uasaaauia EAMEERS’ JQURMAL, AME GIQMMEMEIAL AEVMEISER. Established 1823. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Saturday, October 21, 1854. ' New Series. No. 181. Hazard’: Gazette. GEORGE T. HASZ IRD, Proprietor and Publisher. Published eve Tuesday evening and Saturday morning. 0lllce,Soutli side Queen Square. |‘- E T: ltlI—Annunl Subscription, 15:. in advance. Ian . Discount for cash ‘fill! or ADVIRTIIIIO. For the tint insertion, occupying the space of 4 lines, ineludinghead,2:.—8line:,2: ine:,8:..—l2line:, 8:. 8d.—I6line:,4:.—20 lines, 4:. 6d.—-25 line:,5:.— Mlines, 5:. 6<l.—-8dline:,6:.—anrl 2d. for each additional line. One fourth ofthe above for euch continuance. ‘ ' ‘ ' ‘ " ' ' -illbecontiaueil luti I forbid . ' THOMAS DOUGLASS, 5. PLAT!‘ srn BET. NEW Ybiirr, Importer and Dealer in every description of . Foreign and Domestic H A R D W A R HEAVY ENGLISH GOODS BY THE PACKAGE. soar: sass? I-‘on Bee‘: Braces, Turnsorews, die. MANUFACTURER Of the Premium Steel Squares, Premium Angers and Bits, Axes, Socket and Firmer Chisels, Patent Hollow Angers. doc. Agent for Burlington Wagon Arlee. Davin Kiuosnann. 8; Co., Manufacturer, Burlington, Vermont. I-A S. L. TILLEY,‘ Wholesale and Retail Drugglst I5, auto :'riu:s:'r, SAINT JOHN. JV". B. onaann ii: BRITISH AND FOREIGN DRUGS, CHIIIICALI. Patent Medicines, Perfumery, Soaps, Spices, Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty, Varnish, 8t.c., Confection: in great variety. GARRISON st MARSTERS. cusroiii House &. SHIP BROKERS, AN COMMERCIAL AND FORWJRDING AGENTS, Custom House Building. 81‘. JOHN. N. I]. l? Good: from England or the-United States may be forwarded to any part of this Province, Nova-Sootia or I’._E. Island by consigning the same to G. 6: M., ‘enclosing Invoice, to prevent delays. fit Charge: Moderate. 5 Smx BRASS FOUNDRY. AND MACHINE SHOP. BY B’. C. HOBS. ow open in GrestGeo_rgs Street, on the old N Stand. Old Copper and llrnss bought. An Appretnice wanted. ’ May I8, IBM. ‘ The National Loan Fund Life Assurance Society of Lon on. APITAL £500,000 Sterling. Empowered by Act of Parliauient, ‘Id Victoria. A Saving Bank for the Widow and the Orphan. _ '1‘. HEATH HAVILAND, yr. Agent for Prince Edward Island. [[7 Ollice,Queen Square, Charlottetown. September ll, I853. Isl Mutual Insurance mpany, Incorporated by Act of Parliament in I848. V HIS COMPANY olI'er: the best guarantee in case of loss, and accept: Risk: at a saving of full 50 per cent, to the assured. 'I¥be present reliable Ca ital exced: .£I100. Per- son: having property in harlottetown, or vicinity, should lose no time in applying to the Secretary of 'this Company for Policies or In ormatiou. E[7'0ne of Philips‘ Fire Annihilator: has been purchased by the Company, for the benefit of person: insured in this Oflice. In case of Fire, the use ofit can be.obfuined immediately, by applying at the Secretary‘: Ollice. _ W. HEARD, President HENRY PAl..lllEli. -0 I alec’y and Treasurer. Secretary‘: Ofies, Kent Streetrg August bib, I858. Charlottetown Co CE 1.1!! JJVD FIRE INSURANCE COM- PJl.N'Y. L0.N'DON. ass-aanrsisnn or act o IAILIAKINT. capital £5,000,000 Starling. CHARLES YOUNG, Agent for P. E. Island. Equitable Fire Insurance Compa- ' ny of London Incorporated by Act of Porliosust. OARI) 0|’-‘ l)|ll.EC'l‘OltS for P. E. Island.- Hoii T. H. Hauttood. Hon. Charla: Huts- le , Fraser’: Loursortli, Esq., Robert Hutchinson, g ., Tliuiarrs Damon, Esq. _ aataebed Risk: taken at low ‘Premiums No charge for Policies Forms of Application. It'll any other information, may be obtained from the Sub- sorlber, at the one. of G. W. Deblais Esq. Charlotte- '°"" ii. I. CUND.Al.l.. April ‘Rh, IBM. Agent for P. B. I. Notice of Co-partnership. IIE undersigned having this day taliea hi: Coa- sin, Mr. Gnoaol AVIII into Partnership, the business hitherto carried on by him individually, -wll in future be conducted under the style or firm -ofD. D, G. DAVIII. All person indebted to hiru lll please make payment of their re: tivs Account: to the new Firm; and all those to s in- debted will please furnish their Aeoollts for liquida- DANIEL DAVIES. ‘ Olsen’: lqnre.,0et. I. All papers ow Old Royal Agricultural Society nmus-rams. EXHIBITION! N Exinairioiv of Domestic Manufacture: and Agricultural Productions, will be held in Char- lrmetown, on Wednesday, the lira! of Jllbvsmber next, when PIIEMIUMS, as follows. will be distributed For the belt 10 ard: of Cloth, of Island wool, spun an wove on the Island, but which may have been dyed and finish- ed either in this Island or in the Pro- vince of Nova Scotiu or New Bruns- wic - - I I0 0 For the best 10 yard: wool grey Home- spun. miflod &, pressed I 0 0 10 do dyed do finished I 0 0 10 do fuucymixture. o I. 0 0 10 do Shepherd’: Plaid, I 0 0 10 do twilled Flannel, 0 I0 0 10 do plain 0 I0 0 10 do lloiriospun, wouien': wear, 0 I0 0 10 do wool and cotton do 0 I0 0 Piece ofCarpeting, not less than twenty 2 0 0 ya :, Pair of Horse Rugs, inillod, not less than two ards It are. Hearth Rug. made of woollen yarn, .1 o o mg Woollen faiucy plaid Shawl. D shepherd‘: pliiid do Do. not shawl, Do. lon shawl or scarf, Pair of thick knit woollen Stockings, for verulls, Three pair: of woollen socks, Three do woollen Gloves, Three do woollen mittens, Linen Table Cloth, 8 yard: Linen 'l‘owe||ing Three Linen Sacks, capable of holding O C>¢¢=O1DO °¢30¢50l5fl :- 9 O O O4D<>¢I3 OI5<>O<3€>€ four bushel: each, I0 0 Bonnet, made of grass plait, 0 I0 0 Hat do do 0 I 0 AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS. For the best tub of Butter, not less than thirty pound: weight, 0 I0 0 2d best do. 0 5 0 Cheese do twenty pound: 0 10 0 2d best do. 0 5 0 llalf-dozen Swede Turnips. 0 8 0 Do Carrots. for ilie table, 0 8 0 l)o Rout: llluod Beet, 0 3 3 Do Roots of .\l.iugold \Vortzel, 0 3 0 Do Roots of Parsuips, 0 3 0 Do Ear: of Indian Corn, 0 8 0 Do Onions, 0 8 0 Do Applelo 0 8 0 < P 0 UL TR Y, For the best pair, male and female, Dorkirig Fowls. not iuore than one year old (alive), 0 5 0 do do Cochin Cliino do 0 5 0 do do Turkey: do 0 ll 0 Discretionary Premiums will be awarded for' such article: as may he considered worthy by the Committee, although not enumerated in the list. Allarticle: Exhibited must be strictly the manu- facture of persons residing on the Island, with the exception o rst mentioned ' in he List. hibiior: are requested to send the article: intended for competition, to the Secretary, if practicable, on the day previous. y r er, A I-‘armor’: Dinner at the Globe Hotel at the hour of four o'clock of the day of the Show. CHARLES S'l‘EWAR'I', Secretary. Committee Room, Aug. 8, I854. WESTMORELAND BANK of New Brunswick. MONCTON, COUNTY OI‘ WESTDIORELAND. HE Note: of this Bank are redeemed at the Bank of New Brunswick, St. SAcxvii.i.:-—Messr:. Allison & Cogswell. Ci-uiu.o1-'rn'roiviv, P.l-‘..I.—Jnmes Purdie,Esq. Bill: on London and United States purchased at either the Ilead Otlice or Agencies, and all descrip. tion of Banking Business negotiated on the most fu- vorable terms. OLIVER JONES, President. .lA.\Il".S JOHNSON, Cashier. Weatmorelnnd Bank of N. 8., Moncton, 9th September, 1854. Sheep Skins, Butter, Wool, &c., HE Subscriber will pay the highest mnrksitlprice in CAIH, for any auantiyé f BU’ ER, WOOL, SHEEP and LA 8 8 NS. ROBERT BELL. Char|ott:town..Iane Gib, IBM. 9:: Wshlng made easy and Pleasant Of IOITON IV UII Chemical Washing Powder. all! MINING POVIDI OH DEAR! fl’ IIIUOII ‘MAT 9013 TN‘ HARD MIRKTO WAIHI THIS Powder. prepared by a practical Chemist. il a superior article for Washing Clothes. The process of usingi: simple a easy, : aanssa without Injury to the finest fabric. One package of this” Powder will make two gallon: of :ol\.soap, supsriurl in uality forpll doraeetic IQQI. _ Nothing exceed: this powder, after having been roads into an soap for rainoviag grease s II from woolen clothe: and :arpets' Directions on each package of the Powder -—which, iffollowed, will, give, allsra fair trial, general satisfaction. ‘ ‘ , W. R. WA'|‘SON. General Agent for P’ E. ldaadu laid also by I. W. Iaiivrraa. and 1'. Dunni- - 'ia:aoti_iy , _. riax Seed. it: t he glee will in ,=i.s.r.. 'l'Ill01‘llY I.:rrln*..ri-air... »--~ »-~ - IAL |. ' «liwi ma "- O FOR SALE. THAT valuable plot of GROUND at the head o Prince Street,_furmerly the site of the Baptist Cha I, fronting 100 feet on Euston Street, and I04 on pper Prince Street. It i: one of the most desir- able situation: in the suburb: for a gentleman‘: resi- denca, or is capable of being divided into three building Lot:.. For Terms, &c. applly to . H. POPE. Jabs 8. TO BE LET, And possession given on the First day of May net! HE DWELLING HOUSE and Premise: near Government House, at present occupied by Captain Beaaeley, consisting of a Dwelling House which contain: a spacious Dining-room and raw- ing-gooin, Breakfast-room, 7 I3 -rooms. lflffl KN‘ chen, Servant‘: Hall, 3Servant': Bed-rooms, Pantry, |.nrder, Front-porch, large Entrance Hall, large Inner Hull, Back-porch. 2 Buck entrances, Buck and Front stair-case, Sculler , Pam and Wash-Ilouae, Lum- ber-room, and a splendid 6 roomed cellar. A lurgd and conimodiou: Coach-liouse, 3 stalled Stable, Harness-rooin, Cow-hpuse, large Hay-loft and Grain-room, Manure-yard, large Kitchen garden with Fruit tr:e:,&.c., Flower garden. elegant fit)?" entrance and carriage drive, a large Lawn running down to the Harbour with convenience for keeping boats, &c. Extensive plantation of young trees. 0 all kinds, large Root-house, Wood and chopping house, and a spacious and commodiouri yard. _ There are front and back gate: facing on dilfercnt Streets, and is never falling well of water on the premises. _ _ _ ‘this splendid Mansion from its situation com- mand: the liriest view of any house in Charlottetown, and frorii its proximity to (iovernirieiit House nod other advantages the Subscriber COIlIltlt!lll'ly offers it as the most elegant, comfortable and desirable resi- deuce tor a gentleman‘: family in or near Town. For further particular: apply to _ DAVID WILSON, Richmond Street. Sept. 6th, 1854. FOR SALE. 20 ACRES of land on Township No. til '-..iving a front of 20 Chain: on Montague River. 200 Acres on Lot No 8, embracing the West Point ofthe Island. . I00 Acres cu 'l‘uwnsliip No. 60. Pasture Lot No. 188 in the Royalty of George- wn and _ Town Lot No. 95 in the 4th hundred of Lot: in Charlottetown. Apply to WILLIAM FORGAN. Feb. 1th, 1854. FOR SALE. BEAUTII-‘ULLY situated HOUSE and LO'I‘, on the North side of Hillsborough Square. For further particulars, apply on the Premises to RICHARD SMITH. October 4. entf HUNGARIAN B A L M . v For Restoring Preserving and Beantifying the Hair. THIS elegant preparation is an effectual remedy for Baldness, or falling utfof the "air It prevent: and completely criidicutes Scarf and .I)flI’|(IfllII‘, strengthen: the Roots ofthe hair ; causes it to grow lnxurinnlly;gives itn rich, dark, soft and glossy appearance, and prevents it turning gray. 'I‘he ll_un- gurinn [lnlm is in purely Vegetable cotrrpoand, scien- titiciilly nnd cheiiiiciilly combined, and is ‘warranted to contain none of those deleterious ingredient: which prove no injurious to the hair. It act: directly upon the akin, cleansing and purifying it frorii all unhealthy :ecretions,therehy removing and preventing the accumulation of scurf, duudrulf und other impuri- ties, which so frequently cause premature decay and loss of the hair. » The Hungarian Ilulin is especially adapted to ladies’ use; und one who have tried the vurinns olenginous mixtures, with no benefit. will at once discover the agreeable and beneficial efl'ecls produced by this pure and delicate preparation. Instead of mania and tangliug the hair. (which is more or less pu ed out in the process of combing, ) it leaves it free and clean ; promotes is natural 1 moisture, and import: it beautiful dark and glossy appearance. Try it at once and you willbe convinced oflt: supe- riority over ull other compounds for the air. Much more might be said in fiivor oftlri: inesIi- muble compound, but it is deemed urieoesaary. The proprietor feels confidant that on: fruit. will convince the moat incrtluloua. of its rare and ninni- fold virtues. There re. If you have lost your hair and wish to restore it, Ifyoa are losing your hair and wish to preserve it, If you are troubled with Dandruf and wish to annoy: it, - , ' lfyou have any humour of the Scalp and wish to \l lfyou are troubled with Nervous Headache and wish to cure it, If nu have hair enter: at the roots of the hair and wish to destroy them, If you have hnvelt dry and wiry hit. and with if to been a soft, pliable und beautiful no :ilk;:nd it you wi -to preserve rich. gracefull and luxuriant irsesesto the latent period of life, use‘ PEltltY'8 HUNGARIAN BALM. 4-. . Prim I5 and on sent-. in large bottles. D.'[‘.‘\YLOR, Jr. &. C0,, General _Agent:, II Hrmow-r :t., Boston. W- R IVATSON. General Agent frir Prince Edward Inland. Sold also by bl. W. Sxiivivaii, and T. Dunni- sax - Oars-lags: t .0errlege:! 0:‘:-rlage: r IIVI-IE Subscriber, thankful M past favors, tnlte: this bfiortanh to inform hi: friends, and the is general , Id vol Is Great , , and all be_ prepared to Dameh carriages. of :v deseri ‘ion at iii: shortest-noiic ; audbebppes, b astahl a good vrorkrtiaae . to ‘me in visual patronage. \ ' 5 From Haul’: Merchant’: Magazine. BUSINISS ENDURANCE. Men of genius without endurance cannot sne- ceed. Men who start in one kind of business may tind it impossible to continue therein all their days. Ill health may demand a change. Now a wider field: of enterprise and success m: be opened to them ; new element: of character may be developed. Men may have a positive distaste for some ursuits, and success mav demand a change. one of these case: fall within the general rule. Men who have rare talents, but if. they " are everything by turns. and nothing long," they must not expect to prosper. No form of business is free from vexations; each‘ man knows the spot on which his own harness chafea; but he cannot know how much his own neighbor suffers. It is said that a Yankee can splice aropc in many ditferent ways; an English sailor know: but one method, but in that method he or: his work well. Life is not long enough to allow any one to he really master of but'one pursuit. The history of eminent men in all profession: and calling: prove: this. The great statesman Daniel Webster, was: great laviyer. [die boy- hood was marked only by uncommon industry ; as a speaker he did not excel in early life. With great deliberation be selected the'|aw a: his pro- fession, nor could he be deterred from his chosen ursuit. Wbileapooi-student, not the tempting prize of fifteen hundred dollars a year. as Clerk of the Courts, then a large sum; gained with great difliculty for him by the zeal and influence of his father. nor could all the persuasion: of the father, turn him from the mark be had set before him ; and his great culogist, the Attorney General of l\’lass:u-liii:etls,is another marked illustration of resolute endurance and indomitable industry- lil'e-lung—ceuteriug in one profession, making him one of the chief ornaments of that profession, if not its head, in the United States Our late rlistirrguislied Ambassador, at the Court of St. James’, Hon. Abbot Lawrence, whose wealth ispoured out for all benevolent purposes in donations large as the sea, can recall the time when he had his profession to select, and tho tirst dollar of his splendid fortune to earn e chose t'l('lll)t'.I'llel_V a calling; he pursued that occupation wiih integrity and endurance, through dark days and trying seasons. and the result is before the wurld. 'l'lii: case ulliirds an apt illustration of Ilie proverb of the wise man. that: man ‘- diligent in his business shall stand before king: and not before mean men.’ The late John Jacob Astor, as he left his native Germany, paused beneath a linden tree not far from the line that separated his native land from auotlirr, and made three resolutions, which he intended should guide him through life. ‘'1. He would be honest. 2. a would be industrious. 3. He would never. gamble." He was on foot; his wealth was in the small bundle that swung from the slick laid on his shoulder. The world was before him. He was able to carry them out. His success was the beat comment on his endurance. ~ Stephen Girard, at the age of 40 years, was in quite moderate circumstances, being the captain of aemall coasting vessel on the Delaware; and part owner of the same. No trait in his character was more marked than his endurance, and this‘ element gave him a fortune. All men who have succeeded well in life have been men of high resolve and endurance. The famed William Pitt was in early life fond of uaimiug ; the passion increased with his years; he knew that he must at once master the passion or the passion would master him. He made a firm resolve that he would never again play at a game ofhazard. He could make such a resolution; be cuuld kee it. His subsequent eminence was the fruit of that power. William Wilberforce in his earlier days, like most young men of his rank and age, loved the excitement of places of hazard. He was one night persuaded to keep the farobsnk. He saw the ruin of the vice of gaming as he never saw it before; he was appalled with what he beheld. Sitting amid gaining, ruin and despair, he took the resoluiion that he would never again enter a gaming house. He changed his company with the change of his conduct and subsequently in-cnine one ofthe most distinguished I'lfIfllI§IlIl'lt‘ll of his age. . Dr. Samuel Johnson was once requested to drink wine with a friend. The Doctor proposed tea. “But drink atittle wine,” said his boat. “ I cannot," was the reply. “ I know ibstiuence —I know excess; but I know no medium. Long since. I resolved, a:I could not drink a little wine, I would drink not at all.” A man who could thus support his resolution by action, was a man of endurance, and that element is at well -displayed in this incident as in tbeeombination of his great word. - - When Richard Biinaley Sheridan made his firsiepeech in Parliament. it was regarded on all hand: as a most inurtifying failure. His friends urged him to abandon a Parliamentary career, .iiud enter upon some Iiel abi|ity.—‘- No,” said She me, and it shall come out!" g became one of the must splendid debaters in England. Loyola, the founder ofthe order of Jesuits, the courtiei, the man of gallantry and dissipation, ob- tained such mastery over himself by labor and endurance, that, to illustrate the fact, he stood several hours, apparently unmoved, in a pond of ice an muddy water up to his chin. Perhaps no oil r nation in Europe, at that time, could have w the battle of Wat-rlau exce i the British, be. cause no other could have broug I to that conlllct thu amount of endursrree needed to win. For many hours that army stood manfully before the murderous fir: of tbe l"r:n<'-ll. or-luuin after colu ma tell, while It gun was not discharged on their part One sullen word of eoinmanrl ran along the has as thousand: fell‘—' File up’! lilo up 2’ ' Not ygi- not yet !' was the Iron Dole‘: reply to the ear. neat request: niece to charge and I hi the foe. Atlengsb the tune of auto: same. to: charge was given. and victory perobed apoa the standard of England. , - . -mf—¢ V Mauqasspun rp: -i.-n]:..Lsnr::.—Tbs gird]. pl’ l?I|'I'l]|lI_‘:9IhI.:f:" sea. ‘The M3. excess or - ac hm‘ Uuaff '= "fl '_’°'"" ""'"' F How in sun CIlMllAl.l.—IllI.I fact conceded, that notwithstanding the vast material progress we are aiaki ; notwith- standing our free institutions; notwithstand- our common schools; notwlthstandiu our newspapers, crime, instead of dimini: in , grows more formidable continually. W y is this? We will endeavour to explain the apparent paradox. The solution is at once a warning and a rebuke. The great ‘highway to crime is acknow- ledged to be mtemperance. On this oint men of all parties, all sects, and all loca itie: pro agreed. ' ui-_ lawyers concede it, our udgea proclaim it, our JIIIOII attest it. hose who urge a prohibitory law, and those who rega it as unconstitutional, -have no difference of opinion as to this fact. Directly or indirectly, intemperance is chargeable with three-fourths of all the crimesconimitted. Where it does not lead immediately to violations of the law, it does remotely by super-inducing poverty, or by brutalizing its victims. If it fail: to make the drunkard himself an outlaw, it take: its reyenge, by educatin his children for the Jail or the gallows — gar, .dnieri'cai: Pa- per, from the Friends’ Review. Winn-Awaits Bov.-—A country school- master began one morning the duties of the day with prayer, as usual, but after prayer he went up and asked a little boy why he hadn’t shut his eyes during the prayer, when the boy sharply 1-c:ponded,—‘We are instructed in the Bible to watch as well as pray.’ Hsnnivass or A Nnc9.o’a Hun--Nxoito Cnrricisirr or AN Errrsi-ii—The Knicker- bocker for October is already on our table. In the Editors’: Table occur the following samples of negro wit : ‘ Some idea of the hardness of: genuine Sambo’s head, may be gathered from the annexed paragraph, which we find in the Daily Eagle, printed at Memphis, Tenn. A ‘ colored pusson,’ well known about town as ‘Old Kit,’ while passing under a new three-story building, in process of erectior. a brick-but fell from the hand of a briclr layer, on the wall above, a_ud in descending came in contact with the negro’: head. The resistance was great, and the brick-bat was broken in two. After recovering from the temporary stun, he addressed the brick- layer with: ‘I say, you w’ite man up der, if you don’t want yer bricks broke, just keep ‘em 0 my end.” ‘ By the bye, we have it good many clever anecdotes of the odd and bright sayin s of ‘ the dlrli people,’ but we have so dom heard a keener satire than was expressed by a colored ‘ boy,’ as related to us just now by a friend upon whom no good thing was ever lost. It seems he was looking through a grave-yard fence upon the tomb- stone of a villager, who in life had been known as a rather close-listed citizen,wbo:e principal care had been ‘ the greatest good of the greatest number,’ the ‘ greatest num- ber ’ with him having been ‘ number one.‘ Alter a pompous inscription, the following age of Scripture was recorded: ‘He that giveth to the poor, lcndetb to the Lord.’ ‘ Dat may be so,’ soliloquized Sasnbo, ‘but w’en dot man died, de Lord dicta’! one ‘is: a red cent.’ E’yahl e’yah ! e’yah,’ Now if that is’nt a specimen of satire by inver- sion, we have misconvinced its ‘ drill.’ - \ A New War To Max: TIA sun Cor- I-‘I-:B.—-In the refreshment department ofthe Sydenham Crystal Palace is introduced a new mode of making coffee and to: by hydrostatic pressure. It is the inven. tion of M. Loysel, a French chemist, and by its agency he proposed to ‘achieve the following result:--namely: The reduc- tion of tea and cotfee of peculiar flavor and clearness, and a rest economy and saving coffee, valued at one and four-pence, ha un- dertakes to produce an imperial gallon of the infusion, too strong for ordinary use, and of It limpid clearness that would be uite unattainable by any other means. is process is by scientific appliances, and ii recognition of the known tendency of liquids to find their level, to force the boil- ing water twice through the coffee and thus to get hold of the entire principle called cafeine—a thin which be allege: in never- done by the or inary’ mode of p sting, In the preparation of ten, his great iscovery is a very simple one, and one of which every housewife may avail herself. . Loyael says, that be has discovered that by grind- ing the tea in the same manner as coflie, before infusion, the quantity of exbilii-axis‘ tluid obtained is nearly doubled. T5. u- perimcnt is a very simple one, and .55, 5. safely recommended to all connoisseurs in the preparation‘ of "the cup that cheer. bug not mebriates." Having, say: our London authority, had an opp‘o'rtu‘nity of toning the tea and coflbe as prepare M, Loyur. apparatus we can vouch or the delicacy of tlavor an liinpidity ofbotli. The strength did not strike it’: as satbfactory, but that 5; a_ matter of taste, and course is in]... euoed by very simple giyrqr-at" gum... 0 A - in the use of the material. With a pound of .