on Frauen Vitsaa wy LULL ot URAGE. Meat, Poultry, Fish and Fruits Kept Fresh and Delicate by a New Process, (Cor. Detroit Free Press) To eat turkeys in midsummer that were frozen last November, and vet are as fresh as if they were sacrificed ves terday, was one of the novelties of our seaside menu, and si arvival in Boston we have taken great pleasura in visiting the extensiv vareho thie Cold Storage com : thing of the way ir .1 tish, fruits, oto.. are h i by this new process. ‘The building, which is of brick, and 165 feet long and eighty feet wide. consists of four stories and a basement, with corr rs in the and freezing rooms occupying tire space on each si : Through the cour y of N. C. Pike the SUDErmnic nden We wera esc th wareh ron LL equipp. d MOHMAErY centre, ie en- h this nsive basement i purpo nearly are of The ten persia on this flo here v tie en rature and here were rooms ceiling with packa it was ugh OSITIve reiresin he dehightf Air boxe 3 CODY ard, where it is purified 1 the top of the br iid air are condn 1380 the he temper h is regulated by thousand ton r provided for this a 1 1 t Se 1.3 1niding Ot to the third ure of thirty six degrees, an in in to draw our wraps closer around us. Hew the store- rooms were devoted to large cons ments of butter and assing along th i ing ro The m like an ' phere, 10 smperature Sing only we il ment tl ato 108 galvanized ice and salt, quail, could wer. About «1 to thaw hickens, iff as they 4} wen Ciean and Happy Duteh People. Cor. Rt. 14 unis Rep exes wnunts almos i st assured of clean lin washed I'he chickens are wash oxen, a4 washed. Everything is scoured religiously, Vermin are consid- ered a disgrace. A Dutch housewife on a cobweb, will not only wove it, but will scour and scald place where she found it and w tute a hunt for the spider whie remitted until she has the under the dust. The have big gilt letters upon their facades to express the sentiment of their own- ers. They are all expressive of content and full of kernels of philosophy of life. “Lust en Rust” indicates the pleasure and repose of the owner, “Mijn Genoe- “Mijn Lust en Leven” indicates that the home is lus pleasure and life, * Builen discloses that the owner is withont care and “Vrengde bij Vrede” shows that he has joy place. Some longer titles fuller sentime The whole of the country leaves the impression that the enioy this life, . What Is Slang ¥ { (Bos L thal an ne mav re Holland. The houses are aile and out the goats, VOB COWS, nui nor are discovering mse COTPRe Lotuses i jen” shows his entire satisfaction, 4 " LOrTd with his with tone h ive life 01 people » n Courier} In ita best sense slang is an attempt to get at the truth by the shorter routes. It may not alwavs do this decoronsly, but, none the less, it gener- ally manages get ti Slang is the sworn enemy of circumlocution and periphrasis, on to Bre, It believes that in liter ature, as in geometry, a straight line i the shortest distance between two points. As it almost invariably orig- nates among uneducated people this is quite natural. of the dry husks of things to get the quicklier at the kernel. It is an un- conscious striving to attain to the ‘reacher after what Mr. Carlyle top- loftily calls the “eternal veracities.” A Senator's HMelpmate, [Boston Budget.) Mrs, Senator Logan is a model eon- man's wife. She is a fine, matronly ooking woman, with snow -white hair, clear hazel eyes, the merry langh of a school-girl, and the tender kindliness of a mother, Magnetic in manner, she exercises a Jotent influence over the senator, and does much to increase his rsonal ¢ popularity, She writes his etters, corrects the proof of his 8 hes, franks his documents, and istributes his garden seeds with rare judgment. a KALAKAUA'S KINGDOM, What an New York Mun Saw in the sandwich Islands--No Pests Except feprony. Interview with E A. Thorne, ] Chicago Tribune “What sort of labor is employed in the islands?” **Mostly Chinese, and the rest Portn- i a, and or I'he Germans often become J Lio ry are more nUMEron y most reli vident hanakas are OVOTUsSeers, are Yi Be od, and The Kana ible, but they are id to ana are hw charged that existed th referen 10 been a ery on Ca , but without foundation The anv a laborers are engaged for arrival that work alter rat:on Wav stantia Old bnglish We 1 sti 3 dings, alle hun long lid not and st went emote paper 120 yea oid comes this item Married, in Ww, Mr. William Donkin, a consi mer of Great Cassin, near » connty of Cumberland, Stotten, an ay woman of © ty bipas juarters of mnt ol beef: ble n cluded with eight int 4b : twelve ham imber of chickens, whi h sm pe y punch, twelve do many gallons of nety bushels of malt 1 fi * INA Che company sted ladies and id t race ET inte cons af lemen, who concluded withthe i twenty-five fiddlers and pipers ondnctad vervihing was eo with order and Puritans relaxed a little ¥ came to marriage, foi langhter of Rev. Mr Jallantine, of Westfield, Mass, was married, his poo. ple sent him as wedding presents sev- eral quarts of rum and brandy, a loin and leg of mutton, a leg of veal, five fowls, suet, butter, flour and pigs, cranberries and apples. Civil mags trates used to perform the ceremony, and at the feast a dance, the music be- ing furnished by « mulatto fiddler, was enjoyed, though Rev, Jonathan Judd was so horrified at the dancing at weddings that when his son attended one at Southampton, Mass., he sent a messenger after him to lead him home by the ear. roatost wien when What in a woman is called "curios ity” in n man is grandiloquently mag nitied into the “spirit of inquiry.” George Washington weighed 209 pounds at the close of the revolution Ary war, English Exchange: Land in London recently sold at the rate of $3,000,000 nar acre, The Hanging of Six PDesperadoes hy the Inmates of the Andersonville Miockade, [Chicago Herald.} On the 30th of June, under the ership of a myst lead: rious character known nn,” but t Ver yi t baen i as “ Liambeor Ji he real name of whom has ne vigilance com Ando: onville, were kn nites wos and the OWh in camp ns The original ob je et of ti i was of raid thr Jim" i ince Was How the Revolutionary Meroes Cele brated Peaer. ng i L he ex it wai 1 then, day with firing of songs till hill Heath nave t grand when the ar: s thundered forth thy onee,” by ylling 0 Lord, with sor strengt but its of m hing to signal eneat were lights the approach the from their lofty tog % lke ires to the God of peace, of A Newwnboy's Triek. {Boston Budget.) Dinize went out of the Park theatre the other night between the acts. It is not sary to say at this time what All that the reader need know is, that in coming back he met nec ander his arm, crying bitterly. “ What's the matter, sonny?” said Baize. who was full of the milk of human kindness, combined, perhaps, with a liquid of a more substantial character. “I'm stuck,” answered the boy, “and my father will lick me when papers. ‘Too bad, too bad,” replied Baize, sympathetically: “what wil you take {or the whole lot?” “‘Twenty-five cents,” said the boy, drying his eyes and wiping his nose on the sleeve of his | lent man; “give them to me.” the street, and the boy took the quarter and disappeared suddenly round the corner. An hour later, when Baize was leaving the playhouse with Mrs. Baize ho saw that identical newsboy with those identical newspapers, whin- ing: “Please buy a paper, mister? I'm stuck.” “So am 1.” said Baize, | | THE LADIES’ COLUMN, Fine wool is so lovely for wear, so eanitary in tls eflocts, that it is plensant frely it is pressed into ser- wnltluan gar Ih introduction wonr'thy to sea Low lar a fot sits and outdoor own to the Vi Wer 0H ments, by raveled”’ women ot Lily grad Lol a good nd finished, the diflerenea in fahis nit fad The Tt y i fitted Eng inh wade flied 1m sdoption /ojer as, i wie _ud aqua Rays of Learning « like the statue } mortal ever raise living is 1 satd on the any 4 friend o1 Neveca at emotion, t production it, will pover have any ol Atkin, txenlle vial te {iy xh } ? and that is a Faller, ind axketh nothing ; Was of giving to ti veel! It is a species of agreeable servitnd to be under an {0 those we esteem. Queen Christine, obligation One nugratefnl man does an injury to all who stand in need of Syrius, Should erry He wha seldom apeaks, and with one calm, well-timed word can strike dumb he logquacions is a genius or a hero.- Lavater I have scldom known anyone who de- troth in tnfles that conld be trasted in matters of importance. Paley. He that dons not know thors things which are of ure and necessity for him to know, is an ignorant mau, whatever he may know besides. Tillotson, “True dignity i= never gained by place, And never lost when Bonors ate withdmwn” wo Muesli npes, Defect in manners is aaially the defect of fine preceptions. Elegance comes of no breeding, but of birth. Emerson, Of all the actions of a man's life his marriage does least concern other ple, yet, of all actions of our life it's most meddled with by other people. — Selden, | AGRICULTURAL, Farm Notes 1D the Dent, lowatloe The Live Stock Monthly, speaking of ensils ge, fist still endeavoring HAYH while theori wre the i Vidi tie ©] thie pri to build silos, Inge and de fet Jeunt wile cows, inne ile ve, nt the Eres i istaker het at i that p rtion aiwavs been ding th Ihe duces ab it the he root inst 5 Rardin s ny Anders of the Sonth used t negro women wid of the To say that the neeed meal, in t sr, 1% a dar Lhe hands of a care produc nit, but when v fed, in part meal in COLL Aarons food, the to my COWS apd aboul attend care Ore there tod three paris wh i! LIran, in, Opin n, 16 waik wit on belier winier or Preserving Salt Meat of the corned beef aud salt por Mneh completely spoiled during the sammer As a than Some of malt, ‘ rauloved small amount is using too wh more salt i% necessary to preserve the meat times it contains inpunties that the maat to contract a bad flavor, for cause pire proserving meat and dairy products, It costs bug which wm impure, and it is more satisfactory in all respects, Meat packed in a barrel and i coverad f it or it contains brine. The it there and place. The pro. dnote of the decomposition of animal submlances always bave au unpleasant taste and smell, and these in the cave of meat in a barrel are communicated to the brine und {rom thence to the meat, Meat vacked in brine shonld be ent in pieces with a very sharp knife. This will leave the edges smooth. After it the fit or blood coming to the top cf the $ 0 latter should be poured off and boiled, ties to rise to the surface while the blood will be coagulated, Thess subsiances shonld then be skimmed off, and when i i ALL BORTS. A simple lay-—an egg. A gold pen-—a coin vault, Worth is a millionaire. Pressed for time—A mummy. A whine merchant —A dealer in bad Baris It is a cold day wheu the ice left, i not 1 bal T A base I mafl keeos no hand warm. botel cook should a wide Me FIVE hich are be made a ca the best les, put them into a pnd- . ‘ 3 0 cover ; when tender serve with sugar and cream. Nice breakfast cakes, to baked in muffin tics, are made of one cnpful of wheat ffonr and one cupfal of Grabam flour, a little salt, one egg beaten very light, sweet milk enough to make a thin batter. "the irons must be hot before putting the batter in. water be To ex:edite the making of a lemon pie use hot water in place of cold, stir the ent-up lemon, the sagar, and corn- starch, and eggs together, ax if vou were making pudding savee; then pour in hot water; if the pail or basin containing this is then placed in = vessel of boiling water it will cook in five minutes, A delicions pie is made by stoning and chopping ote heaping capiuol of raisins, mixing with the juice and rind of one lemon, the velks of two Bake with bottom crust only, and make a me- ringue of the whites of the egps. Yon may put one whole egg into the pie, and mak: it with an upper ernst, CEE. To make crystal varnish take geruine pale Cavada balsam and rectified oil of turpentine, equal parts ; mix, place the boitles in warm water, agitate well, set it aside in a moderately warm place, and in a week pour off the clear. It is ased for maps, prints, drawings ard oth:r ar- ticles of paper: also to prepare tracing paper and to transfer engravings. Swierneeas : Parboil and let them stand in cold water for balf an hour. Wipe dry and place in an oven in a pan in which bas been put a cup of water and a tablespoonfui of butter, When brown cracker or imba and return to the oven again. When brown remove them aud i i i i .-— A picked eleven of lawyers from Liv erpool played a cricket match with a proked eleven of lawyers from Manohes- ter. The day was beautiful ana fine, and the barrel. tinue pure, tho operaiion of boiling should be repeated. Special pains should be taken to keep tie meat under the Lrine at all times. A perforated top or false cover, or & {rame work, should rest on the meat and be weighed down by a clean stone. If these precautions are employed the liability of will by very slight, i | practice. With the first ball of the seo- ond over, however, u dispute arose, and the twenty-two lawyers gathered around the nm to argue the point. The argument continued with no of abatement till five o'clock in the even. ing, at which tims the umpire died. t astonishment is felt that he held 80 long as he did.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers