The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 22, 1886, Image 6

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    NEWS OF THE WEEK
—~Wm. McDonald and Edwin For-
rest were arrested in St. Louis on the
night of the 5th, while they were divid-
ing $4000 worth of jewelry stolen from
a store in that city on the night of the
26th ult.
—A fire in Buffalo, early on the
morning of the 8th, destroyed the large
candy factory of Sibley & Holmwood,
and a building occupied by Frank A.
Campbell’s hat and cap store and T.
W. Reynold’s’ boot and shoe store.
The Broezel Hotel and Wells Street
Presbyterian Chapel were damaged.
The total loss is about $183,000. Dun-
lap & Co.’s bat factory, in Brooklyn,
was damaged by fire, on the night of
the 7th, to the extent of $50,000, and
Louis Fowler & Co.’s pattern shop, ad-
joining, was damaged $25,000, The
main building of the Gilbert Manufac-
turing Compauy, in Bainbridge, New
Yock, was burned on the 8th, Charles
Presbrey, Superintendent, perished in
‘he flames,
--A magnetic storm was noticed at
Rochester, New York, at 11.20 on the
track and upsetting them. Two of the
cars caught fire, and it was with diffi.
culty that the occupants were got out
in time to save their lives, Several of
the passengers were injured, two of
them dangerously.
—Navigation on the Delaware and
Raritan Canal has endea for the sea-
son. A large number of canal boats
are frozen in between New Rrunswick
and Bordentown. The company had
set December 20th as the date for clos-
ing the canal, not expecting 80 long |
and severe cold snap so early in the sea-
son.
~The official canyass of the vote of |
Towa was finished on the 11th, The en-
tire Republican State ticket Is elected
by a majority ranging from 14,842 to |
16,001; the former being the majority
for Pray, Clerk of the Supreme Cowl,
and the latter for Eberson, Supreme
Court Reporter,
--By two freight trains colliding on |
the 10th, on the Memphis and Charles- |
ton Railroad, the conductor bad both
legs cut off and three tramps, stealing |
a ride, were killed. An express train
on the Pennsylvania Railroad going east
ran off the track near Brintons, Penna., |
morning of the Sth, more violent than
Charleston earthquake.
--The temperature at San Diego,
California, during November, averaged
38 degrees, During the month there
were 28 *‘perfectly clear days.”
—Field, Thayer &
boots and shoes, of Boston, are
norted to have failed on the 9th, The
youse is one of the largest In the
New England trade. Their liabilities
ire estimated at $600,000. It
lieved the creditors “*will receive
good dividend, and the firm hope to
be able to pay in full.” At a meel- |
ing of the creditors of the Messrs. |
Maguire, In Quebec, on the Oth, the |
liabilities of tne firm were set down |
at §425.000, and their assets at $400,- |
00. Mr. Sampson, of Quebec, 1s In- |
volved to the extent of $200,000.
Co., dealers in
i
—Rlizabeth King, a maiden lady of
32 years, died at Rochesterville, Ont.,
on the 5th, and left her estate i
$100,000 to a young couple—Gilbert |
Allan and “Chrissie” King—on con- |
dition that they married on the day
of her funeral. She was buned and |
they were married on the 9th.
—A locomotive on the Beech Creek
Railroad exploded at Jersey Shore Sta-
tion, Penna., on the afternoon of the |
9th, killing Phillip Knight, engineer : |
Allen Ramsey, fireman; James Warren, |
engineer on the same road, and Joseph |
Fielder, a machinist. It 1s thought
the steam gauge of the locomotive did |
not work properly. A collision between |
freight trains on the Lebanon Valley
Railroad occurred on the evening of |
the Oth, near Annville, Penna. A man,
supposed to be a tramp, was killed.
The boiler of one of the locomotives
exploded. and set fire to cars
with peiroleum and hay, which burned
for some time.
Of |
loaded
the
and
amount of
redeemed
November JUth, the
debt of Pennsylvania
cancelled was $713 TOL.
=The Comptroller of the Currency
on the 9th authorized the Steelton Na.
tional Bank, of Steelton, Pa , to begin
business with a capital of $75,000, and
the Commercial National Dank, of
Shreeveport, Louisiana, with a capital
of $100,000.
—1It 1s reported from Dallas, Texas,
that coal mn immense quantities has
been discovered in Henderson and
South counties in that State.
on the morning of the 11th, wrecking i
tke trucks of three cars. The passen- |
was injured. The accident was caused |
—Thirty tramps, who have camped
andoah, Penna., went into the town on
night of the 11th, got drunk,
in a saloon and fatally
them the
saloon keeper, James McKeone. Nme
-—In Baltimore,
on the 10th, a col
to ni-
the Maryland Um
white a woman and
jamitor, saying he |
for §15-—the price
left it with the
again
Later developments indicate
that the woman, who was about 60 |
years of age, was a dissipated char-|
acter named Emily Brown, who |
boarded with a colored family, and |
that she had been murdered for the
price her body would bring for the
dissecting table. On the evening of |
arrested and confessed the
it at the instigation of Janitor Parry.
Benjamin Smith and William Reed on
the 12th quarreled about the spelling of
a word at a spelling match at
Indiana, and Smith shot and
killed teed.
—At Lancaster, Penna., the
the 11th, James, alias
“Re dy Jacobs, fatally stabbed his
brother-in-law, Ellsworth Quigley, and
latter died on the mornis f the
1 Immediately after the stabbing
Jacobs disappeared, and has not yet
been apprehended. It appears tha
quarrel originated from Quigley pro-
testing against Jacobs’ abuse of Lis
children. In a scuffla that ensued,
Quigley threw Jacobs down, when the
latter procured a knife. and, with th
remark **1'1 fix you,” inflicted a terri-
bile wound,
on
of
»
[So
sy
he
th.
ry (if
Lt the
§
—J. C. Hill, a resident of Edgewood,
near Iittsburg, collected $5000 on the
10th and took the money home to Keep
over night. His daughter, having a
severe toothache, got up early on the
diameter and only 30 feet below the
surface.”’
on the 10th adjourned after the reading
of the journal, on the announcement
pee, of New York.
— Among the cities which will come
dnder the provisions of the bill extend-
ing the system of free postal delivery
passed by the House on the 9th are the
following.
doah, Beaver, Falls, Bethlehem, Car-
lisle, Chambersburg, Chester, Frank-
lin, Hazelton, Huntingdon, Johnstown,
Lebanon, Meadville, New Castle, Nor-
ristown. Oil City, Titusville, Warren
and West Chester. In New Jersey:
Asbury Park, Atlantic City. Brick
Chureh, Morristown, New Brunswick,
Orange and Plainfield. It 1s believed
that the bill will meet hittle or no op-
position in the Senate.
—A street car on the Walnut Hills
cables Mne, at Cincinnati, lost its grip
on the evening of the Oth, while going
up Gilbert Avenue Hill, and the brake
also refused to work. The car ran
back with fearful velocity a quarter of
a mile to acurve, where it left the
track and plunged down an embank-
ment. All in the car, except a baby,
were hurt, but sttangely enough no
bones were broken, nor was any one
daogerously injured. The car was
wrecked,
—James W. Sykes, proprietor of a
public warehouse in Chicago, was ar-
rested on the 10th on the charge ef
fraudulently disposing of 2200 bags of
timothy seed, the property of the Mer-
chants’ Loan and Trust Company, and
valued at $15,600, and also issuing &
false warehouse receipt to the same
company. Sykes was conumitted in de-
fault of bail,
—Henry Mosley, a resident of Mari-
etta, was crushes to death under the
Ycela of a train at Harrisburg, on the
—A fire in Attica, Ohio, on the morn-
ing of the 10th, destroyed nearly the
whole business portion of the town, a
place of about. fourteen hundred inhabl.
tants. The loss tes about $100,
000, the insurance about half that sum,
One wing of St. Francis’ College and
M . at Loretto, Penna., was
burnéd on the 9th. Loss, 22,000; fully
insured. The agricultural Implement
found of 8, R. White & Brother, in
N , Virginia, was burned on the
evening of 10th, Loss about
$25,000; insured,
—While a train on the Wisconsin
Central Railroad was descending a
eenah, Wisconsin, on the
i
i
the to herself, Her
yurglar was in the
house, followed her down stairs with a
revolver and fired, wounding hisdaugh-
ter severely, if not fatally, in the neck.
library warm
~The grain elevator of the Western
Maryland Rallroad, at Green Village,
Chambersburg, enna. was
burned on the 11th. Incendiarism is
suspected, Oliver Chambers who
the building, was
$
ternibly
in
i
i
—The large woollen mills in Clinton,
Michigan, were destroyed by fire on the
Loss, $180,000; insurance, $30,-
Two employes were severely in-
The fire was caused by an ex
plosion from a gasoline leak. The Cin.
cinnati and Newport Iron Pipe Works,
in Newport, Kentucky, were damaged
by fire on the 11h, to the extent of
$25,000; covered by insurance,
—On the 20th ult, a tray of diamond
rings, valued at $5000, was stolen from
J. H. Johnson's jewelry store, in New
York, by a well-dressed young man
who appeared as a would-be customer,
On the 12th the culprit was arrested at
a cheap rate East-side hotel and was
locked up. He has hght hair and |
moustache, and says he is Wm. Wau- |
ser, 22 years old, a machinist by trade, |
and recently arrived from Chicago. |
He has confessed and some of the stolen |
property has been recovered. He took |
the tray and contents, dropped the |
former in a neighboring hallway and |
pocketed the latter, :
40th CONGRESS—2d SESSION. |
SENATE,
in the U. 8. Senate on the 8th, Mr.
Ingalls offered a resolution, which was
adopted colling on the Secretary of the
Treasury for mformation as to the
pumber of manufacturers of and
wholesale and retail dealers in oleo-
ma who have paid special taxes
under the law of August 2, 1886; in
what districts such taxes were pald,
and how many pounds of oleomargarine
have been assessed, and in what dis-
tricts it has been made. The bill re-
by Mr. Blair from the Select
Committee on Woman Suffrage on
February 3d, ng an amendment
to the titution of the United
States, extending the right of suffrage to
women, wad taken up. Mr. Blair spoke
in support of the bill. When he had
finished Mr. Blair gave notice that he
would at an early day ask action on the
measure, A message was received from
the Presmdent, and the Senate went
into executive sossion, and soon after
In the U. 8, Senate on the a
communication was received from
Mint,
law the coin-
demption of trade dollars, Mr. Morrill’s
resolution declaring against further
attempt at revision of the tariff during
the present session was taken up, and
Mr. Morrill spoke in advocacy thereof.
Beck and Sherman, Mr,
adjourned,
HOUSE
of bills and resolutions were introduced
under the call of States. The Senate
bill *‘for the relief of graduates of the
Military Academy’ and the bill appro-
priating $200,000 for a permanent
school of instruction for cavalry and
light infantry at Fort Riley, Kansas,
were passed. The Senate Electorlal
Count bill was considered, pending
which the House adjourned,
In the Xouse, on the 8th, a letler
was presented from the Director of
the Mint enclosing a draft of a bill for
the issue of subsidiary silver coin. Mr,
Boutelle, of Maine, asked unanimous
consent for the passage of a bill ad-
mitting free of duty material to be
used in rebuilding the burned portion
Mr. Breckenridge, of Ar-
ferred,
behalf of the Committee on
the bill for the consoldation of certain
bureaus of the Navy Department a con-
tinuing special order for Monday, De-
15th. Mr. Reed, of Maine,
After some discussion, Mr,
amended the resolution so as
y that the bill should be con-
Committee of Whole,
Herbert
to prove
the
was adopted. The bill extending the
free postal delivery system to towns
baving 10,000 population, and where
post-office revenue amounts to $10,000
tion of the morning hour,
In the House on the 9th, the Confer-
Committee on the
was appointed. Mr. Morrison, from
the Ways and Means Committee, re-
ation of fractional parts of a gallon of
spirits, with the Senate amendments,
was agreed to, and a conference was
The bill to extend the free
postal delivery system was passed. It
provides that there shall be free postal
delivery in cities of not less than Lfly
thousand population, and authorizes the
establishment, at the discretion of the
Post-office Department, of free
delivery system in cities having not less
than 10.000 inhabitants, or yieldin
.
8 Pp | revepus of $10, 0
the
a 0
g a
A yearly.
s of .
Representa
are passe « ex-
i law; also forfel
184 Gd) acres
Brule River Ral
i il was con-
il
Whole,
* 1
nea,
v
Commiliee
hich the House adjou
road 1
sidered {
of the
wt
pending
—
FOR TH
FOOD
1 ¢
14
Never find fault until is perfectly
certain a fault has been commitied.
The very felicity is the
cultivation of usefulness,
ts
fe in
st s3al
mula
Do tot herald the sacrifices you make
to each other's tastes, habits prefer
ences
®
3h
Let ily
be: spor
air
The
ual accommodations
taneous, whole-souled, and free
WT TA
as
y who marry for physical charac-
teristicior external considerations, will
fail of lappiness,
Const «
within
sphere 4 the other,
A bedtating, tardy or grum yielding
to the wishes of the other, always grates
upon a bving heart,
They who marry for traits of mind
and heat will seldom fail of perennial
springs ¥ domestic enjoyment,
Neverreflect on a past action which
wis dom with a good motive and with
the bestjudgement at that time,
They ire the safest who marry from
the stanlpoint of sentiment rather than
of feelirg, passion, or mere love,
The bautiful in the heart, is a mil
of
:
%
Lali
3 ¥ * 1s # 1 3 5 + %
ne anoLier 1n an Loomes
he experience, observation, or
mestic lappiness than the beautiful in
person.
He wlio is passionate and hasty is |
generall! honest, It is your old dis-
semblinghypoerite of whom you should
beware, There's no deception in a |
bull-dog. Itisonly the cur that sneaks
up and tes you when your back Is
turned.
THE MAMMETS
PHILADELPHIA.
BOL. coiovenrsrtsrerrsnttocenss
HOES. co contrsrssnisananssnrsnns
BROOD. oso immssesntisssnrmantany
MOIALDE. cos vssrenansans
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IVAGIR. cossne vassen
WHIM. cons snnee
TROIR. coneve aREEEs
eas AA EERRARRS ERR RRERRARRERS.
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rerandd
Sab ueid
88s SE22BEB0on SoBe TEE,
-
Lh ropa he
age subsidiary
“The Hand That Rocks The Cradle
"
They say that man is mighty,
He governs land and sea;
He wields a mighty sceptre
O'er lesser powers that be;
But a power mightier, stronger,
Man from his throne bas hurled,
“Yor the hand that rocks the cradle
Is the hand that rules the world.”
In deep, mysterious conclave,
*Mid philosophic minds,
Unraveling knotty problems,
His native forte man finds;
Yet all his es’ and “isms”
To heaven's four winds are hurled,
“for the hand that rocks the cradle
Is the hand that rules the world.”
PERS I.
EN PAPILLOTE.
————
| town of Napoleonville, on Bayou La-
| fourche, the narry dusty road that runs
esque by a dense hedge of the Chero-
Mons. Marcade’s plantation.
paper which she clenched tightly. It
| was creased, wrinkled and bore evidence
of having been through quite an ordeal
i of twisting.
| cited appearance of her friend. She
ingquiringly: “What is
| Jeanne? Tell me,”
the
| with a sneer, thrust the paper Almost
{ into Miss Holton’s face. ‘Read dis,
| han hask me what ees de mattairel
You imagine hi ham one simpleton!”
Surprised and taken aback by Jean-
| for & moment knew not what to
hand. The writing bore evidence of
bayou, for the venerable owner was
| called a progressive planter, and had
dabbled in new varieties of sugar cane
and late improvements in mar ifacture
until he had advanced beyond the pos-
sibilities of agriculture, and the planta-
tion was knocked down under the
tioneer’s hammer to New
merchant to pay debts,
auc
a
In 1855 the place was one of the most
the whole
was
charming spots to visit in
sugar belt, The large mansion
always open to visitors and Marcade’s
| the parish, The front flower garden
alone occupied some four acres, and
sweeping away to the primes al forest
| in the rear broad cane fields made up a
landscape that was most pleasant to
look upon, A grove of pecan trees
sheltered the big plantation house from
the rays of the summer sun, and
to the left a square of dark green foliage
showed where the orange grove was sit-
uated. The wealth of Mons. Marcade
and a beautiful daug made
plantation a most desirable attraction
hinr
Huel Lis
for the young people of that
:
i
wring parishes, and there w
he {i
ir lady visitor end
:
The
“A
ey r
Mw
sr Jeanne
week whe i
youl
two will
the plas
be!
tha x
the tit
During this |
§ 1855, Mlle,
i
ng her bosom friend,
Fi,
3
n . vey 13d fa hs vy
MALY ACTOR PN a
oy
tisn and a gnu
of her
H
$p 3
Poth g
+f}
get)
fidelily
tor five years remained
er, an eternal
to each olher
which had
Théy discussed when together of even.
thie car-
and
ight their
ve £ © 8 r
ings the gay season ol
pival and ali t talk,
when they separ
ng embrace was almos Ling to
11nd
Mi a ljoined
1 long
their
gs Holton’s chamber
hos
young Al
$
i
y hey up
ing through the
communicated
There was one subject,
neither ever touched that
was George Haverfield, the of
neighboring planter, and Dow en raged
in business at New Orleans. Both girls
do iw
the
ywever,
i that
bet weer rooms,
¥
TM
that
and
son
upon
a
some young gentleman, although they
would not confess as much to them-
selves, and each had a gort of Intuition
that such was the case. IL had been
Marcade, and his frequent visits to the
plantation seemed to give color to the
So it was, bya
sort of mntual understanding, neither
had mentioned his name during this
St. lomes mentioned at the dlumer
table that he had invited Haverfield up
out no comment from either of the
girls,
the young ladles took a sharp gallop on
their frisky little Creols ponies, and
their merry laughter, reckless riding
and exquisite benuty made them known
to all the inhabitants for miles down
the road. After breakfast came an
hour’s practice on the piano, and then
reading. So it was the days slipped
happily away, and Miss Holton had
been there nearly a week.
It was a bright Thursday morning
and the atmosphere seemed pregnant
with the delicious perfume of newly-
cut grasses, tinctured with the faint
sraell of boiling cane juice from the
sugar-house, Miss Holton was stand-
ing alone on the front veranda looking
out upon the beautiful garden that lay
at her feet when she was somewhat
startled by a tremulous touch on her
shoulder. Turning around she was
surprised to see Jeunne, pale and
ted, The color had left her
- » Toes
The few words on the scrap ran thus:
EANS, Nov. 2d, 1885,
ed my deepest affection.
[ am true.
never so happy
bove all other
will until death.
I will see you,
Geoncr HAVERFIELD,
A quick light came to Miss Holton’s
eyes, when she read the name of George
It caused her beart
the faster and ber breath to short
en, and yet, w
Haverfield., to
beat
hat did it all mean? She
¥
i
knew nothing of the paper and could
not remember ever having seen it.
“What you tink mutiered
Jeanne,
“I only think that I see a of
paper with some of Mr. Haverfield’s
That's all.”
deavored to hide the emotion
ance even of his name caused her,
“Han so he write to you
my hown ouse. Ah! Esielle,
yo know ow much ee ees to me.”
Estells Holton at first was about Lo
resent the manner of her ZIriend, but
her good nature came to her relief and
she inquired: “Why, what I
do with this? 1 never saw paper
before.”
This aroused Jeanne,
saw dis? Why,
jes now. Yo ’'ave use |
94
now Mm
plece
she en-
the utter.
hin
Estelle,
even
have to
that
“You
it hin
for papiliote
Levare
I foun’ yO room
+
wv
in yo aire,
5 &
5
tried
those days,
mfounded. She
ung ladies wer
© Riven uu
atrsiw
GainLy
4
tiring, a
wilnesses ever 80 si
3
for this purpose, but where she
11d not tell.
bered having torn some pieces of papel
had ob-
Ste
tained the paper she cot
i
must have picked it ap from the man-
{el
knew she had
from Haverfield,
have been proud of it.
w] tell you, Jeanne, 1 never read this
before. 1 may have used this paper,
but 1 did not know what was written
or somewhere about the room.
received a
1f she had she would
note
never
upon it.’
Sha tried to remain calm and coliec-
ted.
“It ees too much. Estelle!
Yo ‘ave decelve me-—han such a fren’,
You are my guess, han hi ham
feeling’ —and
Estelle!
100,
the nervous girl broke down. She ran
room, and throwing berself on
her bed gave way toa @
Neither young lady was at breakfast
that morning. At poon, when the lit-
tle New Orleans packet, Louisiana
Belle, passed down the bayou she stop-
ped at the Marcade pladtation and Miss
Holton and her trunks were taken on
board,
The plighted friendship had been
broken, aud although Jeanne, to keep
up appearances, stood on the Jevee
waving her handkerchief at ber depart.
ing visitor, she felt in her innermost
heart that hereafter there was to be no
affection between them,
Whilst the Louisiana Delle was puf-
fing slong down the bayou bel ween the
waving cane field {hat lined either side,
to her
ood of tears.
plantation house of the sudden depar-
She her
self had made some excuses to the rest
| of the family, but all believed that there
had been a rupture between the girls,
At the dinper table St,
He appeared
surprised, but said nothing. After the
cafe noir, excusing bimsell he strolled
out to the front gallery, puffing his
cigar. The ladies had not risen from
the table when he entered hurriedly
with a scrap of paper and asked who
had found it.
Jeanne recognized the piece al once.
She said she believed Miss Holton had
dropped it. St. Romes shook his head.
Then be remembered he had left the
note on the hall table after lighting a
cigar with the envelope.
+ What note?" sald Jeanne eagerly.
“Why, iaverfield’s, of course. He's
coming up Saturday for a hunt.”
Jeanne sald nothing. She entered
the room Miss Holton had occupied.
On the bureau there was a piece of pa-
per not unlike the ope she now held in
her hand. She picked itup. Then she
both out on the white marble
top. Yea; it was the same hand writing
{irregularities of each
Si ro
nd -
knew nothing of it after §—ouid it
| be 50?" She leaned over il ena th
| whole letter. It wes: &
i New One 94% Boys, 1460
| Dear 56, Homes: Bord, a
¥Y our kind letter touch
{ fection, To my dog and gun
I fool that 1 an
ins when bunting. It,
sports 1 enjoy moet, and
On Saturday next
day Geet Ay
Dain tri
Seve so Lapiy
bora ull othe
will gil dent}
vill ty yon
Foner rou
GRE Bev
When they reached be rom
| found her in almost an bstereal con-
{ dition on her bed. The slution of the
words on the papiliote 0! Mis
{| showed the note Lo have heey
| field’s acceptance of St.
i tion Lo a hunt.
What letters passed btiweey the two
| girls after this discovery were never
Whatever they were ov re-
i
Ley
Holton
1laver-
ines’ inyil
pe
| Known,
ip, and that
, Haverfield
Papiioles
Ler sister-in-
matronly looking lady, M:
hair in
night without thinking «
law, Estelle Holman,
Romes Marcade, and tls
at the old plantation.
be better than none, |
much worse,
at
#
+
xi I8,
episode
[alfa loat may
a jatler
—————
OLLA POD)
a
ia
%
¥
i
Esceedingly Toot lgore
An exceedils
made in Bpain after
up any kind of game
liver
y wlgt}
1 4 ¢loth,
gave the blood,
pieces i
a teacupt
put 0 a Klew pan
ofl, with equal parts «
add a little bacon, ga
pepper, sweet herbs i
carefully skimming 1
before the time 10 sel
giblets and liver.
A delicious but dy
born in Valencia is U
or chicken an
the !
ul of best oli
f th
Wi
inv
Wis ana waler,
e. lt. pimento,
id RIL sinner,
Bi an
TIN
4d nee,
2 ]
ing can be lost which agver cximtad
Our rice is werally #8 of
many o
os your
r
Ji
ge in
sof starch.
vain mp
comprenend
5
weibiiilies {
%y
that NICE NGS
not be covered —
when enclosed
Otherwise the
as it should be, each
from Lhe other.
This olla, «
needs a fine fos
wipe clean, but
walter; put a wine-gh
saucepan, beat it wel
br fry, stir
BpOGnH |
a
browned throw
4
i
it about
the
pul
especial
it will be
4 :8 fried”
ATiNg
nd contin
ead, le
wooden Ww brea
1
i fi
il 3
ta
that it does not burn
ter, stir the garlic
the chicken: continue
it fries; add a little
stirring; whenever a
is heard stir again. w
well browned or
cloves of
tt
ors vi
garlic,
¥
it Willi
a
i ad crack! of
{
% the chicke:
hich will take
8, stirring
hopped oni
red or
at
is
ail
gilde
{from five to ten min -
stantly, put in seven
three or four
chiles, and stir
contents calch the §
Le
wi
"me
18,
Chis gr
1s
i
en
Ones ]
ed: then add tomat
ind parsiey at
mi
BU
| ters &
cupfuls o
ald hot stock
whole: let it boil or
pie
{ rice:
OniV, Wish
aside to simmer uni the rice become
tender and done,
The true process « i
set or egg flip 1s des:ribed by 8 student
of Oxford who inven Peal
well the yolks of eight ez’s, with refin-
ed pulverized sugar, and a graled t-
meg. After well rubbing joaf sugar on
the tind of a lem put thesugar, will
a p.ece of cin the contents
of a bottle of wine into 6 sBuce-nan,
place 1t on the fire, laking itolf whe:
it boils: then add a mingle glass of col
white wine: put the liquor into @
| spouted jug, an 1 it gradaall
| among the yolks of the eggs; all mu
be kept well stirred while the liquid 5s
pouring in if it ba: nol sweel enoufi,
add more joal cughr, and, lastiy, pour
the mixture as switly as possible [fom
| one vessel into anoftier until § ywhis a
fine froth. Observ that if the wire be
poured boiling ho'8mong the egss Lhe
| mixture will curdle | This posse! should
be drank hot.
A famous Frena dish called ous a
| Aurore is a stimul@ to a fatigued appe-
| tite. The eggs, aslany as yor please,
| be boiled hard; raovethe shells, cut
|each egg nn halve aul taks out the
| yolks, beat these tia paste iu a mortar
with salt, pepper SAVOry herbs and
Viace sop 3 the mixture in
egg, and lay Lhe
dish, Arrange
mal
Ny
a ne
3
ted
"iy
0
a and
namo
3
i
pour ¥
fu
| cream.
each halved whik¥
| remainder in a bused
the stuffed eggs #the top with some
force-meat upper®t. Place the dish
m a moderately 2 oven, and serve
when the egas ay elicalely browned.
One of the svecdSt things in the life
ness of his
of our Saviouris #® gent
inary auxieties of
dally hi whic ie allow to rel us
Iv whic ;
oo, Jad he pow ruffle him. If he
told people to * ‘xd anxious for the
morrow,” Re alsdl ed the injunction
himself, ¥ “sufficient for the
day is the
burden is al