this ship or car are hollow spheres or holding tho bed of the car above and entirely out of the reach of tho Tho entire car is mado of steel and is aud fire No in tho roughest All the luxury of a railroad palace car possible at with less This is a very pleasing prospect for the future especially as the inventor adds his confident tion that his water car will travel at railroad speed and make the passage of the Atlantic iu a week or carrying only mails and light express A model of this about ty feet and worked by a pair of small steam was on exhibition some time since at Dam on tho Harlem in the upper part of New York A newspaper pondent says of Its propelling and supporting its paddles and one and the same that they are three hollow globes of sheet mounted on journals with proper propelling gear or armed with paddle blades at right angles to their vertical arranged liko a child's three-wheeled tho third wheel being and ed by a horizontal iron which supports the journal and a light deck for the etc. The globes are supposed lo be aa tight and strong in tho water aa a ship's iron to be incapable of leakage unless from collision to discharge at tho axes by revolution any water that may get into any of the compartments to sit on tho water with sufficient cy to carry their load without sinking more than of their diameter to walk tho water instead of plowing to make headway very nearly to the travel of their to make no wake or current nor waves to right or to turn the whole as on a pivot to right or left bv stopping one of tho aft to dissipate tho force of wavo concussion by the spherical surfaces ways presented in every to carry the superstructure or car high and dry above water by one-third its di- and thus with an ocean car of sixty feet sheer above the caps of tho highest and by tho great breadth of the vessel every way cannot affect the secure it against possibility of or even pitching like an ordinary in case of injury to a bull of this tho part can be turned up out of water and repaired at sea ns readily and as thoroughly as in a yard while she can run upon a beach liko a or cross an isthmus liko a on a three-grooved THF STATE That so important a matter as the dividing lino between New York and New involving as it does tho commerce of the chief harbor of the should remain for years a question for discussion among seems But one of tho happy results of the union of the States has been to diminish the importance of Stato boundary Few persons realize that were it not for the Federal Constitution this city and Jersey City would he in fact and for all as they now are in the technical language of foreign that a passport system and a house inspection would embarrass every ferry and that a standing army would bo needed in each State to protect her And like burdens would rest upon other On tho continent of questions of ary have been a fruitful cause of war for Here they excite an ment in a and are adjudged upon a few sheets of Just now the District Judges of New York and New Jersey cannot agree as to which has authority over matters upon North but the worst result that can happen will be the placing of one more appeal on the of tho premo Court at It seems that in when tho al judiciary was tho tion of New York Stato was New Yorkers at to embrace the whole breadth of tho harbor and extend to low water mark on the New Jersey and tho original law of Congress defining tbs authority of the courts was framed giving to the New York District Court jurisdiction to the Jersey But in 1833 tho two States adjusted tho lino allotting to New Jersey one half of tho to New York the other The question now is whether cither by approving tho boundary bargain of or by de- scribing the jurisdiction of the courts anew in the Revised has ed tho lino of division between the courts to correspond with that between the Judges Betts and Blatchford have in past years rendered decisions in favor of what we may call tho New York aide of the holding that the old timo authority of tho New York courts remain unchanged and now ally embraces New Jersey's part of tho They sustained their ia crossing the river and levying upon sels actually lying at piers in Jersey City holding that unless a ship were hauled up on tho Jersey shore she was within tho New York court's Judge of tho Now Jersey District has now his opinion in favor of New Jersey's He says that it is for his court to deal witli all that is or occurs in tho New Jersey half of the and that a vessel at a sey City wharf is subject to his authority and process. All of is geous to OF ANCIENT 1'EJtSiA. BY ELIZABETH The superiority in many ways of tho Persian over tho other Aryan creeds not bo While Hindus shipped impossible and Greeks honored idealized men and Persians bowed down before a pure To tho bloody sacrifices and orate ceremonies of Hellas and India tho simple ritual of Aryan offered an able Its groat is in its practical application to man Brahman ism and filled with thoughts of a future state of gavo littlo heed to earthly In Greece religion made life but was of slight sistance to man in his Zoroastrianism alone gave full value to tho necessities of the present and the sanctity of work and the im- of Tho good effects of its healthy precepts were somewhat counteracted by its other Once n people's creed is established on a firm basis in its exercises i powerful influence on Religion in Persia occupied itself with the world and with human but its estimation of them was distorted by its strict division of all objects and forces between and Dualism was a to science and a ranca to A stimulus wan given to the study of material but the scope of inquiry was Certain promises were assumed as a basis for all The tasks required of Hebrews by tho Egyptians were easy and possible when compared to those tho sian student set for Tho Magi's quest of knowledge was a labor from which even Hercules would have ed. Their efforts were futile because of their Tbo idea of quality in nature blinded them to tho law of cause and They referred all the destructive forces in the universe to since they classed these as it was impossible for them to understand tho relation of death and de- cay to lifo and That certain evil in may be ed as good because of their was beyond their They saw in nature not a perfect formed by the action of contending but a discordance produced by a power seeking to destroy all To them but the destroyer of and the winter's cold but a cruel foe that had blighted the of They could not look beyond tho leaves that to the buds that shoot and the fruits that This new vegetable is mado from ordinary they aro tolerably sound and fully developed purely chemical The ed tubers must first be carefully peeled and Iho cut and discolored portions being also pared Tho peeled tubers should then bo allowed to soak fora short first in plain then in acid tilted sulphuric acid being the agent em- aud the mixture should bo quite cold beforo tho potatoes aro put into it. Tho and most important part of the is that of boiling tho bles in diluted sulphuric acid for a con- herein lying the gist of the Iho secret of which is kept rather closely at but a 8hort series of well organized experiments would probably enable any of our friends to elucidate tho Tho variety and ago of tho tho timo for which it is subjected to action ot the and especially tho strength of tho aro all matters of great importance to the object ia view as ejecting the quality of tho As some littlo we may bear in mind tho process for which is effected in the cold and also tho fact that heat greatly enhances the action of all acids upon ganic BO that as tho potatoes according to our advices have to bo in the a comparatively more dilute acid should probably bo Treated in this way tho entire substance of tho potatoes hardens und becomes gradually less When they are to bb taken out and in a stream of first warm and afterward cold tho subsequent drying process being in alt instances a slow and gradual Potato ivory thus prepared is not very unlike tho ordinary kind but is said to bo of a more even us well aa easier to while it is not BO liable to split when exposed lo Iho influence of a very dry Potato ivory is of a creamy white and it being even it is for the manufacture of billiard There is no in dyeing or coloring the material either during the process of preparation or and altogether it would seem that this new product in ono which is capable of an immense number of useful Toils other good qualities it adds that of being exceedingly Wo should havo said before that sulphuric acid used must be quite free from even traces of nitric or hydrochloric acid being trimming aro not in faror for black wool young ladles the present fancy ia to brighten black dresses with facings and vests of colord or to wear an entire basque of guy or else a Jersey but the greater number of black wool dresses are now made in tho simple styles adopted for cloth as thesa are more serviceable because less likely to go out of and aro pensive because they require no ming but or else very simple A gentleman who spent a portion of the month of October in the town of says that the eter frequently registered several below But so great IB the buoyancy of the climate and the purity of at- in metropolis of Canada that no inconvenience is felt from the A is apt to suffer from Lis He was he on tho street one and feeling very when a citizen came up to and slapping him on the shoulder yer nose is And he found that this was actually the He no- afterward that people walking in the streets were in the habit of ly slapping their noses and ears to keep up the circulation in those A NEW cable is to bo laid and it is announced that the sub- toward the enterprise have all been James Gordon Bennett has some stock in tho  

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  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!