The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 27, 1883, Image 6

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    GOOD-BYE OR HOWDY -DO ,
Bay good-by or howdy-doo—
Whats the Sade arnt the two?
QOemin —goin —every day
Best friends first to gO away—
ri2raap of hands you druther hold
Than their weight in solid gold,
Sips their grip while greetin, you.---
; Baw good-by or howdy-do?
Bowdy-do and then good-by--
9 ixes jest like laugh and ory;
Deathe snd births, and worst and best,
“Panglod their contrariest ;
i Bv'ny jinglin’ weddin' bell
Skeerin’ up some funeral kaell--
Here's my song and there's your sigh.
Howdy-do and then good-by !
Say good-by or howdy-do--
Jest the same to me and you ;
*Pain’t worth while to make no fuss,
#*Csu se the job's put up on us!
‘Bomwone's runnin’ this concern
That's got nothin’ else to learn--
jIfhe'swillin we'll pull through :
y Say good-by or howdy-do?
———————————
Scientific.
m—
“fteel nails are the latest novelty.
nale,
sountry was defeated,
the potato run.
«ful growth of the potato,
photographs of a very
region.
the electric apparatus
place,
fection.
most stylish checks are box-plaited from
waist down, every three piaits or so
hav. an-plaits of silk or satin inserted
around the lower half of the skirt,
These plaits are sometimes made of
velvet or woolen material.
——— A
The Cuisine.
sm
A Rica Tomaro Soup, —Take eight
good-sized tomatoes, cut them in half,
put them into a saucepan with a bunch
of sweet herbs and an onion stuck full
of cloves, some allspice, whole pepper
and salt, Cook them slowly until quite
soft, then strain through a strainer or
hair sieve until the skins and onions and
herbs only are left behind. Have a
quart of plain stock boiling hot. Stir
the tomatoes into it, add the yelks of
two eggs beaten up in alittle cold water.
Serve with sippets of toast or fried
bread.
CORNSTARCH BLANC-MARGE may be
varied almost indefinitely by adding
fruit to it. Stir the fruit in after the
pudding is cooked and is just ready to
be poured in the moulds. Itis deli-
cious also with chocolate in ; where you
use four tablespoonfuls of cornstarch,
use two of chocolate, pour in teacups
which you have first wet with cold
water. A nice sauce for this is made
by beating one egg and adding milk
and sugar to your taste ; a very little
vanilla improves it, and still does not
disguise the chocolate flavor,
l.aMB Pre.—Choose a nice lean
breast of lamb, cut it into pieces, roll
each piece in flour and place them in a
pie-dish with one pound of potatoes
peeled and cut in quarters ; season with
pepper and salt, and pour in enough
water to fill the dish. Make a crust
with three-quarters of a pound of flour,
six ounces of dripping or lard, and a
pinch of salt ; mix to a paste with col
water, roll out and lay over the pie;
bake in 2 good oven for two hours:
cover the crust with greased paper
when it is browned, to prevent its burn-
ing.
MixT Savce.—Take fresh young
mint, strip leaves from stems, wash,
drain, on a sieve or dry them on a cloth,
chop very fine, put in a sauce-tureen,
and to three heaped tablespoonfuls of
mint add two of pounded sugar ; let it
tablespoonfuls of good vinegar. It is
before dinner, so that the vinegar may
ing Institute Fair in Boston will be
made by the Willimantic Thread Com-
pany, whe will show the process of
spinning and spooling cotton and silk,
the entire process being manipulated by
gineer, who is to run the engine to
furnish, power, will be a woman.
A new electric light regulator has
deen invented by M. Tommasi. Sel-
smium is the principal agent as the re-
sistance of that substance varies with
GREEN
Fill up
ha intensity of the light.
regulation of the other are lights,
atemosphere by dialysis.
mas secured an increase of the
IBLF OX YRen.
of prussic acid
«~hemist of the
when attacked.
country,
of vegetable origin.
Ferns, of which
i ute coal fields,
swaps and moist climates,
im Zingland, one-thirty fifth.
“Fiistwaccomplished by the use of
w=avbors stand from each other,
sufficient for the soup required, and let
it boil until the vegetables are quite
soft, adding a few leaves of mint and
the erust of a roll ; pound all, and hav-
ing boiled a quart of peas as given as
them also,
the ingredients and pass through a
gleve. Heat it and season it with salt,
pepper and sugar; add a few young
boiled peas, and use the spinach to re
store it,
Tur ReAsox why cabbage emits
such a disagreeable smell when boiling
is because the process dissolves the
essential oil, The water should be
changed when the cabbage is half
eooked, and it will thus acquire greater
sweetness,
Parsxirs SoMTES, —Parsnips are
put on the fire in water, and they are
done at the first boil. Skim them and
slice them across, and set on the fire
with a little butter and salt till brown,
Add a little parsley chopped fine, turn
into the dish and serve.
A DELICIOUS SALAD is made by
boiling new beets without scraping
them. When they are tender, drop
them in cold water, remove the skin,
slice them and put them in a salad
dish in layers. with slices of hard-boiled
eggs ; season with pepper and salt, a
little butter and vinegar.
Taroca Cup PuppiNG.—This is
very light and delicate for ivalids. An
even tablespoonful of best tapioca
goaked for two hours in nearly a eup of
new milk ; stir into this the yelk of a
fresh egg, a little sugar, a grain of salt,
and bake it in a cup for fifteen minutes,
A little jelly may be eaten with it.
A NOTED CATERER tells this story :
If green peas are shelled and then put
in dry, open-mouthed bottles, and
shaken together so as to occupy as little
space as possible, then corked tightly
and sealed, they will keep three or four
months. They must, however, be
buried in dry earth in the cellar, This
is certainly worth trying.
Frurr Cake. —A good common
sort of fruit cake is made of five cups
of granulated sugar, three small cups
of butter, one cup of milk, six eggs,
one wineglass of wine and one of
brandy, ten cups of flour, two nutmegs
grated, two pounds of raisins, one
of English currants and one
pot a This
cake keeps wel
i
3
Recent Legal Decisions.
SaeriNe—DELAY TO
FrREIGHT—"PERILS OF THE SEA."—
A. & Co. owned a cargo of barley in
France, and shipped it by B, & Co.'s
schooner to London, and the bill of
lading provided for save delivery,
“the perils of the sea’ excepted. The
vessel, in sailing up the Thames, col-
lided with a steamship and was sunk ;
the collision resulted from the schomn-
er's helm being put to starboard, but
not from any negligence on her part,
and there was no finding whether or
not the steamship was at fault. An
action was brought for the less of
the barley, and the plaintiffs recovered,
on the ground that the collision Was
one of ‘‘the perils of the sea.” An
appeal was taken to the Court of Ap-
peal, where the judgment in the case—
Woodly vs, Michell—was given in favcr
of the defendants. Brett, L. J. inthe
judgment, said: “In a case like this
it was only necessary for the plaintiffs
to prove non-delivery of the cargo, ard
the defendants could only answer 'n
one way—shewing that this non-deliver y
was caused by something excepted in
the bill of lading. This bill of lading
But unless a collision occurs without
the fault of either vessel it is not
peril of the sea’ within the meaning of
these words in a English bill of lading.
On the finding of the jury in this case
‘a
only found that the schooner was not
negligent. Now, the moment it appears
there was a collision between a sailii g
vessel steamship
and a the Court is
1
i
her course and the duty of the steamn-
ship to keep out of her way. Even if
the schooner, there must
some on board of the steamship, and it
is clear that a collision which happens,
in consequence of negligence on either
vessel cannot be said to be ‘a peril of the
sea’ within the meaning of these words
in a bill of lading.”
CORPORATION
—A MajoriTY.~—A public officer wig
removed by a vote of two members of
he proper Board, one voting in the
The Board was compos d
at law from scting in the meetings of
Board. The officer argued that
the power of removal could not be ex-
erted by a majority of the bare quorum,
the quorum of this being a majority of
the members. The Supreme Court of
California, in affirming the judgment
of removal in this case—the people ex
rel. Flint vs. Warrington—through
Judge Sharpstein, said : “A quorum
properly constituted has the full powes
of a Board, and a majority vote thereof
will validate When an a
sembly is daly met it is clear law th t
the corporate act may be done by a
majority of those who have once reg: -
We ase
uot aware of ny case in which the
contrary has been held, and must re-
gard the law as well settled that ina
case like this the action of a quorum 's
the action of the Board, and that a
majority of the quorum present could
do any act which a majority of te
»
the
its acls,
INJUNCTIONS DAMAGES= APPEAL,
— Certain person, who composed the
“Branch Pilots’ ** Association of New
Orleans, got an injunction to restrain
one of its members from piloting ves-
sels in or out of that pert independently
of the association, and from violating
his obligations as a wember whilst a
suit against him to compel him to per-
form his duties was pending. Ths
preliminary injunction was dissolv.d
on the motion of the defendant, it aj-
pearing, by the complaint in the case
Leirne vs. Michell—in the course of the
defendant, if persisted in, would cause
the association an irreparable injury,
exceeding the sum of $2000. An ap-
peal was taken to the Supreme Court
of Louisiana, where the dissolution of
the injunction was sustained. Judge
Poche, in the opinion, said ; **It strikes
us that, tested by the allegations of the
complaint, the damages suffered by the
plaintiffs can be m.asured in money,
and are therefore not irreparable, and
an injunction cannot be sustained
where a compensation in money will
be sufficient. By the very Means of
observation through which plain.
tiffs have detected and are able to
enumerate the acts of defendant in
boarding vessels and piloting them
they are afforded an efficient mode of
computing the damages which defen-
dant will cause to the association pend-
ing the litigation which will finally
adjust the conflicting claims of all
parties to the suit. Plaintiffs’ counsel
bitterly denounces the jurisprudenc
which has so signally misconstrued a
provision of law, and thus enables an
enjoined defendant, by means of an
insignificant bond of $500, to continue
in the performance of his illegal acts,
thus ‘provisionally chastising crime
and wrong.' Inadvancing these views,
nd in advocating a construction under
which a defendant, in fsuch an}injunc-
tion, would be deprived of the right of |
dissolving the same on a bond, counsel |
nishing an insignificant bond of $500,
these plaintiffs have suddenly, without
warning, and for an indefinite time,
paralyzed and checked the defendant
from the pursuit of a calling useful to
commerce and profitable to himself, in
anticipation of a judgment which may
deny him that right, but which may,
on the other hand maintain him in the
pursuit of that identical business,
Further consideration of the subject
hasled us to the conclusion that our
reasoning in this opinion is thoroughly
supported by a formidable array of
authorities,’
VIOLATION OF ORDINANCE—RIGHT
To ARREST.—In an action for false
imprisonment the defendant defended
on the ground that the arrest by him
as a police officer, for the violation of a
city ordinance, was just and proper.
The point relied upon by plaintiff was
that as the arrest was made without a
of the
offense and in the presence of the officer,
The plaintiff recovered a judgment,
the case--
Wahl vs. Walton—to the Supreme
ance was had. The Chief Justice, Gil-
fillan in the opinion, said : “A peace
arrest a person: 1. For a
public offense committed in his pre:- |
ence, 2. When a person has comimit-
ted a felony, although not in his pre:-
When a felony has, in faet,
committed
made
to have
it. 4,
reasonable
Un a
cau ©
commission of by
the person arrested. At the commen
law a constable might, without wai-
upon
the a felony
his But
well settled that in case of an offence |
in view,
not a felony the arrest must have been
made at the time of, or within a reason-
able time after, its commission, Now,
though the offense here was done in the
presence of the officer he did not make
the arrest for two hours, and there was
no difficulty or
the delay.
warrant,
interference to excuse
The power to arrest without
while it may in some cases be
useful to the public, is dangerous to the |
citizen, for it may be perverted to pur- |
poses of private malice or revenge, and
therefore ought be enlarged,
His arrest cannot be justified, and the
judgment against the must
Philadelphia Record.
not to
officer
stand.
What Mrs. Newman Saw ina
Harem.
“The gates of the ‘Abode of Bliss,” ”’
said Mrs. Newman, “closed instantly
after 1 had entered A
long corridor into the main
apartment of the harem. It was fur
nished with gorgeous tapestry hangings
the building.
opened
and sumptuous satin furniture of cur-
jous design, The curtained
looked down upon blooming gardens.
Ranged about the chamber in various
attitudes of women.
Some were seated on divans and some
were kneeling. Thirteen of them were
the wives of the Pasha, A cloud of
negro servants attended to their wants.
{ could speak but a few words of
Arabic. but we were at home on the
subject of dress, which has a universal
language of its own among women.
All the women had large, long-lashed
and lustrous eyes, and dark, finely-
chiseled features, Their customs were
magnificent, and strangely fashioned
of rich satins and loaded with orna-
ments of gold and jewels and garlands
of pearl. Their head dresses were of
silken gauze, held by bands of gold and
surmounted by graceful ostrich feathers,
They wore silk trousers and silver slip-
pers, and their finger nails were tinged
with yellow. To an elderly lady, very
queenly in her movements, implicit
obedience was yielded by the others,
The air of the apartment was heavy
with the perfume of sandal wood. A
crowd of colored servants brought in
cigarettes and sweetmeats and coffee,
and of the delicacies 1 was pressed to
partake, The eating of these dainties
and gossiping with each other is the
sole occupation of these women of the
harem. They live in luxurious bond
age, in blissful ignorance of the out-
side world. I longed to reveal its beau-
ties and possibilities to them, but could
converse only by gestures. Before I
left a baby Pasha was shown to me,
Its mother looked like a veritable
‘Sleeping Beauty.’ The interest shown
in the baby and the mother by the other
women of the harem was to me a beau-
tiful evidence of the universal sister-
hood of women,’
windows
were 8 score
WI Ds ——
A St. Louis woman has just re-
married the man from whom she
was divorced six years ago. Both
fou id a peaceful life entirely too mono-
twous,
Agricultural,
Sorghum,
Sorghum is rapidly growing in favor
in the West, and this season witnessed
quite a large area devoted to it in this
section, It possesses several advan~
tages other than yielding sugar, as the
fodder from it keeps better than that
from corn, not drying and crumbling so
so readily. The seed is very valuable
aleo, being excellent for poultry as well
as for fattening stock, and the yield on
good soil is very heavy. Altough the
agricultural department has beep ridic-
uled for ita expensive experiments at
making sugar from sorghum, yet it fes-
tered and, encouraged the produc-
tion of sugar with such peristency that
the growing of this plant as a source
from which to procure sugar has been
firmly established in the Northern
States, the final result of which will no
doubt be our independence of Cuba and
other tropical countries for our sugar
supply, not excepting even Louisiana.
During the war the Southern States
grew large crops of sorghum, from
which syrup was made of an excellent
quality, but the art of crystallizing it
was not known at that time ; but with
recent discoveries and improved systems
of crushing and evaporating there is no
longer and difficulty in the way. The
Minnesota Amber has been successfully
grown wherever corn can be produced,
and so extensive has sorghum growing
come an competitor.
Unlike corn, in some respects, however,
sorghum is specially adapted to light
sandy soils, stands draught much better,
and can
compactly
unimportant
be grown closer and
m
he
more
best results are ob-
tained when the crop is put in the ground
early, and for making sugar the stalks
should be cut and worked up the same
day, or within twenty-fours; but
best to co-operate, and thus save time,
is
manufacture,
adopted in
labor and expense in
which is the plan
places,
Although
from
there are many experiments being tried
many
the production of sugar
sorghum has been established,
in different localities—for much is yet
to be discoverad that will be of valuable
During
of the juice into sugar rapid chemical
assistance, the conversion
changes take place, and experience is
to be successiul ; hut
manufacturers
ob-
stacles in a few more seasons, and the
growers and
®
are confident of overcoming all
industry will then be one of the must
important in the country.
According to of
Agricultural Department, cane sugar
in sorghum is associated with one-tenth
of its weight of grape sugar (glucose),
and not far from one-fifth its weight
of solids not sugar, such as ash, gum,
albumen, wax and a few other sub-
stances. but the cane sugar varies from
14 to 16 per cent. of the expressed juice.
The product of seed is equal te from
two to four bushels per ton of cane.
About 40 per cent.
in the begasse (refuse), but the same
proportion is lost in the juice of the
tropical cane, though it is believed that
investigation will result in discovering
a method of saving one-half of this loss,
The begasse is used for making paper,
the reporis the
of the juice is lost
and, treated as a fertilizer, returns a
portion of that which was taken from
the soil. It is also used with advan-
tage as fuel where that article is scarce.
Ever the scum and sediment are used
in some manner, no portion of the cane
being wasted.
As yet capital and improved mach-
ery are necessary in making sugar from
sorghum, and the methods of manufac-
ture differ ; but individuals can manu-
facture sirup with but little expense.
The difficulty is in crystallizing the
sugar, for until that takes place the re-
sults isonly sirup. Leaving out sugar,
farmers can easily and cheaply grow
sorghum, either for sirup or fodder,
and, withthe yield of seed, will no doubt
find it as profitable as any other crop
on the farm.— Philadeiphia Record,
—An advocate of corporal punish-
ment for children said: “The child
when once started in a course of evil
conduct, is like a locomotive on the
wrong track-—it takes a switch to get
it oft.’
A colored girl in Atlanta, Ga., was
knocked over by an engine, and ina
few minutes got up as if nothing un-
usual had happened, and looking after
the engine, said : ““You's got a heap
ob politeness for to serve a lady that
way i"
Tur SurerrLvovs Nraro,— For
the past few days the blasts on the
Union street excavations have been
im SAA
The Princess Mary, Duchess of
Teck. comnmonly known in England as
Fat Mary, set the example of riding
the trieycle, Now Victoria has or-
dered two machines for her young
granddaughters, the Princesses of
Hesse ; the Princess of Wales gave her
daughter one for her birthday pre.
sent ; the Princess Louis rides, and
hundreds of ladies have followed the
fashion.
—Fizz-icky Soda Water.—The publi-
cation of the Governmental analysis of
soda water sold in Montreal has created
a disagreeable sensation there, as most
of the samples were found to be danger-
ously impregnated with copper and
lead,
— King Luis, of Portugal, has artist
tastes, and recently, in giving audience
to an Italian visitor, Cavaliere Sarfatti,
showed a prayer-book which he had
illustrated with drawings. These are
said to be remarkable for their beauty
and harmony or coloring.
A Dublin woman has found her
sphere in hauling unfortunate fellows
up to the dock for breach of promise.
She had gathered in four of these chaps
who had trifled with her affections,
fractured her heart, blasted her hopes
and wrecked her future, and in suits
running simultaneously in several
courts had in a fortnight won a verdiet
of $250 in one case, $1200 in another
and $3000 in another ; but before the
fourth case was concluded her enter-
prise was detected, and the 'aw en-
compassed her in its avenging :
Somebody has discovered that the
English sparrow is good eating, and
there is now no danger that those birds
wlll become any 100 nDUIMerous,
In anger flew her agile jaws,
Aud swear words darted from her ton-
gue,
The maid was fighting mad because
She couldn’t make her bangs stay
bung.
Cicero said there is an elogence in si-
Cicero evidentlv used to crawl
up stairs in
lence,
his stocking feet when he
came home from lodge.
—Fred. Smith of North Stonington,
Conn., while passing through a wild
swamp a few days ago came upon a
large watersnake, which killed,
The of the snake was greatly
swollen. Mr. Smith ripped it open and
he
body
fifty little snakes, from five to six inches
in length, ran out and squirmed in the
Mr. Smith gathered up all
the vipers he could catch and took the
batch home to show to his neighbors,
—.A couple went up from Hunger-
ford township to Le Mars, a few days
ago, to be married. They quareled in
the hotel about the clergyman to be
employed, he favoring a Methodist
divine, while the lady wanted a Con-
gregational clergyman. The upshot of
matter was that the lady walked
back to Hungerford township, and the
man, after waiting a day for her to
relent, also went home,
cc Mp M———
A Father Hubbard.
The other day when old Major Sol-
man announced his readiness to proceed
in the direction of church, his wife
appeared wearing a mother Hubbard
dress. The old man intently regarded
her for a few moments, and asked
“Mary, what sort of a coat do
call that ¥”’
“It’s 8 mother Hubbard, Jeems. *’
Au going to wear
church ?"’
“Why, certainly, Jeems. The mother
Hubbard is all the fashion now.”’
“Well, I'm glad to know it," the oid
man replied. *“‘Just wait until I get
ready and we'll go.”
The old man went out into the
kitchen, took a couple of meal sacks,
cut the bottoms out, sewed the tops
together, and put them on in imjtation
of pantaloons. When he returned, his
wife uttered a loud cry of astonish-
ment, and exclaimed :
“Great goo iness, Jeems, what's
that ¥'°
“Father Hubbard,” the old man re-
plied,
“You're not a goin’ to wear them
sacks, are you ¥"’
“I've got to be fashionable to keep
up with you. I've got as much right
to wear these meal bags as you have to
go in that bran sack.”
“I'll take it off.”
“All right ; off goes the father Hub-
bard.” and turning away, he added to
himself : “Only one way to beat a
woman, and that is by agreein’ with
her. Ef il hadn't been for the daddy
Hubbard I'd a been in a mighty bad
fix.
tall grass,
the
you
you LO
ie
iw
Facts and Fancies,
«The Philadelphia Record office has
suspended in front, 90 feet above the
pavement, a light of 10,000 candle pow-
er,
~Uateh a rat alive, tar him all over
thoronghly and set him loose. Your
premises will soon be clear of the ver-
«There are 48,040 Post Offices in the
United States.
~Watermelons eaten in moderation,
are good for the system,