DAINTY COOKING OF VEGETABLES. Carrots.;A 1aâ€"C‘r9;me: Scrape, wash, and cut them into pieces or slices as desired; boil. them'in water with salt and pepper;',when..nr€tr.15 tender en- ough; strain them.‘ Putginto a sauce- pan' a hreakfast'gupful of thick fresh cream'with-a‘lump of butter; when this boils add. the carrots and let them simmer for fifteen m‘inutw. Just be- fore serving thicken with the yolk of an e’ggâ€"Ragout de 'Carottes: Prepare as above, boiling them a shorter time; ‘ntrain‘, and put them into a saucepan [with ,slices_ of bacon, parsley, chives ~and plentiful seasoning; stir over the ï¬re, and after a few minutes add two: tables‘poonfuls of stock and a cupful’ of thick gravy; boil gently and reduce to a'f'coufte ‘sauce. - Serve without training. Onionsâ€"A la Creme :â€" Take some mall; good-shaped onions, boil them till tender in water and salt, and strain them. Melt a lumlp of bï¬tter in a saucepan. throw the onions in. sprin- kle than gt, once with a mixture of Potato Rosesâ€"Select round instead of long potatoes. After taking off the skins, cut round and round as if par- ing an apple. until the potatoes are used up. Fry in a kettle of hot fat. Sprinkle salt over them and drain. Frozen Milk Punchâ€"Freeze togeth- er one quart milk and one half pound sugar. After the above is frozen mix with it one half pint rum, one half pint brandy," one and one half pints} whipped cream, and half of a nut-l meg. ‘ ' Pineapple Sherbert.-â€"One tablespoon- ful of gelatine soaked in one cup cold water 15 minutes. Dissolve with one cup boiling water. Take one half can grated pineapple and one and one half cups sugar, juice of one lemon. Add ntrained gelatine, put in freezer and pack with ice and salt and freeze. Strawberry Sherbert.â€"One quart of berries mashed ; sprinkle over these one pint of sugar; add the juice of one lemon and a half pint of water in. which has been dissolved a tablespoon- ' tul of gelatine. Freeze as you would!i ice cream. ' "then add one and one ellalf' cups (of water, one sliced onion; a. few bay leaves. a little pepper! and salt and a wine glassful'of vinegar. When'done roll three or four ginger snaps and ‘k:..l--.. thicken. Indian Pancakesâ€"One pint Indian meal, one teaspoonful salt, mixed with ~enough boiling water, to'make alit- atter as for griddle cakes, and the beaten whites of four eggs, added just before baking. en, pepper and salt and a little chop- ped parsléy. Mix thoroughly and let cool. When cold make into balls, dip into a beaten egg, roll in bread crumbs and fry in hot lard. Fish Croquettes.â€"One pint cold boil- ed fish, free from skin and bone and minced fine, one pint hot mashed po- tatoes, one tablespoonful butter, one half cup hot milk, one egg well beat- Pineapple Cream.â€"Ihree pints of cream, one pint milk, tw oripe pine- apples, two pounds sugar. Slice pine- apples thin, scatter sugar over them and let Stand three hours. Cut or chop the fruit into the eirup and Strain through a bag of coarse lace, Beat gradually into the cream and freeze. Remme a few bits of pineapple and stir in cream when half frozen. 1 A Cuban DesserLâ€"Grate one cocoa- nut, add one cupful of water, press through a fine strainer. To the juice add an equal quantity of thick sirup, made by boiling water and sugar in prOportion of one cupful of water to a pint of sugar, and six eggs well beaten. Cook over a slow fire until it thickens like custard. When cold dust with powdered cinnamon. Serve cold. pan and two good sized onions chopped; m: the onions in the butter until at a pale brown; and one teaspoonful of curry powder and the same of flour. with a little salt, mix and stir for five minutes, moisten with a cup of stock and stew gently for a. few minutes longer, put in the meat and simmer until done, but do not let it boil. Serve with rice arond the dish. An English Dishâ€"For a curry of cooked meat cut the beef into small squares, according to the quantity of meat to be carried; put two table- apoonfuls or more of butter into a stew Chicken With Macaroniâ€"Cook one chicken or fowl until tender, saving the stock therefrom; remove all bones and chop into dice, not too ï¬ne; boil two cups mamroni in salted water un- til tender; strain and chop into inch lengths; then putting butter in your baking dish, having a layer of chicken, layer of macaroni and one of bread crumbs, pepper and salt. Continue al- ternate layers until dish is nearly fill-i ed, having bread crumbs on top. Howl take two cups of the stock and one half cup cream and thicken with flour un- til like thick cream. Pour this over chicken and macaroni and bake about three quarters of an hour. -_- -vvc uvuuCl Lll Dunn: waxy. adore PIERCES ALL IT MEETS. injury is caused by indiscriminate - . jS-hO‘eiflg than any other way. The hor- The shark ‘5 generany cons'dered Ch» 5 se’s hoof that has never been shod Wili most- dangerous of deep-sea fish. While stand_ ordinary farm usage Without he is the most voracious recent investi- f ggg'sgléilgfltyé prï¬glfiifi, 351132132? (3): gation by the British. Government 3 no â€3 1' eased: foot. shows that he is not the most dam, " gerous, since a small fish, met with ADVANTAGES OF THINNING FRUIT sometimes in the shoals, is often asJ ' q . destructive of human life. The gar- j Thï¬ advantages claimed for thinning fish never grows to an imposing 5 orchard fr " ' _ length. It has a long, sharp beak†- - - . â€"- . which gives it an arrow-like shape. 9 Tymnft’g Increases the Size Of fruit, This living arrow, when alarmed, dashes : gives It more color and better flavor. out from the water and goes soaring ; it diminishes the amount of worthless . . . p 0 :3 ruit, windhl‘s, etc., increases With such force t§§t when it strikes j smearing: N ‘1 f 't d . the a foreign body it either passes througL i ‘ 0' r m ’ an m" some it or inflicts painful and serious wounds. i “598 increases the (01231; Yield." It An English officer was struck by one flessens the amount of rot, espemauy on the peak of his cap. This resulted ; in the case of peaches and plum, since in an investigation by a representa- ; the diseases can spread less easily tive of the British“ Government, and it ' where the fruits do not 'touch each was found that men has test their 1 other. Thinning also tends to keep in- , lives from Lhiscause. . :..-:.....- :L . - . fl. anu maxe tneLr way to the particular gravestone on which the 21 new six pences lay, and each old lady, having picked up her six pence, is then pre- sented with the floan, the bun and and the crochet shawl. . ~. _ â€". wv‘uV‘UV-L vu ; two sides by houses which? have ex- ? aggerated their architectural tendency I to overhang. The graveswnes are so “old that most of the inscriptions are 'worn off, and they are only to be reached by climbing a sort of portable stage coach ladder from the pathway. Here gather on the appointed morning the 21 old ladies, for, as a rule; they are old, and very old. The distribu- tion of six penoes, hot-cross buns, shawls and two-shilling pieces takes when the thing was first started, but it has been going on now for several hundred years. The onlookers, as a rule, are a few freshâ€"complexioned nurses in pretty bonnets and cloaks, and half a dozen residents of Little Britain. T. ‘- l 1 Priory Church of 'St. Bartholomew the , Great is well worth a visit; from the l - - . lbatless and in yellow stockings, play 3 their games. Founded in 1123, it still gretains its heavy Norman pillars and .; rounded arches, which- have been 5 carefully restored where the stone has crumbled through centuries of decay. urlous Custom Observed In an Old Lon- don Churchyard. There is still observed in an out-of- way London’ohurchyard one of those ancient ouStoms, the observance of which gave so much delight to Charles Dickens, and whose description of which has done so much to endear to all who read the Pth little, tight little island.- . Twentyâ€"one ladies, be, the ins de must be darkâ€"preferablyi green. If a baby 13 no: made the vicxim of a white cover it is probable that his eyes will not trouble him. i That babies and little children are troubled with weak eyes is a great source of uneasiness to young mothers. Frequently the fault is their own. A white parasol may be pretty, but its effeCt on the baby’s eyes is alarming. In choosing a parasol cover be careful that whateyer color therutside may Leeksâ€"Trim a sufficient number of large leeks, remove the green part, and cut up the rest in two or three pieces; if they seem very strong, scald them in boiling water; if not, sim- ply boil and strain them thoroughly to extract all the moisture. Chop them up. and brown them slightly in butter, flour salt and pepper; mois- ten with cream or thick gravy; stir over the ï¬re, and when done thicken with the yolks of two eggs. Serve with fried bread or with cutlets of frican- these must be sprinkled thickly with bread raspings, moistened with melted gbutter, and baked in a tourtiere, or {after that fashion, with fire over and underneath. En Puree: Choose some ‘white onions, scald them thoroughly in boiling water to diminish the strong taSte;,ince them, brown them slightly in butter, and leave them to simmer Just off the fire. When almos: melt- ed, prws them through a-fine sieve, mix the pulp in a saucepan with cream or good Math and a lump of sugar; stir over the fire until' you have a puree of the usual consistency. Serve on fried toast, or as a garniture to a suitable entree. flour, salt and pepper; Then pom-0v them some fresh thick cream, stirring Ie.enly till the whole is slightly thick- iehed. Serve very hot at onceâ€"Famis: Boil some large onions in plenty of water, till tender but quite firm; Strain them, and scoop out the middle very carefully. so as not to break them. Make a stuffing with bread- crumbs slightly boiled in fat broth and the remains of chicken or veal chopped fine, all well waned with salt, pepper and spice. F ill the onions with this mixture and brown them thoroughly in butter. Serve with or without rich gravy or white sauce. The same sort of dish can be prepared ‘ with a. fork and mushroom stuffing; WIDOW'S MITE. BABY’S EYES. CARE OF HORSES’ HOOFS. The horse’s foot should be given at- tention from birth. Trim into shape with pincers, provided for this purpose using a rasp o: a knife to finish With. If the hoof is inclined to be one-sided, correct this by trimming. . On an ordinary farm, there is no necessity for shoeing unless the hoof is brittle injury is caused by indiscriminate shoeing than any other way. The hor- se’s hoof that has never been shod will stand ordinary farm usage Without any difficulty, provided, of course, the horse does not inherit a tender or dis- eased: foot. I finished covering the wheat. As a result the ï¬rst two-thxrds gave a good crop of wheat, with a good stand of clover, the last one-third a fair crop of wheat, but a poor stand of clover. I think the right plan is to do all the manuring after haying. You have a chance then to see all the poor spots, and, ‘as a rule, get a good crop of hay next year. Best of all, a good healthy sod to plow under. Before this is done, or atterward, give the house a fumigation of burn- 4ting sulphur or charcoal, and clean up ; thoroughly,‘ and it will ‘be astonishing ï¬how clean and sweet it-w1ll be, and {how the hens will rejoice to get into lit. Of courseit wianeed to'be thor- {oughly aired after thefumigatiOn'be- j fore-hens or any other living thing go sin there to stay long. Even the.rats Vin their holes may be killed by this §fumigation~ if they have not -a way to get 'out of doors while 'it is being {done. i There may be Other places in gthe barn, calf‘ sheds, Diggery and Eeven in the house celiar, which wnuld fbe benefited by the spraying with fiwhitewash, and perhaps some of them {by the fumigation, if it can be given twithout danger of fire. . I . A My farm slopes in all four directions, writes J. L. Barden, Soil sandy loam, with a little clay in spots. One year ago I plowedg 3 1-2 acres on the north side at the top. I drew out manure beginning at the top, and worked down; when two-thirds of it was cov- ered, I ran out of manure. I gave the ground a good dragging, which worked manure in to some extent. I then drilied in wheat. In the winter, when more manure had aecumulated, T £3‘2,L l \VHITEVVASHIN G. There is no quicker or easier way to §get the heuhouse whitewashed than 3by using a force pump and spraying I . . _ . gnozzle- With a thin wash of lime wat- ier. It may not make as nice-looking {a job as using the brush, but the force sends the spray into cracks and crev- ‘ ices and corners where the brush does not reach as well. Before beginning to spray take a stiif broom and sweep down all the cobWebs and dust, and re- move whatever may be in the way, so that all points can be reached. If there are any suspicions of lice or mites about there, and few henhouses are free from suspicion in that respect, a few drops of a solution of carbolic acid in the wash would be a great im- provement to the whitewash. “1 do n0t have a covered barnyard for the purpose of keeping manure. All the manure is hauled out as soon as it is made in order to keep the yard clean. I construCted a fort of my cows." There was a cover over the yard for the com- whole volume of dairy instrumions in those few words. The watch- fulness to preserve cleanliness and the kindness to the cows are the cornerstones to successful dairy- DAIRY BUSINESS. It is nOticeable that in every com- munity in which the dairy is well developed there is a high degree of Pr06perity and reï¬nement. The influence of the business is uplift- ing- It requires intelligence and a wide study to make the business a success, and all this is on the line of refinement. It demands gentleness Eof disposition. No rough, brutal man can achieve success in the dairy. He mustbe kind, and, if nor naturally so, he must cultivate the spirit of kind- ness. The cow must be loved, must be patted, must be fed well and fed properly, and all this leads to. the broadening of the mind and th? improvement of our natures.§ Then there must be cleanliness' nor only about the premises, but about the person. A certain dairy- man has a covered barnyard, and he was asked at an insu’tute if he was satisfied with that way ot_ seeping manure. “Why,†said he,§ EXPERIENCE WITH MANU‘RE. SWW'WWC' WWW‘W the amc-unt of worthless .zlis, etc., increases the, [0. 1 fruit, and in- some bad luck and calamib y, «and secur good luck and prosperity. So greai 13. . thre‘natwe‘ faith in its infalli- bxhty tnat not long since the Chin- naa lf:..:..L-_ L- h a monopoly of the Emperor, no oth- er almanac being permitted to be sold in that country. Although containing reliable astronomical information, its chief mission is to give full and accur- ate information for selecting lucky places for performing all the acts, great and small, of everyday life. And as every act of life in China, however tri- vial, depends for its success on the time in which, and the direction, point of compass, toward which, it is done, it is of the utmost importance that ev- ery one should have correct informa- tion at all times availahla at “many lnfalllble Journal Enjoys the Largest Circulation: In the \Vorld. The Chinese Almanac is the most largely circulated publication in the world, the number of copies printed and sold yearly reaching several mil- lions. It is printed at Peking, and is wâ€"\- vuvu u Bulk, auu I wouldâ€"lriégéâ€"kvlgd hard work to explain why I was not sounding a. .fog signal." “ I saw him and at once gave the en- gineer the signal to check, and Jack- son barked ,as though he was im- mensely pleased. ‘I signalled-to stop and yelled to the first mate to get out the lead. Just then I saw. alum- ber schooner loom up in the fog, and I’ll tell you we were so close together when. she passed that I could almost touch her booms. That dog had smell- ed that boat. sure as you're born, and if I hadn’t checked there would have been a collision and then a suit, and {SQGJE intair' weather, and all of us Ekept a'CIOSexWatch'orIThim during a {fogmtlf he jumped up “and; down as though something pleaéed'him very . much you could be certain that we were getting -close to â€land. ' , ~ :- -“.I.rernen;ber due time wewer'ecom- fing down Lak'eJSuperioriâ€"from Duluth .3 in a heavy fog. 'We had had fog all the .way up, and Jackson, that was his 'Qame, was pretty-Aired of _ sailing 'When we reached DuluLh‘a'nd tried to jump us, but we couldn’t spare him and he stayed with 11's. g \Ve didn’t have, as‘manf’lights in those days as " Jackson was so disgusted that he lost all interest in the boat'and spent the time sleeping on deck. When we were about eb“east Whitefish Point I was figuring that‘we were outside far enough to be safe, and was not the least bit nervous. Suddenly Jackson Jumped up and ran to the rail and put his paws up as though he expected to look_ right over to a dock. We do now and it was no easy thing- to take a boat from the upper end of Lake Superior to Sault Ste. Marie in a fog that was with you all the time. We had a. thick fog I'd hunt for that dog and keep him near me. He was better than a'chartï¬â€˜He-c'ould smell Iand_ f-qrther ewayu’than a. _man could " \Ve were always very careful that he didn’t get hurt in Loading or un- loading, for he was worth a good deal of rhohey go. 119;: -Mgny a time when be easily seea. I’believe'that if he could have done it he would have jumped into bed and pulled the covâ€" ers over his head." | They Are and rum to Skippers or Lake Craft In Case or Fog. Masters of steamers and tow barges on the lakes have a fondness for dogs, and on dozens of the boats running between Lake Erie ports and upper lake ports dogs are carried. Sailors generally show an inclination for pets, but the dog is something more than a pet on the lakes. He is a valuable member of the crew. He is considered as trustworthy as a barometer in giv- iing notice of an approaching storm.‘ 5Most of these dogs are cowards in gstorms. Occasionally a Captain finds a‘ Idog that is not afraid of heavy weath-§ Ier and seems to enjoy the rolling or; g pitching of the boat, but as a rule dog's.I 'are as afraid of a gale as a woman? 3 .passenger, and at the first Sign Of a§ I istorm hunt for a hiding place. f . " I had a dog that was as much like; la woman as it was possible for anf animal to be,†said a Captain who has’ carried a dog with him for nearly a iquarter of a century. “He could tell;" a storm was coming long before I could ,nOtice it, and often before the ham-3 meter would change. He would come to me whining and crying, and I could-? n’t keep him away from my heels. Hej seemed to be asking me to put him ashore or to find a comfortable place for him. Iused to feel sorry for him,' he’d carry on so. When the storm. would strike us he would be out of sight, i J 1 l .1 and we often found him hiding under :I ' l l l the bunks and in corners where he 901.1“ not see anything and could not A correqiondent, who travels a great deal says: After speaking with far- mers in various towns, I find that an increasing number are believers in the idea of mrting manure on to the fields in the winter as it accumulates. Ex- cellent crops are reparted from land so treated. ’“taken' to remove'the infested fruit. It is also pmbqble that the prodncu'on of large quantities of intemr or worth- time for them to recover. DOGS USED AS BAROMETERS. CHINESE ALMAN AC. DRAWING OUT MANURE. CONSUMPTION OF COFFEE. The consumpmon of coffee Lhe World over is growing rapldly. ihe next decade it was 1,320.00 Last year it was 1580,000,000o A battery of modernIGerman 3Ҡ1817. using the new quick-firing 8ҠRecently supplied them, can 2:: SFXty Shots aminute azarange ofo fl'v'e mlles. Eon the spot. if the public are in searCB of the real hero of the baitie 01' Undu- man, there he is, ready madeâ€"0118 “'10 committed no blunder to be redeemed by courageous conduCL afaerwardï¬- He holdly exercised his right of 99‘5""al JUdgment in a momeni of 8313‘?†Peril and the result amply J'u-‘iuned the soundness of his decision. y; SI‘EADY AS A GLADlA'l‘OR, 'lyflth what to some of us looked like :mevrtable disaster staring him in ma .gfaoe, Colonel Macuonalu {Ought his ibrtgade for all it wuzi worth. HO 59‘“ch moved upon the. best available Eground, formed. up, “'ht‘tltd about, and iatood to die or Win. He won practical- I1y unaided, for the pinch was all but over when the Camel Corps, hurrying up, formed upon his right, alter he had faced about to receive the Sheila) Ed D1n’s onslaught. The Lincolus, who larrlved later on, helped to hasten the flight of the enemy, whose repulse was aseured ere they or any of \\ auchOPe'S brigade were within LOG yards of Mac- donald, Lewis’ brigade were not even able to assist so much, and such out- Slde. help as came in time to be of use was in the first instance from the guns of Major Williams†and another 'battery, and the Maxims upon thelft {near Surgham hurried lorward b." the 'Sirdar himself, as I saw, General Hunter came over to the headquarters- Staff galloping to get a sLstmce and rode bacx with \x auohope’s brigade. which doubled for a Considerable (115' tance, so serious was the situation and nervous the tension of that thrilling ten minutes. Had the brilliant, the splendid deed of arms wr‘mghc by Macdonald been done under the eyesof a sovereign or in some other armies. he had surely been created a general on the soot If the nnhlin are in said] 3 Pcake's, Lawdc’s and dc liouggmunt's batterics blOOd their ground, sxde by sidé, with the infantry, never waver- ing, firing point blanx upon the der- vish mass:s. , ~ â€"“L'L'"J ‘u‘ V“â€â€˜â€œâ€œ6‘â€â€˜ {of-the wild, angry dervishezi did not quite synchronise, and Colonel Mac- ldonald was able to (levee vix'tuailyhis fwhole ï¬ring strength to the overthrow ‘of the Khalxia’s uivisiuh exe rapidly turmng auuut 111's; une- then unutht’r of his battalions to deal with the Sne- ikh Ed .Uin’s unbroken Columns.1'he enemy on both sides got very close in, hundreds of them being kiilcd almost at the feet of the men of the hheauial brigade. . Dervtsh spears were lthWn into and over the szaunch and ungicid- ing Soudanwe and t'elluheeu smdxery. 1" 220,010 men. 10 up" ‘ ‘ Lu! :but four battalions, 13000 Sundanese and lVVith a tact, 000111: fhave never Seen equalled ColunelMac. 4donald manoeuvred and lougnt his ;' men. Ihey respvnded LU his call m iconfldence and alacrity begottenol llong vauaintance and implicit iatthin gthetr leader. ll; had led several mm ibattalions th‘udgl] a sum: of lime fï¬ghts and skirmisnts, always emerg. Eing and covering ntmselt and llls men lwith glory, honor and Ween. Allol ithsm‘ knew him, they were proud ol fhlm, and repused implicit cunlidenceiu their . general. anistalauly the Khalifa and his Son, the Snetkil lid Din, though; that thtir lurtunate hon: had Comeâ€"that, in detail, they would destroy fiISt Macdonald, then' one by one the Other hhcdivial bricades. What might have been, had falhcl‘ and son arrived at the same time and distance on both sides of Macdonald, as they evidently intended, I will n0t venture to discuss. Hipplly the onslaught: -2 -L ‘ or in all less than hgypllun suldiug aid and his SJucL-x direction, and :h cc; and (L it would have Spcilx‘d aumn. sturdy Highlandmau said, ' it. I'll see 111cm uâ€"â€"d maun just fxghg.‘ Mr. Bur; describes the aifair; ' 13:; smug; RAPID-FIRE GUNS males was the acuq onel Magdonald with hi: 1e 'giernsu {orces m; ?h nun numuered mug in upyus; Lnem he had l;l\Y\-‘ ’ Lack Malian. 1111 no of the city foundation Glasgow is ow They own the ground, the stxee plants, the waterworks, the parks and gardens and concert halls. And although every one of that: institutions is worked more cheaply than me any other town, each one is made to bring in a greater yearly pm- ï¬t to the community. the total pro- “ M- nnnnrn on municipal undertak- ned by her pofmlzuion. ; t rail- '9 made to bring in a greater yea“, WT : ï¬t to the community. the total pero- ï¬t per annum on municipal undertak~ y ings being $374,500. @The corportion of Glasgow has spent over $150,030,000 on making their mud ditch into a river up v. hich the green.- ' est ships afloat .can sail, and in mis- ing their tovm to its present pusizion. And yet‘ its puhlic debt is, taking inao Y I] .-‘ H H .1 r“ H :câ€"o consideration its size, by far the srmli- a est of any city in the world, The key to its prosperity is that every common improvement, everything has been done by the corporation. Take, for instance, the poorer dwell- ings. .In 1844 a. Royal Commission was ; sent in reply to a cry that the poorer: bâ€"J sent in reply to a cry that the poorer ._ in districts were unhealthily overcrowd-: M ad. The report of the commission was " that the death rate was over 44 in T311] "31'! 1,000 of the population, and Lin: :31 â€wins fever was as well known .35 \ -; the face of the aildedt inhabitani. 'l‘he 1‘. corporation took up the mzttLer, und to-day Glasgow’s model dwellings are the very best 01; the kind. CLEAN BEDS FOR SEVEN 015x115. ' m: To build these, of which there are 30" ï¬VG. capable of housing 2,000 pf‘f- , sons every night, the foul ruokenes, which are still the curse, from 8191')" 901M Of View, of nearly all other large towns were swept away. Any one. mil†or Woman, can get a thoroughly clean ‘ bed for the sum of seven cean. Audi “though over $450,000 of the public; PM? was spenu; on erecting the/g2“ MM! a 800a yearly return. is ‘priiai on “flea“? 6 per cent. And Lhe den; 11 “I†has been reduced to 19.9. 'v"- -V“ UV“ VV -V 0" instead of the city being supplied “Eh those necessaries of life, “@191“ and 833’ by those private comparites.: the (maple, through their own corpor-i futon, supply themselves at the mum-V ml Fates 0f, in the first case, 12 cent s. - and “1 the second 37 cents, as agains’. 17 and 64 When formerly supplied by“ “3111311168. And it may he added that not only is the charge for water very.1°W8‘?t of any town, but the xx :â€" her Itself is acknowledged by expicz“ 5 t9 b9 the very purest supplied to any . Olty or Village. l Yet Glasgow maps from the \\".i’__i?.l‘: $99137 310, e an annual profit of. 35214): i At “33 same time as Glasgow put-E c the Ccmmon Good prOperLy the. ; markets were also bought. And al- '_ gab the lightest tolls are levied. sq theitrthe sellers are able to (lisp-05:3. zit; mice fï¬d‘"; t0 the inhabitants g 1‘5"", n' In 9 (‘1! . g Samara . any other town, ‘1 :1? ; gas supply. u also gained from U ’ THE GREAT PARK SYSTEM. formewor .‘ g on the good resul:.s of their ': 1‘ enterprise in these directions, - We 210w taken over the elecu‘uuil > " ’ 0 the cit at a. 'early Div...- ï¬t °f 810,97 . y 3 re paid by the Corpora- put.» aside $8,500 for this ‘n‘ v - 1111:1235“! .atter Glasgow stands alarm. “53% “63 are public property. I}; “wth‘e inhabitants are able». mi " ‘_ 3mm“ _, 9:? washed in the Way: ow NED BY w -7- whole of its revenue was 1 irom duties made on all arti- ' brought into the city. ' was in excess xpenditure, and the surplus aside, and in 1845 they in- his accumulated money in the .of ground right in the heart Lty now known as the “ cum- 3d." That purchase was we on of Glasgow as she stands At ï¬rst the income from Lhe m Good " was only a little over 3 interest- ago Glasg "er†Chen!" y tation for muni- w facts concern- of GiangW will mummy. Concert Empire, and in and municipal in advance of ;gOW was 21(11- :8, situated on she stands sec- .tion and com- levied no’ MADE “'auer. [la 1 i. s Fu r- dash 1n ways also they at 91 And: ci'LV 1 eragi ing 4 Elrst Hou EAS‘ Fen r' fax pro rea th ll gt en .) \V 1'1 U} 10d