The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 28, 1881, Image 1

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    Fame,
Fame is on the mountain's crost,
Steep is the ascent;
Unless wo climb the mountains height
Can we ever be content ?
But there's another mountain,
A Tofticr summit still,
Whose apex, high above the clouds,
Leaves fame npon a hill,
Many reach thi
But few the mountain
hillion
Rion
+ wh
Fame, citadel of worldly t
But not angelic vost,
There's many a spar
kling fountain
Of little good or ill:
But then, the turbid waters
Tabak 4 NH
Dig thoy that food the mill
Un the Farm,
Roosters orowing,
Cattle lowing,
Watchdogs baying,
Hay wO8 not t}
Paavocks in plumes of »
In the mt
Atl the
Ri
Roa
The master rog
16
wa 3
THE MISTAKE GARNET MADE.
low-browed, yellow cottage,
i a canopy of
locks. Here dwelt Mrs.
A he Widow Darley, as she
was commonly called by the inhabitants
of Linden. Here, si the departure!
of her niece, Garnet, her brother Rob-
id the city tol
ade, which event ocenr-
FEATS Ag0, she had lived
on the produce she
acres of ground at-
tached to the cottage, which she
aged to sell or bart
al a
Day was fast verging
A littl
3 +3 » 3
i neal
uee
fon > 3
io earn the
dressmaker's
red a couple
al
man-
ar away for groceries |
ving {own three miles distant.
into dusk. In-
FRED
VOLUME XI1V.
)
| just in time to see a chipm
along the fence dividing
{ Mr, Denver's, topple
k, running
lot fy
A
sry as vy
HIS
in
har m
y over and a
. muscnlarly framed
Apollo, with
his face, §
after a man in
and handsome
sombrero shading
roputions the {
wit l
HOVOULIN
winded operations, and with
2% 1 i
alsed A000, ered ont
* Hex
ne man
sass SLE
youl
§ GO You
1 4 . 2
I'll ba with
FEL EY
learn after a while
:
done my work
“Oh, my™
11 8
well.
} *
BUG Orit
Frys
stupid— hoy
d or
¥y .
HOW
next
Miss-
n, and an espe
r master, Mr. Denver
gray npon the scene, and on
line kissed the purple tops o
tant mount The Widow Darley sat |
by the window busily engaged in da
ing a wretched-locking stocking over a |
manimoth orange, bemoaning
with her every stitch her recent attack |
rheumatisin which confined her to
the house, when she was thoroughly |
conscions of the fact that her services |
were needed out doors. Now was the |
time to dig her potatoes, now the time
to gather certain apples, and—do |
everything in fact; and here she was,
rot only unable to get about, but so |
Leavily trammeled by debts that she
found it impossible to secure the assist- |
ance so much needed.
- Well, § declare pe
This exclamation was caused by the
rumbling old stage coach, that daily |
passed her house, stopping at the front
gate, from which alighted her niece, |
who ran lightly up the walk and into
the house followed by a stronglxr-built |
man, bearing on his shoulder a good- |
sized trunk, which he deposited in the |
hall ere making his exit. i
“ How d'ye do, Aunt Susan ?” with a |
hug and a kiss. *“ Not a slave to rhen- |
ism, I hope #’
“Yes,” replied Widow Darley, who,
by the way, was a tiny woman of fifty, |
with a face not unlike the wrinkled ap- |
ples that grew on the tree in the garden, |
“the monster has me again in his |
clutch. Bat, whatever brings you
home? You haven't surely been sent
adrift 2° >
“Yes, aunt,” a tremor of pain thread-
ing her voice in spite of her efforts to
sppear unconcerned, ‘ times are dull,
an | Madam Brown has so little work
that she deemed it expedient to dispense
with the services of those girls who
proved the most incompetent. I, being
the least skillful of all her apprentices,
was discharged without regret. Most
summarily she dismissed me, withhold-
ing the few quaint words of commenda-
tion she grudgingly bestowed upon the
others. I have no taste for dressmaking,
and am termed a regular botch. Not a
very good recommendation to help se-
cure another situation, eh ? But, never
mind, aunt! I see I am needed at
home How are things prospering #”
**Not at all,” in her most dolorous
tone; “the place is fairly weighed down
with mortgages, and, for aught I know
to the contrary, Mr. Lincoln may fore-
close any day. Yes, any day may find
us without shelter. Onr larder is about
empty and there is no money to replen-
ish it ; all of the flour has been scraped
from the barrel, and to-day I was obliged
to borrow a pailful from Jane Gray;
then, too, there is not a tea-leaf in the
caddy and I do not know how to exist
without my cup of tea. I had meant to
have dug a few bushels of potatoes and
got Mr. Denver's horse to go to obtain
some of the things 1 cannot get along
withont, but I am good for nothing
good for nothing!” with a profound
sigh.
“ Never mind, aunt, don’t worry.” I'll
see what can be done in the morning.”
And next forenoon, about 10 o'clock,
with a hoe swung over her shoulder, and
a half-bushel basket in her hand, in
which reposed a half-dozen potato bags
and a dainty repast done up in a news-
paper, she trudged to the potato lot, to
see what eould be done ; for the widow's
niece, Garnet Embers, was a girl equal
to any emergency. She was a slender,
graceful girl, neither blonde nor bru-
nette, but a combination of both, as
pretty a creature as one would care to
see, with her wonderfully fair complex-
ion, tinged with the merest flush of pink,
her dark eyes, almond-shaped, and full
of vim, shadowed by black, curling
lashes, and a superb abundance of red-
brown hair, coiled low on her well-
shaped head. She had donned a dun-
hued ealico dress, which she had fastened
up on all sides to keep clear of the dirt,
thereby displaying a foot arched and
slender as an Arab’s and over her head,
hiding her wondrous hair, was one of
her aunt’s sunbonnets, making her look,
as she declared, a regular guy. She
reached the lot and set to work in earn-
est, but somehow she made little pro-
gress, Ob! if some strong-handed mas-
enline ereature were but around! What
short work he would make of that job
At this juncture the report of a gun
#1D.
m- i
ROCs:
of
wed
sibs
sounded uear, and Garnet looked up
when
Quite an
* What makes you la
‘ sents 311.) : "
report vour ili-behavior
1} - ry
shall certa
“Pray don't
humility. ©
Indeed I couldn
ill-favored hop-toad
potato, you'd laugh, t
The toad was smal
potato has grown to a enorn
regular whopper! Look! Miss Embers,
the fellow now de at
straggling vine!”
“Haomph!" was all
1
vouchsafed him as she
¢
i ot al Bel 18%
A
18
oo. It was so funnr,
80 l. whereas the
OUus 812i
there goes
well
he Was making
sport of her.
The o'clock
savagely
fourth
minutes crej
and Bob was
hungry. As he emptied the
basket of potatoes, he said:
“It is noon now, Miss
sure. See! Old Sol is dire ctiy over
us. Come, let's have our lunch under
the apple tree, I'm hungry as a canni-
bal.”
“71 too,” acknowledged Garnet.
that parcel yonder, Bob, and
squeeze it, else you'll erush the
berry tarts in it. Aunt Sarah
them, and she’s a famous pastry c¢
“ Cranberry tarts !” his mouth begin-
ning to water. “Yon bet I'll hold it
lightly. I am especially fond of them.
But what delicacies does the luncheon
contain, Miss Embers, prepared by your
hands ?”
“ Not any, Bob,” with something that
sounded like a sigh. “Iam no better
cook than dressm We have both
missed our vocation. I worked two
years in Madam Brown's establishment
endeavoring to learn how to cut and
make dresses, but failed ignominionsly;
was therefore sent home minus a recom
mendation. So it will be yo,
Bob. Although a thoroughly good man,
Mr. Denver is a very exacting one, and
if your work to-day is a specimen of
what vou ean do he will not keep you in
his service any longer than what is ab
solutely necessary. What up-hill work
life is for the poor! Dear me! Iwon
der what I am good for, anyway ?”
“ (Good to look at,” he muttered, un
der his breath, wishing that she would
toss off the sunbonnet that almost con
cealed her face, Then aloud, * Good to
dig potatoes, I suppose.”
At which both laughed heartily, and
together they wended their way to the
apple tree, weighed down with golden
fruit, at whose foot they were to par
take of their lunch. A musical stream-
let threaded its way over a pebbly bed,
washing the roots of the apple tree as
it ran merrily on. Here, on the grass,
in sound of its babbling voice, they
seated themselves and prepared to par-
take of the repast, which Garnet spread
daintily out on a newspaper, first throw-
ing off the offending sunbonnet, which |
motion caused the red-brown hair to
tumble about her face, making a pic-
ture at which Titian would have raved.
“By Jupiter!” ejaculated Bob, “ she
is even prettier than I imagined. She
is a perfect witch.”
He had doffed his sombrero, and his
picturesque, Moorish face, illumined
by darkly splendid eyes, Garnet thought
the handsomest in the world.
“If he were not a hired man,” she
4
Di
I'm
Embers,
“Got
don't
eran-
made
1.
OOK.
with
i
income, I believe I could love him. As it
is, the idea is simply ridiculous. I will
sound him to see if he is as intellectual
as he looks,
passed by unheeded.
aroused them. It was Mr. Denver's,
|
i
{
Iditor and
fitt Can
from und
fos
it
Recamier
'
are
lo Ones
tized with Oars
that were
which were so de lear.
o 1) al ihered
. :
sith
GUeaii,
id away bap
] the i
again, and vet
1
KISSER
kisses
SaVS
hig
an and whoever he
would surely receive that dimple, so the
say of one who has a d
the is Christ-kissed.”
f respect is given upon the
it of admiration upon the
beauty upon the cl
ve is given upon the lips.
men do not waste kisses
wher when they can do so
tter, but in every other chapter
ible
Germans
chin:
} 3 kiss
add; tl
that of
f 1
i
¢
CHEEKS,
the #
and the father of
ran and kissed him,
stasteful it may be men do
arch and kisses him,
the prodigal son
and however di
t aft
{
164 idk
hev n i
related,
x 1
closely
other,
ter of Queen Victorias and wife of an
two ago through a kiss; two
children died of diphtheria, and
1
con
she
;
{
g
boy to “ kiss mamma;” she kissed
love and took the dread disease, which
resulted fatally.
No doubt the kisses of young lovers
taste better than any luxury yet discov
ered
cent kisses like
and untutored— for
vor in time.
tood above the world
In a world apart,
ped her happy
throbbing p
i
er happy heart ;
7}
« though no human lover
Had laid his kisges there,”
The hero of Lockesly Hall said:
“Many an eve did
the sta
And om
ng bry the we watch
waters
5 rusdiod together at the nothing
of the Hoa
siderable attention lately. The way in
which Emma Abbott kisses that hand-
some Castle, who plays “Panl” to her
“ Virginia,” is too, too much !
oxysmal,” * spontaneous,” * absorbing,”
and everybody wondered when
Emma learned to kiss in that way.
Sarah Bernhardt makes a little rush at
her vis-a-vis, and kisses him behind the
ear before he knows what it is all about.
Mary Anderson’s kisses remind an actor
who plays with her of the time he put
his tongue to a frozen lamp-post when a
boy, and now all the old boys are look-
ing for frozen lamp-posts to kiss. Here
is a darling
BIT OF SENTIMENT
“Up to her chamber window
A slight wire trellis grows,
And up this Romeo’s ladder
Clambers a bold white rose.
To her scarlet lips she holds him,
And kisses him many a time ;
Ali, me! it was he that won her,
Because he dared to climb.”
~Detroit Free Press,
HALL, CENT
FASTING FORTY-FIVE DAYS,
How Hiss Hattie Duels strange Lite Teormis
A Waman Whe Had Not Speken tor
Mare than Sixteen Months, and Whe Did
Not Taste Pood for Nearly Seven Weeks,
nated
Lowa vit
wh
Y; Ia, »
3 33
time had bean
» hon death, Were
ged
le water d
drink,
tity through
aily.
» discontinned
xd to a skele
ton, her nose was thin and pinched, her
cheeks were hollow, and her skin was an
nuusually dark color, It was predicted
1a
(ay
me was
tir
more than a
She, however, seemed
few hours longer :
to think the end was further away, for,
on recovering from a deathly fa
wrote the question: * Do vou thin
am going to live always?" | i
t of her friends she
that she suffered no pain whate
On the fortieth d iy ashe was
a comatosC state {
though apparently sleeping very little.
Her mental faculties were unimpaired,
int, he
kl
iy to
mueh «
she Decne
fully conscious of what was ocenrring
her. Her physical
was much deteriorated, and was
now weak and utterly helpless. Her
pulse beat between ninety and one hun
dred, there were no signs of fever, and
One of the
of this fortieth
her breathing,
condition
she
observations
the fact that
singular
Wan
minute. She
was thought to be dying, but recovered
none of her determination, for when the
subject of fi wod Was introduce d by one of
+ nauseated expression came over her
face, much to the surprise of the phy
her symptoms. On the forty-fourth day
she rallied a little, and appeared some
during the
then slowly
On
the following day Dr. F. W. Peck, of
Davenport, made a thorough examina
time
and
any
rising to 100
ber very much reduced, but
not more so than in the case of a patient
The idea of compell
to swallow food was again
ing her
opinion that the only result of such an
Several times on Sunday she
stand that her head was so hot that it
appeared to be on fire. At midnight it
was observed that she was sinking fast,
and at 12:45 o'clock she breathed her
last,
Immediately after death a post-mor
tem examination was made by Dr. Cowper
thwait, dean of the homeopathic depart-
ment of the university. Not a drop of
blbod was found in the body, which
weighed only forty-five pounds. The
A little girl had been scolded by her
grandmother. She picked up her little
kitten, and, caressing it, said:
one of us three was dead. And it ain't
you, kitty, and it ain't me,”
RE CO.,
CURIOUS FACTS,
Celery sea
twent
A suail's
yp certain
will
germinate
be 1
other
«dl. Al a5, BO BVH
it
off,
head
Spallanzania,
and in
Lhe « lephant has been known to die
§ viel whe RB, 1 fit of mad
N, Lhe has killed his kee peor,
In Ole district i Japan seventy
na sudden
une
are reported to have
53
1 fowls fill
ii
The Flying-Fish,
the New (
t from
Irleans Tim
Natu
' 4
BM dl, RUG
Wi
taken out
coryphi ne 1s
noted for the
tints when
its fiat
of fiving.
i nicle, never 3
agree with Mr, Whitman, whe
i { leap to be
800 or even 1,200 feet. I opine that
mt 200 feet is a p y big jump for
of these fishes, and, instead of forty
onds, I calenlate the time occupied
a long leap at fifteen seconds, which
gives a veloaity of nine miles and a frac
tion per hour,
retty
in
Functions of the Newspaper,
1. The newspaper is, first of all, a
business enterprise, Publi make
newspapers to sell, just as hatters make
hats or shoemakers make shoes. The
newspaper is merchandise made to suit
market. Those buy it who wish it,
and the buyers take thi ir choice of thi
wares offered. Without this commercial
value the publication eonld not be sus
tained, and it would be as unwise as
unjust not to take this fact into account,
Newspaper makers, like other manu.
facturers, must consult popular tastes
and market demand.
But the newspaper is also a public
agent. “It offers to the public, for pay,
certain servic 8, such as the advertise
ment of commodities, the
ment of public meetings,
elections and sales. On this work, as
an advertising medium and public
herald, it depends for much of its sup.
port,
Ihese are the private and personal
aspects of the newspaper, and so far as
these are concerned it is the private
property and business affair of its pub-
lisher. But to count the newspaper as
merely a business enterprise, and to
reckon with it only as such, would in-
ult the publie intelligence as much as
it would trifle with the public interests
and rights. It assumes public func
tions and responsibilities which none
but a publie teacher can hold. We can-
not absolve men from the duties at-
tached to positions which they vol
untarily occupy. But the press is the
professed, if not paid, advocate of
whatever set of opinions it publicly ae-
cepts, It offers its columns as sources
of public information. It speaks in
print, and, therefore, with a supposed
deliberation, candor and honesty, such
as men use under the most solemn eir-
cumstances, It is in this public char
acter that it enters into the ranks of
the world's teachers, and becomes a
public educator, — Professor J, M. Gre-
gory.
S1ers
i1
thin
announce.
courts,
> reli —————
Conversation turned on a late mar-
ringo between December and May, some
of the gentlemen poohpoohing the
match, But the lady stoutly cham.
| pioned the frost-bitten Benedict.
“Why,” said she, * every man ought to
keep himself married as long as he lives,
Now, here's my husband! What would
he be good for without a wife? If I
should die to-night he would get an-
other wife to-morrow, I hope. Wouldn't
| you, Josiah 2” Josiah breathed heavily,
and seemed to sum up the eonnubial
torments of a liletime in his ealin re
| sponse: “No, my dear, 1 think I should
| take a rest!”
THE FARM AND HOUSEHOLD,
Test the Seeds,
ry id garden r should
farmer a
he seeds he pug
wldly test th
% those he
wiwing those inten
15 but little 4
hinses, as
. before
ded to mise a arog. It
tO test sonds
saved last wear,
oulbile in ad
vance, and it frequently happen
doing so a total failure of a « rop may be
NO One to
Hl not gro if
RORRON
walls seeds
the fir
will
1 fore th
IWitiar ¥
Willgt «a
POW
Deca
alls, thi
advanced
d for
shindiow boxes
RT f
or flower
juired for testing
thie heat sul
It is alwavs well
is that
ar
rade i
in It
Wher in
POwWih
WW thick
Lhe
iv in: t}
Cely 1 Liu
the field,
Churntug Cream
agitating all the
hurn will sometimes make
nee in the produetic n of
ofesnor Arnold savs he o
re dairy where the mar
not
ugly
oblaining
mld do
thiree
Bil
on
examining
tis boards
ey did not agitate
, Some passing nnder
fl without being
He had the floats
t of three of them and des
80 that there was
A short BPC be tween the edge of
its and the sides of th churn and so
little eroam could pass witho
with floats The
rial was made, the result showing that
the flosts had been
iil Pe
QINe Ove
HH riy
and 1 r the floats
BOR ly moved at all,
taken on
- 3 vy 3
ones substituted,
1 1
i FY
i LOS
2 10 coh
MANS, Wien
: i ,
much larger
3
wn those when
tha
¥
i
&r, produced i
Y of butter
10418 were narrower
Pork in Splie of Chemistry,
Chemistry has misled many people in
regand to ti value of roots.
old hogs the past
wushels a day of shiced
rrew all the time,
me of them
Le pen an i slanghtered,
worker, It was fat, and
most
§
Ff montis «
meat was
1 A
mangels weighs sixty pounds,
shels would ther fore wi igh
According to the wisdom
y, eighty-five per
ds would be water, makin
water and twentv-s«
thing else.
8 0 day of
cent {
o
H
ven
th Chemisty
els contain bu
ar tha y
fst 1
nat mi
no
ig
of sugar, which is
the
cent
property, 1
row fat on twenty
rar, woody fiber, « T.
ight hogs lived all
He pound
herefore
ther words, «
fod »
He OF
PH wer
nds {
pork made ready
: pounds daily of
: ugar, but
18 hemistry, i" Ae LUHriias,
the
JAN pon
sacchanne matter,
groator
Transplanting.
to
g when transplanted,
\ New E
involves
order insure
ind Fa
a good deal
nd a simpler method isin
garden moving
enenmbers, mel-
3 Lin
its are pricked out i
5 « f four plants each, 1
th
i
mer
ers for
0A
spanshios, ia beans, ete.
under glass
he hills
irty-two
O require
in abon
r nine inches square, of
When grown so as
which will be
by the time they begin to
run, have the ground ready for them,
and wet them down well over night, so
that the earth will cling to
Have ready a few square rings of sheet
zine, nine in jnare, made by fold
ing a strip of zine three inches wide and
three feet longeinto a nine-inch square
prism, withdut top or bottom, and sol-
dering the edges together. Take aring
and press it down into the earth around
one of the hills; then run a spade under
it and lift the hill, ring and all, on the
ry it to destination,
ade with a hoe to re
» the cluster of plants on
the hole, draw the earth
and remove first
the spade, then the ring, and the
work 1s complete, These tender plants
cannot be transplanted safely to the
open field much before June 10. But
cucumbers are transplanted thus under
glass whenever the glass is ready for
them. In transplanting vines choose a
hot day, and avoid rainy, cold weather.
If well moistened before transplanting,
and carefully handled, they will not
wilt much, but may need a little shade
for a few days. The transplanting of
celery, cabbage and cauliflower plants is
simple and easy enough in the cool,
moist weather of early spring, but in the
hot weather of midsummer requires
some skill. Much depends in having
the land in which the plants are to be
sot thorougy fine; if coarse or lnmpy
it is much more likely to dry up and
destroy the plants. Choose, if possible,
a cloudy day after rain, but if this can't
be done, and if the weather is dry and
hot, the plants must be watered, Keep
the roots wet while setting them, and
water every day till they grow or till
rain This laborious work
where large fields are sel, but is often
the only way to be sure of a crop. To
make the earth fine for setting plants it
may be thrown into drills with a plow
and then raked down; or if it is desir
ilar din ov
Fansidaniing,
1
two weeks, or
y
the roots
ches =
ite
cave it; A
the spade it
around the ring,
COMes, 18
of celery and cauliflowers, the rows are
marked first with the wheel marker, and
the spots where the plants are to be set
made fine by chopping with a hoe.-
New York Herald.
All cultivated plants contain lime in
sary to their proper growth But as
soils generally contain enough lime, and
we apply it for its action upon the soil,
lime acts upon and greatly aids the
soil. It is thought to neutralize the
organic acids contained in what are
called “sour roils.” In a complicated
manner it aids in the fixing of ammonia. |
It also acts upon the inorganic or min-
eral constituents of the soil, and aids in
converting them into forms in which |
they can be taken up by the plants, |
especially in liberating potash from its
combinations, The effect of lime upon
the mechanical condition of the soil is |
an important feature. Upon heavy clay |
its effect is most marked;
il
1881,
*
| allow air and water to enter, These are
lime, In view
| important question how far it can pro
i duce the effects. That the un-
burned limestone will supply the
demands of the plant for lime, that it
may slowly neutralize organio acids, and
above
seems very probable, Dut that it will
perform one of the most important offi-
ces, the decomposition of organic matter
in the soil, nd
food,
BOIS
do this depends in a
bon x
a carbonate, has no need of more.
seid, while limestone, being already
That
limestone cannot produce all the effects
1% shown hy well-known fact
underlaid by limestone, and
nrally containing a large proportion of
fine ly divided carbonate of lime, are
uch benefited by the nse of quick-
lime as are soils deficient in limestone,
1 he adv riiscments of ground Hmestone
that we have seen make great use of the
experiments of one person in Pennsyl-
vania, who states that his vield of wheat,
treated with ground limestone, was more
than doubled that to which slacked lime
had been applied. He also claims to
it a much cheaper fertilizer
we and bone dust, and more profit
tha superphosphate,
8 have been sent by
who ask our opinion. Our
on” is that we do accept as
i he results of any one experimenter,
Ww hid hn the ¥ are in direct opposition
to the accumulated evidence of those
rans through many
In nothing more easily than in
rricultural experiments can an effect
i
3
ascribed
the
i
BOLLE
is 10
have found
i lin
i guano and
statement
not
s4333%% ¥
WHORES practice
Yours,
to the wrong eause, and when
the fertilizi value of ground
ia
Sin
HIVE
accept it — Ameri
a aaa
ear, in Advance.
NUMBER 16.
SUNDAY READING,
rt
Children's Confessions,
The evangelist, the Rev, Mr. Hammond,
| enmducted a children's service at the Blow
Street Methodist church, Toronto, one
Buandav afternoon recently, After prayer
he catochized the children as to the dif-
ferent names given to our Bavior in the
| Bible, and asked them if they could say
by heart the verse in the New Testament
beginning, * Suffer little children.” One
little girl, about nine years old, stood
ap to say it, but Mr. Hagnmoznd request.
ed her to go to the platform and do so,
This she did, and on being asked to
state how she became a Christian she
gave her experience in a clear and in.
telligent manner, without the slight.
ost hesitation. Her story briefly
was this: Bome of her companions
asked ber to go to Bherboume
street church to Mr. Hammond's
services, as it was great fun to see the
people crying. She did so, and she and
Lier companions used to run out of the
shureh laughing when they saw people
ying, but one day a lady came up to
them in the church and told them of
the crucifixion of Christ jn such a way
that they had never beard before. The
ady prayed for them, and then they
pray a themselves and asked God to
lorgive them for their sins.
Crayer was again offered and a hymn
sung, and Mr. Hammond told the
vas over the Sunday-school teachers and
thers who had volunteered to assist
them conversed with the chiidren as to
Heligious News and Notes,
Recipes,
Rory Jerry Cage.
ngar, thre eggs, one teaspoonful of
cream tartar mixed in a cup of flour,
half a teaspoonful of soda in two table.
spoonfuls of sweet milk; stir well and
bake in spare tins. When done spread
with jelly and roll while warm.
(ER leat four eggs
a teacup of milk into which has
lespoonful of pound-
d cracker and « even teaspoonful of
well and pour on a well
ered griddle, not t tarn it
y as it will do, and fold it
¥
and tum it & warm
Unac OuereL
¥
and add
been stirred one tab
£
flour; stir it
butt
it
oo hot:
then
on to
As ROOT
over twice
plate,
Take a piece of beef-
ir hand and spread
cut a piece of bacon as
ger and lay it in, then cut
ine and spread them over,
nd pepper it to taste, add a pinch
of juniper berries, roll it up and tie it
y some thread so it will not open,
v and fry an hon
Boil
, tak
p
i
potatoes, peel
an a smali piece
mn and let it fry out, then slice a
few onions and let them fry till a light
brown, put a spoonful of flour in and
let it get yellow, t pour in a little
and and then sprinkle
d pepper over the potatoes and
nicGns, pour sauce over them
VV are ready 10 serve,
i
aen
wales VIiBOgar,
YOur
r Meat Caxps.—Place one pound
at meal in a bowl; in one pint of
iz water drop about half an ounce
of butter or salted lard ; pour this boil-
ing ring it as quickly
passible into a dough ; turn out on to
swread board ; roll it unil as thin as it
w and hold together; ent into
de and bake on a grid-
we side and then the other.
over the meal, sti
onn AXe8
I
Household Hints,
After buttering your cake tins scatter
} them and the cake is
not flick to the
o bake hard
bottom
v4 ¥
rain
yy 5 1:1
oven is liRe
fs
41€
y
hte
will |
ati
with w
Cellars thoroughly trea
velio th copperas
able hala
wash made wi
1 be
{for mats a
Whe
starch
Mis
laces do not use
. TT 5
e last water in which
a little fine white
thoroughly, and the
t will be pleasing.
nn Wasuing
f dissolve it
resu
To brown sugar for sance or puddings,
the sugar in a perfectly dry sauce
If the pan is the least bit wet, the
rin and you will spoil your
pa
pan,
sugar will bn
saucepan.
When putting away the silver tea or
coffee pot which is not used every day,
lay a little stick across the top under the
cover. This will allow fresh air-to get
in, and will prevent mustiness, It will
then be ready for use at any time, after
having first been thoroughly rinsed with
boiling water,
Nothing is better to clean silver with
than alcohol and ammonia; after rub.
bing with this take a little whitening or
a soft cloth and polish in this way;
even frosted silver, which is so diffienlt
to clean, may be casly made clear and
bright.
A ————————
What's a Printer?
A printer, according to a punning
exchange, is the most curious being
living. He may have a “bank” and
“gquoins” and not be worth a cent ; have
“gmall caps” and neither wife nor
children. Others may run fast, he gets
along swifter by “setting” fast. He
may be making *‘ impressions” without
eloquence ; may use the “lve” without
offending, and still tell the truth; while
others cannot stand while they set, he
can “set standing,” and do both at
the same time ; may have to use “furni-
ture,” and yet have no dwelling ; may
make and put away “pi” and never see
a pie, much less eat it during his whole
life ; be a human being and a8 “rat” at
the same ; may “ press” a good deal,
and not ask a favor; may handle a
“shooting iron" and know nothing
about a cannon, gun or pistol ; he may
move the “lever” that moves the world,
and ‘vet be so far from the morning
globe as a hog upon a mole hill;
“gpread sheets” without being a house-
he may lay his form on the * bed”
and vet be obliged to sleep on the floor;
handle * stars ;"” he may be of a * roll-
to travel ; he can have a “sheep's ” foot |
or physic; be always correcting his
day; have ‘‘embraces,” without ever
having the arms of a lass thrown around
him ; have his * form locked up,” and
at the same time be far from the jail,
watchhouse, or any other confinement
ho may be plagued by the “devil” and
not be a Christain of the very best type
Over 80,000 buffalo have been killed
in Montana within the past six months,
all but some 20,000 being slain for their
hides plone, which bring from $2.25 to
30.70 each. Men in the [nr business |
say that this wholesale slanghter is rag
idly making the buffalo extinet,
000 from their church property.
Seven members of the graduating |
class of the Yaie theological seminary |
will go to Dakota as missionaries.
The Baptists of New York have in :
contemplation the erection of a denom- |
inational headquarters, on the plan of |
Tremont temple in Boston.
Mr. Moody will spend this summer |
at his home in Massachusetis, where he |
will hold a sort of select camp-meeting |
for advanced Bible scholars. It is said |
be intends visiting Europe in the fall. |
Rev. Henry V. Vorhees, seven years |
pastor of the Reformed church, of Nyack, |
N. Y., bas accepted a call to the Mo- |
nokin Presbyterian church, Princess |
Anne, Maryland, which was founded in |
1705.
The British Methodists objeet to the |
proposal of American Methodists to in- |
trodnee doctrinal topics in the ecn- |
menical conference. To this narrowing |
of the scope of the conference the |
American Methodists are expected to
demur. ;
i
At the recent session of the Central |
Pennsylvania Methodist conference one |
presiding elder condemned the holding |
of large and expensive camp-meetings, |
and of closing the gates on Sunday. |
Another said be had refused to attend a |
camp-meeting whose authorities had re- |
fused to close its gates on the Sabbath. |
Dorset, Vt., is conservative. Pastor
Pratt has been minister for twenty-five
vears. His chorister las started the
tunes for thirty years or more, his dea- |
cons have held office, one for forty years
and the other for twenty years,the Sun-
day-school superintendent bas presided
sixteen vears and one of the teachers
bas taught fifty-two years.
The Christian at Work suggests:
When you preach as a supply or in
some other pulpit than your own, have
regard to appropriateness and the
eternal fitness of things. One minister,
invited to preach to a congregation
mostly sailors, discoursed for full
fortv-minutes against horse-racing;
while we know of another minister who |
preached in an Old Ladies’ Home
against sowing wild oats in one's youth.
While there isa gratifving increase
in the number of Presbyterian churches,
there is a discouraging decrease yearly
in the number of communicants added.
Thus in 1876 there were 5,077 churches
and 48,240 accessions by examination; |
in 1877, 5,153 churches and 43.068 ao-
cessions; in 1878, 5,269 churches and |
82,277 accessions; in 1879, 5,415 churches
and 29,196 accessions, and last year,
5,480 churches and 26,838 accessions.
Here is a steady decrease, the causes for |
which are not vet understood. It is’
needless to say that these facts are dis- |
cussed with care at each general assem-
bly, but as vet without finding any |
remedy, Christian at Wark,
To hor thus gazing up that rod sooms ®
The organ peals; she mast not look
Although with wonderment her pulses
The place whoreon she stands is holy ground.
Tho sermon over, sid the blessing said,
Bho bows as “mother” doss «33 gill
And thinke of little sister who is dead,
And prays God take her there too, a4
Pet, may He keop you in the faith alway,
And bring you to that home for which you pra
Where sll shall have their child-hesrts bee
one day.
HUMOR OF THE DAY,
How to serve a dinner—Eat it,
Shocking—A magnetic battery.
| aboard.
:
‘and a rooster
| orphavs of them
| When isthe most
| visit the country? Give
{ihe stom ing and
|" The Philadelphia Chronicle says that
{being k in hot water become
i
|” A Dungry hen will
‘of conin a Sil pick
‘have a second and a
| more,— Free Pres.
“ Life is a great
Perhaps
Our forefathers could not harbor the
—
The meanest man in the lives
in Missouri. He pleaded in a
of promise suit that a contract made
Sundsy night was not binding.
Darwin, in his recent book, Jn
y a
quite too much of this
conduct. If it is true, a reform is greatly
necded,
WISE WORDS,
Fortune unmasks men.
A boaster’s virtues are on the sur
face.
It is the worst wheel that squeaks the
most,
Better three hours too soon than one
minute too late. ss
Experience is the name men ta
their follies or their sorrows. give
Discontent is the want of self-reli-
ance, it is the infirmity of will.
Good breeding shows itself most
Where to an ordinary eve it appears the
east,
Stay not until you are told of op-
Fortunitios to do good; inquire after
em. .
The worst education that teaches self-
denial is better than the best that
teaches everything else and not that,
Opportuni . sensitive
things; if you slight them on their
first visit you seldom see them again.
Belf- t is the noblest garment
with which a man may clothe himself —
the most elevating feeling with which
the mind can be inspired.
The law of the harvest is to
more than you sow. Sow an act
you reap & habit; sow a habit and you
reap a character; sow a chamcter and
you reaps destiny.
We perhaps never detect bow much
of our social demeanor is made up of
see 8 who
is at once beautiful and sim i
the beauty we are apt to call
iness.
; without
simplicity
awkward
A Shaertil temper, joined with inmo-
cence, will make beauty attractive,
knowledge delightful and wit good-na-
tured. 1t will lighten sickness, poverty
and afliction, convert ignorance into an
smiable simplicity and render deformity
itself le.
Japanese Children,
enter the ordinary
rooms are not much
A part of the floor is covered with mats,
on which they sit and sleep. A block
of wood four inches high, hollowed a
little at the top, answers as a pillow,
thick, over which a clean piece of paper
i each time it is used, to save
i The head poised
prevents the di
ment of the hair, so that it need not
combed more than once or twice ina
week. But the poor babies, and little
Scio.
The island of Scio, which has been so
terribly shaken by earthquake, lies in
the Grecian Archipelago, off the coast of
Asia Minor. It is separated from the
main land by the Strait of Scio, which |
is four miles wide in its narrowest
ve
on the top over each ear, and on the
3 ave seen little babies with
heads entirely shaven and uncovered on"
the coldest day, while the mother or
: .
hundred square miles, and its present |
population is about fifty thousand, most |
of whom are Turks. Limestone ridges |
traverse Scio, giving it a rocky and un- |
oven surface and picturesque appear-
ance. There are a few small streams of
water iu the alleys, but most of the |
irrigation is by means of water from |
wells. Only a small part of the island |
is arable. Gum mastic is the staple |
production, among the other produe- |
tions being silk, cotton, wool, fruit and
oil. Considerable wine is also made on |
the island. The chief city and capital |
is Scio, or Kastro, situated near the !
middle of the east coast and having
14,600 residents. The city is pro- |
tected by a castle, has a harbor and
manufactories of silk, velvet and cotton. |
In ancient times tho chief city was |
called Scios, and claimed to have been
the birthplace of Homer. The history
of the island runs back centuries before
Christ. In 494 B. C. it was invaded
8eio
became a member of the Athenian |
league in 479 B. C, and 1ecovered its |
independence in 358 B.C. Philip V., of
Macedon, took possession of the island
in 201 B. C, and it afterward became
subject to Rome. Turks captured the
chief city and massacred the inhabitants
early in the fourteenth century. Then
the Genoese gained possession in 1346, |
and held it until 1566, when it again '
fell into the hands of the Turks. With
the exception of a short period when it
Bin to Venice, Scio been
under Turkish rule up to the present
time. The inhabitants rose against the
Turks during the Greek revolution in
1822, but were soon put down and made
to suffer torribly for their action. With-
in two months 28,000 persons, without
regard to sex or age, were put to the
sword. 47,000 being sold into slavery,
and 5,000 fled to escape death. Asa
result the Christian population of nearly .
104,000 was reduced to 2,000. A Gree
force commanded by Colonel Fabvier, a
Frenchman, attacked the Turkish garri-
son of Scio in 1827, but were beaten and
driven from the island,
The finger rings of this country are |
“only very strong babies survive their
infancy.” :
Japanese houses have only
windows; they have no stoves or
bat a little bex, from one to two feet
square, with some coals in the center, is
all they have for warmth or cooking.
Two or three cups, as many plates, a tea-
pot, a kettle and some boxes to hold
their clothing, complete their furniture.
All the houses I have seen are very
clean, which is their only appearance of
comfort.
Little children are often made to
take care of the baby. A very common
sight is a little boy or girl, from five to
with a kite,
with a baby strapped on their backs, fast
asleep, but sometimes yi In the
latter case, they only say “Be quiet,”
and go on with their play. Bat
Japanese children seldom ery or q :
and ave very obedient to parents
teachers, whom they venerate.— Mission-
ary Link. .
Perhaps He Was,
; Th other ay a) Jawher-colored, Hg
roned-spavined mri a
a pil hitched to a olay
was crawling along Michigan avenue,
with an emigrant tamily under the cover,
when a man on the corner called oat :
** Say, is that an Arabian hoss ¥*
The stranger drove up
stone, halted, and asked what the other
said
horse.”
* He mout be—he mout be,” was the
serious reply. “I got him in trade
with a chap down in Indianee, and from
the way I was took in I reckon that old
seraph not only beat the Arabs out of
eight camels to boot.” —Detroit Fres
Press
Mrs. Amelia Lewis asserts in Food and”
Health that nearly $15,000,000 is invest
ed in oleomargarine factories, and that
they have adde carly $1 to the
Undiessal kids w
at the sca shore this