The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 15, 1889, Image 3

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    THE FLOWER GARDEN.
CARNATIONS,
Few summer flowers are more ad-
mired than these, combining as they
do beauty of form and color with de
lightful fragrance. Some are sweeter
than others. They rank among the
best of town plants. The rich and
highlv-pa Pill erimson clove Carna-
tion is a very old favorite, and is being
more extensive lv grown every. Year,
aually rood growing and free bloom-
sorts ean be had with white, rose,
pink,
ers The sooner the planting is com-
ple ted in good, deey
an open position, the better.
plants are those that have been kept in
small pots through the winter, and the
soil must not be dry nor removed from
the roots when planting. Carnations
dug from the ground at this season of
the vear do not grow and flower nearly
so well as strong plants that are estab-
lished in pots. In ordering, it
to ask that free-growing sorts be sent,
as some are more delicate than others.
Picotees only differ from Carnations in
having the colors round the edges of
the petals, though some are also mot
tled, not flaked or striped. Pinks in
different colors may be plants d now
from pots. The flowers smaller
than Carnations and Picotees. All the
kinds are excellent for and dress
adornment when taste arranged
h a few of their own leaves.
are
coat
fully
. %
£8 OF CARNATIONS AND PINES,
Dwellers in towns who
for growing button-hole
should grow the kinds named
dens flowers
in
on outside window-sills.
en-inch floor boards are
n be obtained from
cut into lengths to fit the
che ap, an
These,
for compression. They should be ex-
amined morning and afternoon, giving
water to those where the soil is a littie
dry, passing those which are moist, for
though the leaves should never drop
through want of water, the roots must
not be kept in a constant puddle. Cor
rect watering is a chief factor in the
successful culture of these plants. As
often as the shoots grow four inches in
length the points may be nipped out
till the end of June, for making bushy
plants; but if a few very large blooms are
coveted, the stems must grow tall for
producing them, After supplying the
roots with water, the leaves should be
i
day B,
TO PRESERVE FLOWERS,
Therelis much discussion at present
as to how flowers ean be best preserved
to send to far away people. When it is
souvenirs there
much chagrin that the perfumed
beauties arrive in amashed, dilapidated
and discolored condition
jective point. ‘L'his can easily be recti-
is
surface. Another
of the bottom board, as more width is
cutting all the pieces true, so as to en-
sure a close, square fit. Some holes,
as mentioned last week, can be made
moist cotton.
buds flowers
as at the be
keep flowers brightly
that cut flowers
wry to sprinkle with
deeply in mois-
Pa a light aye r
voyage the and
To
18,
it 1s only necess
ture, and, if nece
of cotton over them. "lowers can be
made to last a long time if carefully
watched, but they require the delicatg
nurture of an experienced lover of
St. Louis Globe-Democratl.,
-—
FARM NOTES,
REAry,
blooms.
THERE
material that can be
nure heap with advantage, and during
the warm days of summer the materials
very quickly decompose, Weeds can
on which an inch or two of dryish horse-
manure may be beaten down firmly.
Yellowish fibrous loam is the best kind
of and =a peck, or what may be
SO.
managed heap will
The most important
to have
requisite with ma-
is it as fine as possible,
with a little decayed manure or lea
mould intermixed. It should be press-
ed down, but not made so hard that the
f-
firmer it is, subject to this simple con-
dition. the better. The plants may be
arranged in the box closely, or
they just touch each other, sinking the
roots. without taking the from
them. half an inch deeper than they
were in the pots; and when all is finish-
1 the surface of soil shot be
half an inch from the top of the
This space 1s requisite for the
yal of watering effectively, and
mav be filled up with water
the earth gets distinctly dry on the sur-
ace, 1 giving any so long as
mains wet. It is most important that
the soil in the pots be moist when the
plants are turned out of them, but n
wet indeed, and that in the
i1ld be in the same damp condition.
he roots are in dry soil when plant-
d. good growth and flowers cannot be
expected, and it will be a mere matter
{ f chance if they are produce d It 1
surprising what a number of button-
hole flowers can be cut from a
well-managed box of Pinks and Carna-
3. The former are the first to open,
may be planted close to the mades
others more In the centre to con-
ue the supply. As the stems pus
hey must be carefully secured to smal
neat stakes made firm in the soil. When
the flowers are over, the stems should
we cut down, and the neat, bluish-green
rowths will have an agreeable appear-
nee. If a few bulbs of Gladiolus are
planted two inches deep between the
Carnations about the middle of May,
they will push up spikes for flowering
towards the autumno. More will be said
about these beautiful and easily-grown
plants.
sO
a
the 11d
the uid
4
a8 often as
rot it re-
Yery
}
JAPANESE SPIREAS.
These dwarf plants with glossy leaves
and white feathery plume-like flower-
The used for bedding will be
if cut for that pur-
pose, and will also more readily act as
in the manure heap. It
must not be overlooked that the liquids
he solids, and
straw
serviceable
he
ik
¥
+
|S
OF I
retaining the liquids
absorbent materials, Even
v dirt has been found a valuable sub-
stance in the manure heap when used
absotbent, and as the liquids
hasten decomposition they
increase the value of i
the best mode
1186
85 an
a
serve to
largely the solid
FECT LIME AND ASHES,
are composed largely of lime and
itain small proportions of pl
1 other mineral matter, their compo-
ion depending on the Kind of wood
1 they were procured, Their
)
t
ws OF
wsphates
Yaiue
Sy the
in, Le
is due to the potash they
mly serving as
available plant-food but also assisting
to render available many other sub-
stances in the soil that are insoluble, It
is the chemical action induced by lime
and ashes that enables them to improve
ti in many ways other than that
of simply adding lime and potash as
plant food. No soil is fitted to pre
perfect plants unless it contains all the
plant fool necessary for
of the objects
potash not «
ie soil
witu ©
11 tha
¢
elements of
+ Fer 1B rae
the fulfillment
of the
plants, but soils may abound largely in
plant food that cannot be appropriated
y crops. It is this inert, unavailable
plant food that is attacked by lime and
ashes, its parts torn asungler by chemical
action, and new compounds formed
that are entirely unlike the original
substances, The action of lime on
plants and soils varies according to the
character of the soils. 1t makes heavy
soils lighter and light soils heavier, and
a greater proportion of organic and
mineral matter is annually delivered to
the crops as food. Ashes serveas plant
food to a greater extent, and its effects
most admired of room and greenhouse
Jlants in spring and early summer,
Many are flowering now, and still more,
perhaps, have ceased. What is best to
ASSISTING
gire to know. Those still flowering can-
not have too much water. The pots
may stand in it constantly in the sau-
cers: or, at least, as soon as it vanishes
more should be poured on the soil to
pass through. Plants which have
plant food, the farmer can secure better
ashes by growing
plowed under,
some crop to
in the garden, or, failing such l
be stood in sancers in any shaded place
outdoors, watering them as before,
Clear soot-water is good for them, and
is easily made by tying a handful of
soot in a piece of old muslin, or any-
thing of that kind, and suspending in
water for a day or two, giving the bag
a squeeze occasionally, and the virtues
of the soot will be extracted and sus-
pended in the water. The plants will
not be so good next year as this, prob-
ably; still, with good attention, will
produce a number of their elegant
spikes.
* % &
CHRYSANTHEMUMS,
Such good care is taken of these
plants that they may still be seen in
some room windows and greenhouses
These are the worst of places for them
now; the best is an open, sunny posi-
tion outdoors, where worms cannot en-
ter the pots through the drainage. If
the stems are growing too tall the
may be taken off, and fresh shoots will
push lower down. The present is a
good time for amateurs to purchase
young Janis, which they desire to keep
dwarf for their windows. If they are
in small pots they should be transfer
red to others, three inches wider, using
good loam with a fifth part of crumble
manure and half that Juamity of sand,
pressing this mixture firmly round the
roots, and not quite filling the pots.
The soil in the small must be
moist when the work is done, and that
which is used shquld be damp enough
chemical action, Every crop grown de-
from the atmosphere, either through
the soil, which is stored up in the
plants, to be again subjected to the in-
fluence of lime and ashes,
sown in the row, with rows four feet
apart, 80 as to cultivate it. Do not cut
the fodder until the ears begin to glaze,
when it may be put in a silo, or cut
down, cured and stored in the barn.
Such fodder should never be stocked in
the fields, as its quality will be injured
by exposure to the sun and rains, The
value of fodder is greatly influenced by
the period of growth at which it is cut.
If cut too soon it will contain a large
proportion of water, and if cut too late
it will lose its succulency. Experi.
ments indicate that the proper time is
when the ears are in the ‘milky stage’’
and just beginning to glaze,
Loxpox PurrLe.~According to
Prof. Cook of the Michigan Agricul.
tural College (who cultivates a farm of
his own), London purple is the best for
spraying fruit trees, and one pound to
100 gallons of water is the greatest
strength advisable for the first spraying.
Where a second spraying is necessary,
as may be p especially if the
crop is light, it should not be stronger
than one pound to 150 gallons, and
even weaker for a third application,
Unless washed off by heavy rain one
thorough spraying is usually enough,
’
HOUSEHOLD,
Tune sexsinLe HOUSEKEEPER OF
ne Furure.~1 wish that it were in
my power to persuade. young girls who
wonder what they shall do to earn their
Hving, that it 1s really better to choose
some business that is in the line cf 2
woman’s natural work, There is a
great repugnance at the thought of be-
ing a servant, buta girl is no less a ser-
vant to the man who owns the shop
where she stands all day behind the
counter, than she is where she waits
upon the table or cooks the dinner in a
pleasant house; and to my mind there
would not be a moment's question be-
tween the two ways of going out to ser-
The wages are better, the free-
they are in the other, If, instead of the
sham service that is given by ignorant,
and really overpaid servants to-day, sen-
sible New England girls who are anx-
fous to be taking care of themselves and
earning good wages, would fit them-
wiy they found available, they would
would be
employers,
valued immensely by
When one realizes
houses, and
It is because
AlWwaAvs
at
1
ready to seize the chances,
work has been almost
carelessly i badly done
such 80
and it has
4
have taken such low rank. 3
takes the trouble to fit herself properly.
women trust to being
finding out their duties after
sume such positions—not before, —
Orne Jewett in Congregationalsst,
taught
ti As
——
L.opsTER NEWBURG.—Cut the meat
small pleces,
When hot add the lobster,
per, two tablespoonfuls sherry, and two
of brandy, and a slight grating of nu
meg: then add one cup cream and the
beaten yolks of four eggs. Stir until it
tl slightly. with
4
i-
hickened Nerve
Woints,
The lobster is sometimes served whole,
and is known as lobster souffle with
sauce a la Newburg. It is nicer, how-
ever, if cut up.
First take off the
the large ones,
In the head of the the
“lady,” so called. Put the thumb on
he part that seems to have been made
Press down firmly.
the good
v'" will be left standing up.
row away the *‘lady’ and take
lungs.
Break the bones of the tail and take
meat. The bones may be brok-
en with the finger and thumb or w
hammer,
Of course you make it very
out the brandy and
it a peculiar
iv liked.
In place of toast pdints, points
paste of chopped paste may be 1
The points are arranged around
les of the dish and the lobster pour
into-the centre,
It has a pretty appearance, and tastes
il as it looks,
claws, then
Snail
lobster is
*
t
i
forir it
al) ik
out neat and the
out
+
the
$
+
¥
out the
she
rive
Ht?
eral
shut
taste
sides
i WW
-
orLED CocoaxvTt Ct
sund of
f sweet
To
ALLOW A
STARD,
grated cocoanut
milk. and six ounces of
sugar; beat very light the volks
1
of six eggs, stir them gradually into §
Ta
Iw
fife
i
¥
put the mixture
in a vessel of boiling
hot coals and summer
ry smooth and thick, stirrin
As As it comes
take t!
SOON
it off ¢ fire, px
. and set it to co
put it into custard cups,
froth the whites of the eggs tis
ft, and pile it on the custards; spi
over each a little powdered
sugar.
APPLE SNOW.— Bake six good
apples In a covered dish, with
water in the bottom to prevent their
burning, until they are so tender a straw
can pierce them: take off the skins,
scrape out the pulp, mix with two
secant) cups of sugar and the juice and
half the grated peel of one lemon; beat
the whites of four eggs to a stiff froth
ida
@
make a custard of the yolks of the eggs,
a generous pint of milk and a half cup
of sugar, when the custard is cold put it
snow over it,
- -
ples, being careful not to break them,
thick; put a small piece of lemon peel
Take out the
A new principle in steam packing,
recently brought to notice, 18 claimed
to meet the difficulties hitherto experi.
enced in other methods, It consists in
the employment of a common eccen-
tric ring hooked together by a clamp,
which forms a part of the ring itself,
and this hook clamp limits the expan-
sion of the ring and changes the whole
principle of its action. The rings are
cast heavy, rough turned, very much
larger than the cylinder, a piece cut
out, sprung together and fitted with the
hook clamp or shoes, left slightly larger
than the cylinder, and then returned to
a tight fit; the rings can compress to a
limited extent, but cannot expand, In
use, when the engine is first started, and
the hot piston moves to the cool end of
the cylinder, the rings compress and
allow it to go free, but, when both eyl-
inder and piston get up to workin
temperature, the rings just ft an
work without any pressure and very
little tendency to wear; filing out the
hooks compensates for wear when it
has taken place. The hook clamp Is
made longer at one end than the
the object of this being to break
when two rings are
*
joints
place through the gaps.
A traveling electric ight has been
used in Germany with much success,
The arrangement is a very simple one,
A dynamo, with an engine to drive it,
is mounted on a wagon, something like
a steam fire engine, containing boller,
fuel box and water tank, complete for
a night's service, A supply of wire and
a number of poles, corresponding to the
number of arc lights required, are
added to the equipment, which is then
drawn by a pair of horses to any de-
sired place. On arriving there the
poles are set up where required, and
driven into the ground;
then hung to them and properly cob-
nected, and the engine is set in motion,
The lights immediately kindle, and
from one to fifty lamps can be operated,
according to the power of the machine,
As the lamps can be suspended any-
where and are not affected by wind or
rain,
to contractols and others who
carry on night work is apparent,
eileen
Professor Edward S. Holden, of
California, gives the following infor-
mation about the comet discovered
there June 23d: “*Mr. Lueschner,
student in the Lick Observatory,
| computed tbe orbit of the comet,
finds that this faint come! was already
past {18 perihelion when it
{ ered. It was nearest to tl
20th,
| on June 234 be taken as 100, its bright-
ness on Jupe 29th
{ 12th it will
have LW
16 sun on June
Cp
Wiis |
OnLy
be 76: so that this
{ become visible to the naked eye. On
June 239d the come! was 101,000,000
miles from the sun and at the same
| distance from the earth, On July 12
its distance from the had
| increased to YM7.000.000 miles, and
| from the earth 114,000,000,
positions were: July 7,
miputes north; declination,
{11 minutes, July 11, R. A. 2 hours
43 minutes declination, 46 de-
porth;
grees 27 minutes. The cometis wo
faint
sun
i
’
i
I
i
to
{Its whole history is given above, 1
{ learn by telegraph from Cambridge,
Mass,, that the comet had not been
seen at all in the East up to June 30,
on account of cloudy weather, whereas
we have been able to observe it regu-
larly here owing to unbroken good
weather.”
essa lia—
One of the most
ments In modern
| electric mountain
recently
engineering
railway
i
i
}
A test has been wade in St, Louis of
using fine brick for paving purposes,
The test was made In the busiest
streets, A committee of engineers and
others have just reported that ‘‘fire
bricks show all the endurance of gran-
ite, and that they make a smoother,
cleaner, and less noisy streel, and are
more easily repaired and give a better
foothold to horses; that neither frost
nor fire affects them, and that they can
be used at less than half the cost of
granite, ”’
ati malin ott
A human skull, singularly like the
famous Neanderthal skull which so
engrossed te attention of archwolo-
gists and ethnologists a few years ago,
has recently been exhumed from a clay
deposit near Podbaba, in the neighbor-
hood of Prague, Bohemia, It is nota-
bile for the great flatness of the fore-
head, the thickened eyebrows, and a
remarkably small facial angle, appar-
skull above mentioned.
tusk was obtained
locality,
A mammoth’s
from the same
tt
Foreed to Leave Home,
Over 600 people were forced to leave their
bomes yesterday to call for a free trial pack-
Medicive, If your
order, if you are constipated and have head.
ache and an unsightly complexion, don’t
| to call on any druggist to-day for a free
The ladies
large-size
sample of this grand remedy.
Every one likes iL
package 50 cents.
Paper spokes for wheels are among
the latest appliances for that ever-in-
arti The paper pulp is
into molds under
dries and hardens;
le.
forced iron
where it
i
i
to be much superior to wood, Paper is
useful
wood in many
Ways,
oa
for casting oil the
A patent upon
Hav
out
© that «¢
appetite Of
fd
and a general ling of
to describe? Hood's Bar
ful
ing
medicine
digest
reng
reating
and ton
giving y and a
ness and debit
of take Hood's Bara it YeTy Year as a
ing tonic, with nn § sat A101) ~51iits i
recommend Hood's Sar
gr
ry 211 who have
feeling £. ParMELER,
iserable tired
s street, Brooklyn, B. %
Hood's Sarsapariila
iggists, 81 for
LHOOD & CO Aputhecar
100 Doses One
Bold by alldr
by ¢
Preparedonly
os Lowell Mass,
Dollar
————————— A ———————y
LEND YOUREAR
TO WIHIAT
WE HAVE TO SAY.
DMORW ITS
BEST LOW -PRICED
GERMAN DICTIONAR
PUBLISHED, AT THE REMARKABLY
LOW PRICE OF
Only $1.00, Postpaid, 650 Pages,
Or only $1.50, Postpaid, 1224 Pages.
This Book cont
of Clear Type on ¥
somely yet
gives English
i Jents and po
with English d
HAN wWorag a
English,
while if the 1
want to translate it into
another part of the Book.
It is ir 4
thoroughly 1 fin th En
cans who wish to jearn Germar
ins 6% ¥ vd Pages
Hand~
mei y
xoellent Fag
Berviccably Bo
words with the
unciation, and
aper, and is
Min i it
LYRA
you
ssued, By
|
ing quickly seems to calin the commio-
tion in its struggle to the top,
RADWAY'S |
READY RELIEF.
instantly
cures Sprains, Broises,
in the Chest or Sides, Headache,
or any other pain, CONGES-
INFLAMMATIONS, Rheumatism,
relieves and
quickly Backache,
| one grand curve formed
{of 112 degrees, and the system is such
| that the journey is made as steadily and
| smoothly as upon any of the stsaight
| funicular lives, The Burgenstock is
| almost perpendicular, from the shore of
{ Lake Lucerne to the Burgenstock Is
level
ot hy
§
= i
of the sea. The total len «
the line is U38 metres, and it commen-
ces with a gradient of U2 per cent.
| which is increased to 58 per cent, after
the first 400 metres, this
tained for the rest of the
single pair of rails is used
and the motive power-elect
generated by two dynamnos, e
horse power, which are worked
water wheel of pomioally
| power, erected upon the river Aa
mouth at Buochs, thres miles away,
the electric current being conducted by
means of insulated copper wires, The
joss in transmission is estimated at 25
per cent,
=
Del
£ main
ney, A
ag!
I
Jour
the
Sida
’
1
Tr
i
al ils
poo
It is said that waterproof paper and
pasteboard can be produced by treating
the surface of ordinary paper with
ammoniacal solution of copper, so as
partially to dissolve the surface, which
is then let dry, P thus prepared
said to be equal |
ment.
It Don't Fay
cans when ring from
Ooi OF ich as
mp! £ diseases
from ing
suption of
e's Golden Medical
y cure all these affec
HE ie
ded. ?
iy redux
£59 offered for an ing
the Head, by
Remedy
Catarth in
the
————————
If length of days be thy |
make it not thy expectation.
-—
% 5
WTLIOn,
i
tecling and debility, and in the weakened con
dition of the system, discases arising {
pure blood are liable to appear. To gain strength,
to overcotne disease, and purify, vitalize,
{ and enrich the blood, take Hood's Barsaparilla
to
Happiness depends not on what one
| has, but on what one is
: Scssis AI AA
Fraser Axle Grease.
The Frazer is kept by all dealers. One
| box lasts as long as two of any other. Re
| esived medals at North Carolina State Fair,
| Centennial, and Paris Exposition.
Affectation is a greater enemy to the
| face than small-pox.
| Rupture cure guaranteed by
| Dr, J. B. Mayer, 831 Arch St, U'hil's,
| Pa. Ease at once, no operation or de-
| lay from business, attested by thou.
i sands of eures after others fail, advice
free, send for circular.
Rats and mice have as great an aver-
sion to the odor of chloride of lime as
humans,
aioli
“Penny wise and pound foolish’ are those
who think it economy to use cheap soda and
rosin soaps, instead of the old Dobbins’
Electric Soap ; for sale by all grocers since 1864.
Try itonce. Be sure, buy genuine.
Its said a salve of equal parts of tar,
tallow, and salt will cure the worst case
of felon,
Nothing Cures Dropay, Gravel, Bright's, Hears,
oF Urinary, Liver ins Nerronsnan:
&c,, ike Capps Kiney Cure. OMos, §31 Aro
BL, Phila. $1 a bolle, 6 for $4 Al
Cutesthie worst cases Care goarsaiesd, i
II I.
A little flour shaken on your reama
cake pan is a better preventive o stick
ing than paper.
free by Dr, Kline's Great
418) A fier fre day use. Mar:
Jolona cures, Treatise and $2 00 trial free lo
canes, Send to Dr. Ki 1 Aroh St. Pala, Pa
Manners are stronger than laws.
IIIA.
Ask your draggist for “Tansil's Punch.”
AE ah fin
There is but one way Lo tell the truth
Cramps, Spasms, Soar Stomach, Nansen,
Yomiting, Heartbarn, DIARRHEA, Colla,
Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Internally, half
to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water.
50c. » bottle, All Diruggista.
RADWAY
PILLS,
An excellent and mild Cathartie, elegantly
coasted and without taste. The Safest and
Hest Medicine in the world for the Care
all Disorders of the
Purely Vegetable, Perfect Pargatives,
Act Without Pain, Always fe-
liable and Natural in
Their Operations,
Taken according to directions they will
restore health and renew vitality.
Price 250ts. a Box. Sold by all Druggists.
o's Oure for Ot
- ws THE BEST
keeping the voloe
icionr. B cents.
Best in the World, Made only by the Frazer Lubrics
tor Oo. at Chicago, N.Y. & 8t.Louls, Soid everywhere.
T prescribe and folly ep.
doree Big € as the only
specific forthe certain cure
of this Sisease
GH. INGRAHAM NM ID,
Amsterdam, N.Y,
We bave sold Big GG for
many years, and ii has
fren the best of salle
action.
D.R DYCHE & CO
Chicage, 111
$1.00. Bold by Druggists
ho N CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS,
toed Cross Diamond Brand.
Hale wot
tir Tee
renied
a
far
we omy teliabie p
ser Ladies sek Proggie
mond Brand, iv red 000s
with tae titien. Take te ots
for wnle
=f Ladien™
i “
Chilehester Chemionl Cou Macises .
Su
Li
#8 oti pe
p— - a he re
R330 A MONTY oo he Tarn
to the businome.
be prof " shoo.
Towne and : B, JONN-
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