The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, January 21, 1892, Image 5

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    “| least, with him, Sorrel’s
0 merry anvils sounding
:. All day till set of sun}
It is by sturdy pounding
That noblest tasks are done; |
By steady blows and swinging
“That keeps the world asringing,
' Ching ching, ching ching,
Ching ching, ching ching.
- ==George Horton, in the Century,
~ SORREL'S VOCATION.
BY EVELYN THORP,
d her head still in the air.
{ not. Itwasstonily
i asked—or so Sor-
rel thought. A
third little white
@ pebble followed
two others and
dropped, neatly aimed,
20 of the lake.
Hardwicke saw the color, though his
glance was fixed on the aproximate spot
where the three pebbles had been lost to
view. He had a way of seeing out of
. the'corners of eyes directed elsewhere.
"He now thought that wave of color very
becoming, He was almost on the point
of movin ‘80, but he was saved in time
into the rippli
rippling
7. Sorrel herself speaking.
“Because I want the cultivation of
another year of travel and study and—
: 0 rvation.” :
Hardwicke stopped throwing pebbles
into the lake; He leaned back against
the old stone wall, drew his hat lower
over his brows and plunged his hands
into his pockets. ;
©. What unmitigated bosh.”
This time he had certainly too
ar, The gtk stared her feet on the
grassy slope, k in her lap—a
bh Y ghime fell to the ground.
ould see that she was trembling slightly,
and she held her head TE Sh
was deeply offended. Hardwicke
‘started up, too.
~~ 40h, you must forgive me!” he said.
~ “But yeu cannot realize how-exasperating
it is to a man, with a man’s pulse in him,
to think of a girl like you mistaking so
radically the essential occasion Provi-
dence sent her into the world to fulfill.
You were made to render some good
“man divinely happy, not to waste your
youth and sweetness in striving after ‘a
‘career,’ and all the rest of that nonsense.
Lord! what has come over the nice girls?
All bitten'by the same mania, ; Writers
they want to be, and artists and lec-
_ turers, and heaven knows what. Any-
thing and everything but the oné thing
worth being—a sweet wife.” :
He had talked as he followed her and
the close of his harrangue was addressed
‘to her girlish back and shoulders as they
‘became engulfed in the wide Swiss doo-
way. She had not even’ vouchsafed a
lance. :
‘With
chestnuts,
snow-clad ranges were flushed with the
sunset Alp-glow.
*“A precious, inspiring moment,” said
a voice behind Hardwicke. : It was Sut~
With him was Miss
She smiled ‘ac-
Sutterell glared
Hardwicke and |
terell, the artist.
Ker, Sorrel’s chaperon,
idly upon Hardwicke.
‘but remained silent.
Miss Ker exchanged a few common-
places, if any speech of Miss Ker’scould
thus be qualified. Then Hardwicke had
a perception that she appeared to be
lingering. Sutterell, though not deli-
cately intuitive, appeared to feel the
~ game thing. He presently strolled
Immediately Miss Ker spoke.
+You asked -Borrel-—Miss'
to walk out with youthis afternoon, Mr.
Hardwicke?’ ;
“I did Miss Ker.”
And if I am not wrong it was with
the view—the intention—""
off.
“Qf urging her again to marry me.
You are not wrong, my dedr Miss Ker.
I'know that you feel me an interloper.
You have very exalted views for Miss
But I think it a quite good
enongh fate for any girl to be an honest
And so, as 1 love Miss
Fletcher and ea I consider myself an hon-
‘est man I must warn you that T shall
“continue both to urge’ myself upon her
and to discourage her masculine ambi-
Fletcher.
man’s wife.
tions.”
A darkling flush mounted to the spin
ster's faded cheek.
You are at least frank, Mr, Hard-.
Wisether you merit other com-
Miss Fletch-
er was a mentally unformed girl when I
rought her abroad, though a very
She was an orphan; she
‘relative who could discover or
her great capabilities. 1 did
am an ardent crusader for glo-
uses in which women’s help is
but I recognize that we need
sh if 1|loon
wicke,
* mendation I leave to you.
one,
b
gift
©. bal
sh spirits. Here is one th
ed. You com
colored, |
He
a half laughlie retraced his steps
- from the old inn to the village sqnare over-
looking the lake under its centenary
The higher peaks of the
Fletcher
¢My dear Miss Ker, in love and war all
is fair, you know.”
¢“Then itshall be war!” cried Mrs.
Ker. “If marriage is to be ‘brought
forwaid at all for Sorrel, let it be not
with such a man as you, careless of all
:| great subjects, but with such a one a this | three
| young artist, with a soul full of beauty,
who but stood here a moment ago! Af
higher ideals
will not be crushed into the mire!” She
trembled with excitement.
“ utterell!” said Hardwicke
| easily. “Well, I am willing to put my- |
self against that beauty-lover, Miss Ker,
and see who comes out winner!”
And th A vids
* 8 they patted] is.
«May I beg you especially not to go
for this gail to-day, Miss Fletcher?” said
Hardwicke a few days later. 2
There had been 8 sail on the lake pro-
om Si "He now glared fiercely
at Hardwicke. Sorrel threw up her lit-
tle hand. Cad
1 don’t see why you should make any
such request,Mr. Hardwicke,” she said.
© «For the best of reasons,” he answered
placidly. «I believe a still wind will
blow up within two honrs and the waters
of this lake are notoriously dangerous in
sudden squalls. One must be able to
sail 8 boat as to the manor born, and
even then—"
+ Sorrel had walked on as if unheeding,
: Miss Ker,
‘though she had grown a trifle pale,
made a motion to follow.
‘Perhaps you are about the
wind, Mr. Hardwicke,” she said, her
clared enmity, an acid urbanity.
¢+It seems very still now.”
6 certainly think Mr. Hardwick is
wrong,” put in Sutterell, with a smile of
the finest irony.
¢Are you going with us?” queried
Sorrel, stopping short. :
«Yes, You have no objection?”
¢I thought you might be afraid,” said
tle poses of inspired femininity, and
in reality, had only recently ceased to
be. = And she smiled much as Sutterell
had done. But Hardwicke did not ap-
pear to see the smile. It was assuredly,
as Miss Ker had remarked, very still
now. And Sutterell, looking woman-
ishly handsome ‘in: semi-nautical attire,
did not know how to sal a ; bos for Al
moderate 0 s er quo
poetry gL gv and glanced at
him for sympathy. = Sorrel, her hands in
her lap, the soft rings of her wayward
hair crisping under the brim of her little
sailor straw, gazed out at the mountain
shores and avoided looking at Hard-
wicke. Hardwicke, smoking by the
now and then.
At the end of an hour he made a re-
mark in an undertone to Sutterell.
Sutterell glanced up and shrugged his
shoulders. Hardwicke seemed to insist,
her parasol, became attentive.
. A moment later a new expression
weak mouth drew itself together. He
made a rapid motion, A sail swept
about, :
“Look to what you are doing manl”
cried Hardwicke. !
' The gale struck them at the same mo-
ment. The water, blue before, now
le and green, was churned into
: DoE? waves, ‘The sunlight had been
blotted out of the sky.
Miss Ker gave a low cry and clutched
the side of the boat. The parasol had
been hurled from her hand. 0
«Hold fast, Sorrel, and don't fear!”
shouted Hardwicke, i
And then the two men, hagling in
sail, worked for their lives.
SwHTOR 18 TP TO BRI? iw
tones having regained, spite of the de-
44 We shall see,” remarked Hardwicke. |.
the young lady, putting aside all her lit- |
speaking like the school girl which she, |
Iadies’ permission, looked at the horizon |
d Miss Ki lancing out from under | ; :
- an ‘is her letter. She says shahas taken the
swept Butterell’s face. His well cut but
/ Mind what you. are abouts!’ Hard.
wicke cried two or three times again to
Sutterell, his voice hissing through the
roar and whistle of the wind, But But.
terell seemed to lose his head. = His
spray damped face was blanched. - His
trembling fingers had lost their cunning,
and in the terrifying confusion ‘of the
Forsook him fatally. A fresh blast
struck them——the boat careened. ~~
‘There was a great cry from Miss
Ker-— his SR TYPE t
And then ‘Hardwicke was throwing
out armgand legs )
and dragging Sorrel upto the surface of
it, ; TA Lo it pa Rg Eee
~~ “Hold for your lifel” he shouted, and
Sorrel clung to the bottom ‘of the boat,
now floating an oblong, unsteady bal-
pon the Mi vi
dy,
moment his presence of mind forsook
in the green’ water
7 to their rescue, as well as
and then Sutterell’s ‘rose
ghastly
to the surface and made a wild clutch |
for the boat. He caught Sorrel’s shoul.
der instead. i
Tet gol” cried Hardwicke. But
¢Do you want to
save your carcassi”
But help was at hand. The other
It was but
bottom of the second.
x 2 * *® % * :
A week afterward. The little
village still held its four chance voy:
in consequence of the nervous shock and
exposure, Sutterell, indeed, was still
invisible, and Miss Ker, this
afternoon;
taking advantage of the prerogative ol
her years (though, as she said that moms:
ing to Sorrel, her prematurely gra i
Tor an sh older han she
really was), had sought his bedside
with the ministering graces of jelly
turned out by her own hand.
¢‘Sorrel,” said Hardwicke, finding the
girl alone, “I insist upon a definite an-
swer. In a week I leave for home.
Which is it to be? Your so-called
vocation, or—lovet”
® * = * ®
»
.- When the girl returned to the inn an
hour later Miss Ker was there and started
up dramatically at sight of her face.
“You have—"
“Promised to marry Mr. Hardwicke,
Yes.” She was smiling and weeping at
once. ‘‘Forgive me, Miss Ker! Itis a
great disappointment, I know, but since
that moment in the boat—when we faced
death, and I knew how brave and noble
he was—1I realized the whole volume of
love! I choose it—instead of my voca-
tion!” : i
“Ah!” said Miss Ker. She turned
her face away and said no more.
“Ah 1” x
| called to them to hold fast yet a moment,
prehension.
drown a woman to
.Bwisy
agers. Sutterell and Miss Ker had both
retreated for several days to their beds
AGRICULTURAL,
_ TO FARM AND GARDEN,
: IMPORTANT DISCOVERY.
Microscopical examination of pus
taken from the jaw of a bullock suffer-
ing from lumpy jaw at Peoria, Illinois,
recently gave the startling discovery that
the spores are smaller than the blood
corpuscles, They can thus readily cir-
culate through the veins to all parts of
the body. And itis thought this fact
though we do not quite see that this
should follow. However, we believe it
good policy to destroy any animals
known to be affected.—Nebraska Far-
mers :
STERILIZED MILE.
Considerable interest is taken in
Sgterilized” milk, which means milk
with the germ of bacterial life taken out
of it. This isdone by heating the milk
to 160 degrees F'. It is claimed that this
will cause the milk to keep sweet at
least twenty four hours longer than it
otherwise would. This is one method
of preserving milk that appparently has
‘no harm in it. The English go further,
and preserve milk by chemical com-
unds that are not at present tolerated
this country, but the fact is admitted
that this food product must be pre-
served. — American Agriculturist,
i
GOOSEBERRY MILDEW.
The New York Agricultural Exper-
iment Station has for the past three
years successfully combated
mildew, by commencing to spray as soon
as the young leaves begin to untold, and
continuing at intervals of from eighteen
to twenty days, except in case of heavy
rains, when it is necessary to spray more
-| often, The fungicide used is potassium
sulphide (liver of sulphur), one half
ounce to one gallon of water. By
hot water the sulphide will dissolve more
readily. Commercial liver of sulphur
costs but from fifteen fo twenty cents
per pound, and one gallon of the solu-
tion is sufficient to spray ten or twelve
pump. The ammomacal solution and
the bordeaux were also effective, —New
York Observer.
THE CHEAPEST FEEDING MATERIALS,
Linseed cake is the staple food with
| many farmers. It is not improbable that
| this article will advance beyond a res-
$‘HOLD. FOB YOUR LIFE!”: HE SHOUTED:
sonable price, and the farmer should cast
about to see if thereis not some food
which can be bought so as to pay him
better. - A good linseed cake is the best
food for general purposes, because it
contairs a fair proportion of the differ-
ent forms of feeding matter that ani-
mals require; and one of its great fea-
tures is the oil, a substance not strongly
“Was it not odd?” confided Sorrel to
Hardwicke that evening. ‘I thought
she would take it so differently.”
Oh, the old lady knows what she is
about,” said Hardwicke, carelessly.
One week before they were to be
married—they had both been home
several months—Sorrel came down to
meet Hardwicke with a flushed tace.
«Miss Ker is tobe married, too, Here
itep because she has found a man who
can help her in her. vocation and is
capable of appreciattng its sacredness.”
$A rap at me, Well, and who is this
archangel ¢’
¢‘Sutterell |” :
$¢Well done,” shouted Hardwicke. *
always knew that milkshop had a clever-
ness of his own. The old lady has
money {New York Mercury. :
Birthplaces of Speakers of Congress.
It is a notable circumstance that all
the men elected Speaker, from the First
to the Fifty-first Congress, were bora in
one or another of only thirteen States;
and further, that on the soil of only
seven States outeide of - the South has a
tuture presiding officer of the more nu.
merous branch of the National legisla.
ture been born. These statements are
| rather startling at first glance, but are
strictly accurate, The seven States re-
ferred to are Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey,
Ohio and Maine. The native Pennsyl-
vanians ‘who won this honor were F.A.
Muhlenberg, whose gavel dropped for
‘the first time March 4, 1789, John W.
Davis, James G. Blaine, Michael C. Kerr
and Bamuel J. Randall; Connecticut gave
birth to Jonathan Trumbull, Theodore
Sedgwick, Galusha A. Grow; New Jer-
sey to Jonathan Dayton and William
Pennington; New York to John W. Tay-.
lor and Schuyler Colfax; Massachusetts
boasts Joseph W. Varuum, Robert C.
Winthrop and Nathaniel P. Banks, while
Ohio is entitled to J. Warren Keifer,
and Maine to T. Brackett Reed.
Occasionally a native of one Btate
would be a citizen of another when elect-
ed Speaker, but this has been rare
The only instance besides Clay
were the cases of Sedgwick, who early
moved to Massachusetts from Connecti-
cut; John W. Davis, a Pennsylvanian,
who went to Congress from Indiana;
Galusha A. Grow, who left Connecticut
in favor of Pennsylvania; Schuyler Col-
fax, by birth'a New Yorker, but owing
his Congressional seat to Indianians, Mr,
Blaine and Mr. Kerr.
1t is a fact remarkable for its unique-
ness that the six Southern States of Vir-
ginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgi,
North Carolina and South Carolina should
have given birth to the fourtsen Speak:
ers credited to the South, while not one
of the sister Southern States of Arkan-
sas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Flo- |
| rida, Maryland or West Virginia has
produced 2 man destined to this high
station. ‘And equally strange has it been
that’ the two States of Virginia and
Kentucky were the places of nativity of
one-fourth of the men who have been this
presiding officers of the popular branch
of Congress 789. > Sit, ! bs
very rare.
and Polk
represented in grain and pulse. It is only
“because the feeding
foods, and if other foods are mixed so as
to possess the same pro equally
good
the chief difficulty, but that may be
easily arranged by buying the linseed in-
about four times as much oil as linseed
{‘cake, so if in making a mixture we bear
this point in mind, the most difficult
Of course, the linseed oil must be
crushed or soaked. To supply the al-
cake we have to turn to the pulse crops,
beans, peas, lentils, maize and barley.—
Mark Lane (Bngland) Hzpress.
WINTER MANURE METHODS.
At the beginning of winter a thick
layer of straw er other material should
be spread over the barnyard. If the yard
is too large to warrant this it is too large
for profit. Without some receptacle to
retain it, niost of the liquid excrement
of domestic animals is wasted. ‘This
means the loss of the portion of excre-
ment that is richest in ammonia, and,
therefore, most stimulating to plant
growth, Fresh urine is often go caustic
that it burns vegetation to which it is
applied, but it loses this injurious effect
| when fermented. If the barnyard is
small, as it ought to be, then successive
layers of bedding may We thrown down,
the stock eating what it wishes, If
grainis given more straw and other
coarse feed will be given, thus takin
:
the place of good hay and making richer
manure. Before spring this accumula-
tion of bedding with liquid and solid
excrement mixed should be piled in heaps
to ferment. It isa good plan to add a
nurs is generally deficient in phosphate
especially if largely mixed with straw.
If the two are applied separately neither
does the good it should, though after
the stable manure is distributed grain
crops should have an additional dose of
phosphate, as with the drill ‘it can be
distributed in contact with the seed soas
to do it most good when the ‘plant be-
gins to start. . But the phosphate mixed
with manure is most certain to do good
later in the season, as it does not revert
or become insoluble.—~ Boston Cultivator.
DIRECTIONS FOR LAYING OUT GROUNDS.
The Country Gentleman gives the fol-
lowing - general rules for laying out
S¢door-yards” and lawns in accordance
with the principles of the best landscape
gardening: i
1. Give attention first to securing a
smooth lawn, and well laid out and well
dressed walks. fa
2. Avoid parallel walks, because ex:
pensive and needless, unless entirely
separated in view from each other by
dense planting or abrupt ridges of land,
and prafer few walks to many.
- 8. Every curve in a walk should have
an obvious reason, or turn aside from
some plain object or obstruction, Curves
‘without reason are a deformity. /
t curves approaching ang
oided, and longer and mo
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
makes the disease highly contagious,
large bushes if applied with a force |
constituents are well
“balanced that it is preferred to other
results are obtained. Theoil is
stead of linseed cake, for then the whole |.
of the oil is obtained. Linseed contains
portion of the problem will be solved.
buminoid matter which is found in the
small quantity of phosphate well dis-
tributed through the heap. Stable ma- |
5. In out trees, observe care-
fully what their effect will be in future
years when they spread abroad ther
branches.
6. Leave a part of the grounds un-
planted with trees, to allow a sufficient
breadth of lawn in future years, and to
avoid regular irregularity, but prefer a
constant variety or change.
7. Heavy grading is expensive, and a
rounded and graceful variation of surface
may be more pleasing than a level, and
it costs much less.
9. Dwellings may front streets square-
ly, when the streets are important and
the dwellings small; but large mansions,
at a distance from obscure streets, should
show less attention to them.
9. Begin small, and make perfect
work; avoid the mistakes of laying out
great expense; let the lawn be a smooth
curpet, and the walks have perfect finish -
even if small dimensions,
SUBSOILING.
In the June report of the Kansas State.
Board of Agriculture a plan for testing,
the merits of subsoiling was given, which!
was subsequently recommended on this
page as worthy the attention of farmers, :
who may in this way determine without
subsoiling a whole field whether it will
be sufficiently profitable to justify the’
additional expense. Briefly stated, the
plan consists in subsoiling narrow strips,
say about two rods in widths, through a
field and planting the crop across the
strips subsoiled. Then note the differ-
encein yield caused by the subsoiling.
Aveurding So ¢ nate event separt the
theory and practice of subso!
been thoroughly and practically tested at!
Medicine Lodge, Kansas, during the past,
summer by the United Btates Govern.
ment on grounds leased at that place for:
experiment purposes. About forty acres
were plowed and subsoiled to a depth!
of eighteen inches and planted to cane.!
Another piece of ground was plowed
the ordinary depth, but not subsoiled,
and also planted to cane of the
variety. Both fields received the
_care’and cultivation. The grounds which!
were subsoiled yielded about eighteen
tons of cane to the acre; while on the
other’ ground, simply plowed, the best
yield was only about ten tons.
Mr. Mohler, the Secretary of the State:
Board, recommends that farmers who in-_
tend to sow alfalfa should by all means
subsoil. ' If the soil is upland it is’ all
the more important, This plant sinks
its roots down from five to ten more feet
into the subsoil, provided the hard and
dry condition of the subsoil allows. It
is this:deep rod?ing which enables alfalfa
to endure the severest drough, hot winds
or any other calamitous thing that comes
along. When a good stand of this plant
is secured, it will last fora generation or
more, vielding valuable crops each year.
~=New York World. ;
” FARM AND GARDEN NOTES,
‘When you have decided upon the
garden crop for next season select your
seeds and order early those you have to
buy. of
When that
pay you to save the seed. If so don't
think of it after they are thrown away.
Eggs generally bring good prices from
thjs time on and care must be taken in
managing so as to secure as large a sup-
ply as possible. :
Coarse light hay thrown over spinach
will urually carry it through the winter
in open ground, Jrovided water does not
stand on the land.
It is the freezing and thawing in the
months after January 1st that hurts the
strawberry beds—if you have not yet
given them protection do it now. :
Trim: out the rough and tangled
hedge. Burn the i on land
that is to be plowed, or at least where it
will not kill grass in pasture or meadow.
Snyder, Agawam, Stone’s Hardy and
Western Triumph are reported as va—
rieties of blackberries that prove hard-
fest at the Ottawa (Cazads) station
farm. ’
If the quince tres did not bear the last
season, whose fault was it? Did it have
plenty of manure? If not, why not?
Have you given it any for the next
crop
If you have good keeping apples there
is no need of rushing them to market.
There is no doubt but that it will pay
you to hold them till later, if not till
spring. :
If an accurate account was kept, we
think it would show that more house
8 | planta are killed in winter from an over
supply of water than a shortage. See
that yours have just the right amount.
The Rural New Forker calls attention
to the Palouse apple, a seedling of great
hardiness, a good keeper and fine as re-
gards quality. The original tree was
raised from seed brought from Illinois
in 1879 by George Ruedy, of Colfax,
ashington. a
Pumkins are easily injured by freezing,
and much valuable feed is thus lost every
fall for lack of care. If put in a barn
basement they may be kept until January,
and s0 long as they make a cheap,
rich food for milch cows, especially if
the seeds are removed before they are
fed. The seeds are diuretic and decrease
milk flow. : a
Some’ years ago, when grafting the
grape was first advocated as a means of
protecting certain yarieties against the
‘phylloxera, the editor of the Rural New
Yorker tried many experiments. He
now says *‘but one method proved prac.
ticable, viz., cleft-grafting in early
spring below the surface and heaping
the earth about the stock, after they had
been firmly bound together without the.
use of wax.” chee :
Peas when grown as a field crop should
be sown about four inches deep, which
can be done with a seed drill, or by
sowing upon the surface and then plow-
ing four inches deep with narrow furrows.
They yield about 14 tons of seed to the
acre, which, when ground, make oné ot
the best grains for stock feeding, and
particularly for milch cows. Two
ounds of pea meal
fine squash is used it may:
HOUSEHOLD MATTERS.
2 PERFUME POR GLOVES.
Mix two ounces of spirits of wine with
four minims of extract of ambergris. If
the’insides of the gloves are rubbed with
a small piecs of cotton wool which has
been previously dipped in the mixture,
it will give them a pleasant-end lasting
perfume.—New York World.
TO SPONGE CLOTH.
All heavy wool cloth for gowns, cloaks
or jackets should be sponged before cut-
ting. This prevents shrinking in damp
weather and the showing of spots of
water. To sponge cloth, cotton cloths,
referably pieces of sheets, are wrung
ni in cold water and spread smoothly
on the right side of 'the.goods till it is
entirely covered. The goods themselves
are then rolled up and left twenty-four
hours with the damp cloth in them.
Care should be taken that the damp cot-
ton is free from wrinkles and that the
rolling is even, else the wrinkles will
‘themeelves in the woolen cloth and
are difficult to remove.—8¢. Louis Re- %
public.
DON'T MEND YOUR GLOVES WITH SILE. *
, It is a wery common habit, but a great
mistake, to mend gloves with silk, as
the silk will cut the kid more than fine
cotton thread, thus showing the mend
far more plainly. For the same reason,
mceording to a correspondent of the
‘\Housekespers' Weekly, it will not hold the
of the kid so firmly, but instead
.cut through in time. You will no-
tice that all kid gloves are sewed with
understand the difference in the materia}
and use the most satisfactory. Thread
of all.shades, especially put up in twists
for glove mending, can be boughtfor a
trifle. If a glove is badly torn or rippel
‘the rip up as carefully as you can, tak
mg up very little of the kid as you ac
80. Neat glove mending, is a nice art,
and worthy the consideration of every
economical woman. :
A DAINTY PINCUSHION. =
_ A dainty pincushion is in the shape of
o sofa, writes a correspondent. The
foundation is cut out of cardboard.
The pieces are sewed together, the head.
being higher than the end piece. Before
the pieces are put together they are cove
ered. The one that I saw was covered
with crimson plush; a puffing around
the edge was composed of crimson silk
and finished with a narrow gold cord.
‘Where buttons wculd fastén down the
seat of the sofa pins were used instead—
wkitcheaded ones. The legs of the sofs
are on four large-headed pins, whoet
heads form the feet. Af the head of the
sofa is a hittle emery cushion of sili stael
{ull of many colored pins. ' At the fool
a régeptacle for pina,
ing pig rpm dy but I shall
; y- 4 pillow into a needle book
and fill the bolster with emery powder.
be used in the construction of this
unique pincushion,
of my sofa so that it can be raised, and
inside thread and thimbles can be kept.
—Detroit Free Press.
RECIPES,
I shall fix the sea)
GN
Of course any combination of colors cas.
Bread Oake—Two cups of sugar, tws
cups of bread dough, two eggs, one
of butter or dripping, one teaspoont
of cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg and sods,
- one cup of raisins,
Brown Bread—Two and one-half
cupfuls of Indian meal, one and one-half *-
cupfuls of flour, one pint of sour milk,
one cupful of molasses, half a teaspoons
ful of salt, a heaping teaspoonsul of sods.
dissolved in hot water. Beat the mix.
ture well and put in a greased basin,
steam three hours and then put it in the
oven for half an hour. Bn
Corn Meal Rolls—About five or six
P. M. make corn meal mush. To one
quart when hot stir in half a cupfal of Ha
butter. When cool enough, add a cap--
ful of good yeast, cover and leave in a.
warm place for about three hours; then
3
stir in sifted wheat flour to make as
stiff as dough, and leave until mon
Then make them into
rise in tins before baking.
Golden’ Pudding—Half a pound of
bread crumbs, a quarter of a pound of
suet, a quarter of a pound of
a quarterof a
eggs; wix the suet and bread crumbs im
a basin, finely minced; stir all the in.
gredients well: together; beat the egge
intoa froth; when well mixed putinto a
mold or buttered basin, tie down with &
floured cloth and boil two hours. Servs
with sauce. :
Mrs. Raymond's Corn Bread—Use ons
quart of sour ‘milk, two teapoonfuls of
rolls and let them. 2
pound of sugar, fous
V
soda dissolved in hot water,one-half tea. =
spoonful of salt, one-half cupful of New
Orleans molasses, five cupfuls of Indian
meal (yellow), three cupfuls of rye flour,
(wheat flour can be substituted, but the
bread is not as sweet). Stir well to.
gether and if not thick enough add
more meal.
and put the mixture in and
hours; then putit in the oven for three.
quarters of an hour. :
Grease a two-quart
steam three
Turkey Scallop—Take a quantity of
cold turkey and chop tine; put a layer of
bread crumbs in the bottom of a buttered
dish, and moisten with a little milks
then add a layer of turkey with bits of
‘the dressing and small pieces of the buf
ter on top, sprinkle with pepper and
salt: then another layer of bread crumbs,
and so on till the dish is nearly full; add
a little boiling water to the gravy left
over, and pour it on the turkey; them
for a top layer crust, beat two eggs, two
tablespoonfuls of milk, one of meited
‘butter, a little salt, and cracker crumbs.
sufficient to make thick enough
spread on with a knife; put bits of
ter over and bake three-quarters