The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, October 08, 1896, Image 4

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How It 1s Mads In Ons of New Jersey's
Wig Fuetoriine- Deep Secrets of the Bum | : it Pent ;
| ; the memory of Mojo John Andre, who,
raised by his 1 rL nt an early pericad | 0
of Be, tothe pach of adjutant prarral |
| ness 4 Bit of History About & Fumo
| Enpibh Swace.
New Jersey is the home of the toon
tomato plant atiaivs its highest state of
| perfection snd produces a froit so Jus
cious, red aud round ma to justify the
old English pene of love apple’ to
which the French still oling, wlling it
pomme 4 smonr. The tomate plant be
ing a mative of America, and the name
coming from the Indien wird ‘tumal,”
pit is fisting that tomato catobup should
hun!
rhi ’
ngaally danger:
the runways that there is
en walking into them and
buliets, arrows or drop sticks
odd things one meets in |
fide the inclosore id ar
wok Jike a fine resting
Beyond the plank is
smelling meat, burned
her bail smitable for
Ug
st such contrivances, for
t steps on the plank has
by the sproon stick
iw bard to bnsld, bat it
of traps for large
of inclosure, It is
Yat wut starving In
d to rach the batt of 8
Lad by ten Rus
Iv. Onber sien
in mink etd
ae ik Faia oF
fp Ele pains wene
A heats’ pgeks
Tia to 1 edad. RR
act that such 1oen some:
their ton hsp wpa
ir hy the stoat sep.
i le, Afters
bead down.
oh the arrow
be on every fable in the land.
Widesproading acres are devoted in
Jirsey exclusively to the culture of fo
sirved for tomato éatchup. There are
jarge faotovies in which eatchop making
is the chief industry. A razidom visit to
ome of these factories is emagh to con
vince the owner of the most jaded pal-
ate that there are flavors yot worth tast-
ing. Tomatoes are put up in nearly half
| that of & certain famous English swnce
the sonntry,'' but the product hax heen
| o changed and improved by experiment |
that the old woman hepwlf would be
foreed to adieit that she had not attain.
ed the highest rank in ber art,
The best efforts of at linet two skilled
man iin one of the factories have teen
devoted to improving the flavor of the
Leatehey, bat the result of their Inbors can
te obtained by the gepersl publie nly
in the finished prodoot. Their processes
carefully locked up in their breasts
both of them shumid dis roddenly, the
world would mise a distinotive produoet
of the culingry art. The smperintendent
cf the factory is ono of these men. He
probably knows as mach about prescry-
ing fruits and making sances as any
wan in the United States—and maybe
more than avy other man. He tells sn
interesting story abont the Lunoos Fng-
lish sunce before mentioned,
The makers of the svace did sn ence
other manufacturers imitated the flavor,
the bottles, the labels and so forth, bat
‘nobody succeeded in making sagon that
was just like it. The rival manufactur-
ws shooseded in getting decisions in
sams pame and even to have similar
soats-of-arms und labels, bat the name
6 day the foreman of the big works
quarrel with the provrietors and
narkeb & sance 80 Bonrl; like
hile sind then he suddenly retired
the business, closed his works,
ed making save and lived in lux
wafter. Nobody bas any posi
#4 to the manner in which
is wealth so suddenly, bat
vo tome just a little too much
and that surplas amount of sali-
sroonatie. A whiff of t
dinner is almost as good
is reserved for the catohup making It
e uitruised. This is placed in a
,** which separates the sisi and
w through to be made into catehop |
refining process is not enough.
water is separated from it, and
pulp is then placed in large,
ty scaled caus, where it is
shipped by the ton —New York
1 | to, and especially of the patiousl sane
| of Ameriea--tomuato eatchep, Here the
matoos, the choicest of which are ro
a hundred inocmceivable ways, but
chiefly in eatehup. The cooking ie done
on scientific principles. The origingl rec:
pe for the estchnp produced, anlike
probably came “trom an old worn ir
are carefully gnarded secrets, kept most
of the origina) makers was a gosrautes
| of the peen!iar quality of their sauce.
Fie began waking and plac {
I that connoisenrs could not
spark The foreman kopt this
Near th f the sooth wall of
the nave is & monsment to Major Aare
of Revolotionney mete. The vig Jorg
inscription upin it Fe fou, Sacred to
of the Briveh foiven In Amovios
etoviacd in ant hat hadrons
enterprise, foil © to Bis veal for
his kang av ovis a iq of ee
tober, TTR0, 00 puoversaily below A
And pitaends 0 (he army in which be
served ans aoe wf evan bey hos ifvaa
Al gt the Rose of the mrnnment,
wh vu aa myo Gh met secant the wall
are need
from the ps
fatios of ; or
eral Viasii oy fms the night bodore bis
exec tion. eave With whih tos
| headin of thee. [oars could be broken |
off has beens t4o grost a temptation to
relia Bunters, and riost of the heads
| have been knocked off and stolen. That
such vandalinn iv not wholly modern is
shown from the fact that Charles Lamb
writes of the defacing of this very mon.
gment in this way in pis “Essays of
Elin’ Southey, the poet, when a boy,
was a pupil at the Westminster sebicd
Laster in life he wat exceedingly er
tive in regard to his political princi-
ples, and for a time a sericns (marcel
existed between bimeeil and Lath, be
eanee the iastter, speaking in rogurd fo
this injery fo Andre's mopwisent, de
scribed it as the ‘wanton mischief of
some schoolboy. fired perhapn with
yaw notions of transatismtic fraddom.
Then, sddressing Southey, be added,
“The mischiof was done about the time
that you were a eobolar there. Do yon
know anything about the unfurtanate
relic?’ :
There is pow fastened open the wall
Rect Eo Tow
6 et
wreath of oak liaves which Dean Stan
Jey, when he vizited America, gathered
near the spot on ths bank of the Hadson
river where Andre was executor. Al
though Andre died in 1780, it was pot
antil 1821 that, at the request of the
Duke of York, his bones worn eshund
and taken to England to be bred in
the abbey. The box ia which they were
placed for the voyags is still preserved
in the orstory over Bt lsiip's chapel,
“where the was figures are kept —Max
Bennett Thrasher in St. Nichols
Antesle fHnstons,
Birds are perhaps more comnionly the
victims of illusions than other nnirsals,
their stupidity about their egw being
quite remarkable. Last year, for in-
stance, & ben got into the pavilion of a
Jadice’ golf clob and began to sit on a
golf ball in a corer, for which it made
& nest with 8 couple of pocket handker-
chiefs. But many qu de are pot
only deceived fir the moment hy reflec.
tions, shadows wad such unrealities, bot
often seem victims to iliosions Jargely
bravest of animals when face to face
with dangers which it can enderstand,
puch as the charge of sn elephant or a
wild bosr st bay. Yet the courageous
the dangers bo kpows, is a prey toa
hundred terrors of the imsrinution doe
to illusions, mainly those of wight, for
shying, the minor effect of thew illu
sions, and “bolting,’” in which panic
are caused, as a rule, by mistikes as to
* what the horse sees, and not by mixin.
_ terpretation of what be hears. It is no-
. which shy usunlly start away from ob
| ably doe to defects in the vision of one
aa pleasing to the eye aa catchup that
oe to Harwich, they usually ofjected to
was explained on the hypothesis that
de lippe were a Chiappini. Iewanot think
i fat. The two latter were, however, dew
| jah Boorbons Obesity has been an oft
| family ever since Elisaleth Farnese
gains complete possession of his soul,
tioed, for instance, that may horsey
jects on ome side more frequently than
from objects on the other, This is prob
or other eye. ;
In pearly all eases of shying the horse
takes fright at some unfamiliar objest,
‘though this is commonly quite harm-
tantly bocories an illosion, #8 inter:
pretes as somedbing eles, and it is a on:
ries question in equine neuropathy to
know what it is thus the horse figures
thews harmless objects fo bx When
Russian ponies first began to be shipped
near & donkey. This reloctance
the panies seldom saw donkeys in Ros
sia apd mistook them for besrs —Lon
don Spectator.
Where does the Doe d'Orlenns get his
fat? From the Spanish and Neapolitan
Bourbons, of whom be ia noguestionably
& descendant, even though Louis Fhi-
of any French Bourbons, except Louis
XVI, hia sister Clotilde and Philippe
Egalite's father and the Comte de
Chambord and his sister, who were very
scended from the Neapolitan and Span-
recurriog isalady of the Hpumish royal
married Philip V. She was the heiress
of the fattest Italian that probably ever
Jived. He was a prince fur a Barnum |
show whose legs had to be propped ap
by backram and whalebone chases to pre
vent them overlapping bis feet. Fatty
Charles 111 of Spain and destroyed the
activity of the late Queen Christina,
grandmother of the Centos: de Paris
[Jue Isabelia strongly inherits the
family failing. The Comtesse de Paria
makes a brave fight against the heredi-
tary diathesis by Bantingiziag at Mar-
jenbad and on the Asbergne moors,
where she tires out all ber gamckeep
ers. ~London Truth
Canse and Effect.
“mid 1 hear that your mule was
struck by lightning, Eph?’
“Yass, sah; dar was a powahful bolt
kit de mule right ahind his cabs
“hid it kill hm?’
sto'm. TV —Dotroit Free Press
1 ewes These faojees |
of the nave, above the monnment, » |
Jess, such sx a wheelbarrow upside |
} dows, a freshiy felled log or u piecs of
| paper rolling before the wind, This in-
stant
degeneration impaired the wefolness of |
“No, sah; but it deme broke up de |
On omy gaat
PON A
40 ppm paar 's
CF Avr ad na 48
Va twatn, om 100 Bg
shyt
Fron het thy pi
Banton giles
A Oucstion That Is Gften Gat of Pines
and LU anscessay. :
The old hyn in San Tavior's Orig
inal Poems’ bigianing with © Who mao
to help me when I fell" ought to have
a provisional clause added to in Tae
person who hustens to help a su Jorer
who has been shocked by a fall alsouid
not say a single word. Of conve the
benevolent bystander is brimful of
questions: “Where are you hart?’
Justly the inssne request to know
whether yon can fall down as fight of
$0 steps or from a pinzaa 10 foes above
ground amd pot be dsmaged any more
(ban if you had thrown yourself on a
down pillow only a foot away.
Of course you are hort, and the porve
shook ix so groat that any sori of goes
tion, even if “they” mil fetoh bot
“Have you spraiped yoor ankle?’ and |
water, is an additional blow 00 the nervy.
(me system. You are suffering. per
days in #1 Nicholas
BACKWOODS SURGERY.
Fremting a Didecation with - Pulley snd
wists samrigery as hus been described,”
says a frecuenter of the region, ‘wos
#go. The man was not an Indian, as the
far up loudings while the engineer went
der ont of joint
“Hers was a dilemma The other
you with goestions while every power
of your budy is endeavoring to regain
self comtrol. You ought Bot fo Ruewor,
You wonld like to scremm that “it
hurts’ a hahdred tires mors for being
summoned 0 speak and to dingaose
yourself,
All instructions in the line of "First
aid to the injured’ should begin with,
“fis perfectly silent when yom run
Jift or help & poyson who bas been
stil] partly dased with the trem ndoos
shook.’ Let it be for the safferer to
sxy, “Oh, my head!” or “Oh, my leg!”
or back, He will indicate as soon as it
ig pecossary the injured part, but mean
wile you ars driving him noariy fran
tic by asking about it. Thess simple yet
{portant directions do not sem to be
imoressed ppon the average heipfal
rid,
a knowledges of a tourniquet made from
& stiok and a pocket handkerchief. Hod
water, of course, is required for all
bruises and sprajos, bac jet it be
brought withoot asking. The relief to
the vietita of an accident in having
actly what to dois very great Any
ne who *“ haa been there'’ knows it ail
Yet how quickly ix it forgotten when
| we ran to Jift ap somebody else and be
gin to pelt him with: “Whera did it
hurt yoo!" “Arm you burs Phils
Aelphia Revord.
Red Turties In a Bolling Spring.
That portion of southern or lower
appears to be situsted dimetly over a
mod and water to boil ae if in a cai
dron. At one place on the Half Acre
thers are over 100 boiling springs and
bot mud geysers on a plat of groand
that is not of greater extent than a oom.
mon eity myoars. The chief spring in
thie queer aggregation of beilmg and
spouting jess of mud and water in called
the Fountain of the Boiled Turtles
on account of ite enrics habit of corn
sionally ejecting nawmbers of small rd
is 236 degrees, 14 degrees higner than
ander ordinary M.Gospheric pressure
Notwithetanding the fact that the tem-
perature is saMicient ti» bail meat per
actly within a fow minutes, the small
pod turtles spoken of live asd breed
there just as the ordinary variety docs
in waters of comuvion lakes, rivers and
other strensns. The spring is called the
Fountain of Boiled Tarties because
the quecr, bard sheliad creatures whieh
inhabit it have the appearance of being
public.
Monkeys Have No Fleas
It is curious that monkeys should be
thought to be infected with what nat
uralists call the pulex irvitans and
As every soologist is aware, monkers
have neither fleas nor any other pars
site whatsoe ser; In which, of course,
they differ vastly from man.
As a matter of fact, wien monkeys
begia to pick each other about in the
friendly way we have all oleerved, they
merely detach bits of hardened sehace-
ous neater which has been excrsted by
the glands, and the flen idea is entirely
fabulous, —-Pearson’s Weekly,
saked the late caller al the restaurant
“Ita aweitaer.
“What, you impudent rascal! 1 ask
me “it's white, wir." Why, I'l break
every bone in your —
And a prompt explanation from the
proprietor at this point was all that pre
vented a tight. — Detroit Free Presa
Nia Indwesment to Steal.
“Say, Tradeley, why does your floor
ter’
“PBeepase things are so cheap there
that thaeves prefer to buy and bave the
goods delivered. Detroit Free Fross
The first commercial paper in this
country was the Boston Prices Current
and Marine Intelligencer, Consmercial
snd Mercantile, issued in that oily
Bept. 3, 1780.
The 3 cent silver piece weighed
318 375 grains
hisps, too much to speak, yet they pelt
Ap for half in bour, sod the injurid man |
knocked down or who has fallen snd is !
Tact, of all things, is a8 DOCHISATY 8
wwift and noiseless helpers about him or
her—ataointely silent, pot knowing €x- |
Culifornin culled Hell's Half Acre |
sabatratum of fire, which csaws the |
tartlen The temperature of this spring |
the temperature requirad to boll water |
cooked perfectly done —St. Lenis Be |
what ordinary pe ow a8 the flea. |
bat ordinary people kao flea. {strapped to his mother's buck his «|
“What kind of cheese is this, waiter?’ |
what kind of cheese it is, apd you tell |
walker never watch the bargain coas- |
{ memberanf the party wood not He back
| wan in groat pain. The guide was a man
‘of expedients He got a rope and tied |
| pie patient securely to a post. Then be |
| tied another one around the man's wrist |
“Probably as quesy a pieos of back. | oo
that performed by a Moosehead lake |
guide known as old Sabattus 20 years |
mekname mmplies tat a Yankes, ope of |
those rough fellows formerly chmractor- |
istic of that locality. This gable wan |
eft cn oa inke steamboat at one of the |
ashore with the company. A man named |
Meservey came aboard and in fooling |
around the host managed to tumble |
down into the fire pit and put his shoal |
{snd hitched the Joose end of it to a pui- |
Liey of the engine. He manage) some- |
how to turn on stein, and the poly |
| hegran to wind op the rope. It drew the
| arm out tight in beauntifel shapes and
z
3 3
its meket. Then Sabattus jumped
meanwhile was slowly but surviy poll
{ soreasned and gaped for heath.
“2atuttus danced around like s wild
and, jumping for that, he cat the ropa!
and saved a dreadful catastrophe. This
Dwbo bad gone shore came rushing back
poreama, It was some years sftvrwand,'’
says tao mworator, “thet I wis present
when a lot of summer ocampany arrived
at Gireeriviiie Sabattus was there, to,
‘Are mod you the man (hat practices
~ Low iston Journal
No Autographs For Ser,
A certain family whose borne is in
employ kx onck whose ways arg invari
fer present home one-half of the mis
has diner beem late at Myrtle Villa, ov
the joint ander or over done, nifher bas
But, treasure that she is, she cme near
clone of her very first month's tay.
Cha thie marming of the day upon which
quested her to step into the study where.
a fow woments she roshed from the
stody to the kitchen, where she had
left her ouistress, and in less tinie than,
it takes to parrste had given that asion.
ished Judy notice. 4
“Pint whatever is the matter, Mary?’
inquired her mistress. What has voor
master suid cr dope {0 annoy roa”
Mary ad she flogrished a chek in bert
minteess’ face, "hut bes ony gives me
this for a memth's slavery. Not ma |]
~ Amusing doorual
pt a
The Hard Life of an Africss Baby.
1 sedi at Chikwa's that she little liaby
rough and touble Boe of it buat takes
mother gos to the Seids with baby ox
her bank. hidw abopt fer bears ip thu
general gard oing; carries huge jams of
water on her bead; scrapes Bim repest
esily as she bends and enters the narrow
Jow denrwars of native buts] gives hi
a thorough shaking ss sbe vigoromaly
ponds corn with a long wooden pestle
takes him by the wrist, docks ban in
fhe stream 011 be iv nearly safeated
nd thin spreads him on a pat to dry,
} mentary.
i a RA 55m AAA SI
Prissaee on 5 Blepale Thre
teen made as to the air pressure io bu
eyvie tires As the kinyele stood nlc
the prossure on the frout tis was i)
pounds and on the year tire 28 pots.
When the rider mounted, the Jnoreas
in the pressure in the front wheel was
wot perceptible, and in the rear whee;
rider weighed 175 pounds
sim on
stoppest by uming a soft lead pepeil
all the cracks and crevices that conn be
reached.
era opm
falis between 2 and 4 a. m., the proba:
bility is for cooler weather, with shows
j irs.
| presently the joint ssapped bak into
around to shut off seam while the pal 1
Jey kept on winding “Holy Moses
gasped the guide excitedly, ‘how does |
it go? I dem’t kuow where itis | can’t
stop the blanked thing." And the paliey |
Fav
: sd Sua sm pom
ing Mestrvey to pieces. His eyes wim | 0
sticking out of their sockets, and be |
man, not knowing what to do, when bw |
happened to spy » hatchet lying near |
was dome jose as the party of city folky
snd presently a distingnished locking |
| man, ove of Whe newoomers, wimt op lo |
him and said with a meaning mnie, |
surgery by semin?’ and Sabattus bad to
admit that he was ‘that same feller.’
the subarie of London have in thir
ably so methodical and her cooking #o |
pear perfection that wers she fo leswe |
trewers in the district would by eager (0 |
secure her services. Never hy any chanics |
any policeman crossed ite throshodd
to menking 8 change of residence at the
her wages been due ber migtresn reo |
ber master was waiting to pay her. In}
“Ha hasn't ssid puthas, replied |
iafn't po ortygeepb colivetor, 1 aloe”
ik xl] good naturedly, and one bears |
| very little crying in the village. The
hot sai, wosding, boeing and dong! |
Sil interesting experiments havi |
PURINE +4 +3 «| HVE
it was loss than balf a pound The |
If an oil can isnot at banil to raped |”
a creaking hinge, the peiseoan oftm be
Moisten the lead point and rub it inte |
In summer time, when the new moon |
Homily ¥,
Je
Hit win fie oy
Pas siaw ne § mnt
Uhaeg sh al endl ple
IEEE Tee ;
TEs ARRIVES
Lela ey eis
AL Ls
Arma Bord wt © Aide my
Liar sais a
. Gem pact a ix
Projet son
- Be Sheuter and Th
Posy WEE wi Hue
Ho Carwensvilie snd Oleariieie.
house nd IaHe tickets gots or By
Wey AmTne al Tomiie pr yan—ge
EOF SMCIeNL Lins aire nd fol information
Cai Gn 0) Tees, on
Mi oderger, Agent, imBols.
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Froliv. Niw York
again Fon ska ain
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muy, 0 yo = aa :
seagtios traveling vis Philadelphia on 08
mown, vans from Witimmsporl, willchangs
curd at Uolasabis Ave, Pidsdeiphis.
dE
en to thy bost alarmed at Moservey's ol
per nx TEvANIA RATLROAD. .
Ue RPERCT JUNE I6 9,
6:55 ». 10.3 New
Train 4, duily for Sunbury & -
WESTWARD
HEA M.o~Tradi §, daily sEospl Sunes y
O50 AM ~Prinu mv way in Kris mau Si
PEE ER cau sie meng
a hy Sain) <Rcupt Sustug, £3
wah Lg te FOR
Fu THE EAST AND
ANAS uve. ta
Wastitagion 7:30 a bg nelly Bgl
Flimmstmron a. me dally axoepl Sun
~
many a pets: a, Jobe
erg wt J a. Bh, arvVEng at Clermont a% :
eihy af Jonnsecvarg st elu me SR
Rada way ai L300 soos
Cred sw > © I AE SRS SRA AD RAN ERG
RUvAY AND CLEARFIELD BB
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
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BE EBEEw ewe
grougeeses:
FOR FINE JOB WORK
CALi. AT THIS OFFICR