Newspapers / Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.) / Sept. 29, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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of HI I 1 11 SalisDnry Troll. PUBLISHED ETEKT TTTXTBSDAT BY j . j; STEWART, Editor and Proprietor. SALISBURY, N. C. FBICE OF SUBSCRIPTION t :" ne Year. ......... . ... $1 50 ix Months ........ .......... 1 00 "Three Months 50 lf Advertising Rates by Contract, reasonable. Entered in the Post-Office at Salisbury h$ secoad-class matter. The American Bible Societv, having from experience thai the S,0j0,- Say-school childrsa within toe " Jnfliisnri" Pirn nnfhJnT fnr ocided; :nn ',. to try the ile to every kes with l h saul to be Herald thiolcs I.UAl SU. Ji l'" " J3s' " r ... . i ti, n, juntry is frying t0 devHe !f preventing tne exporia- .,V. ailirap hnt t hat Will L , unless emigrati is pre The peasant has n make his :J.mll rmn' nd when h ' Tri h pan. ; foreign fellow creatures the other day,"" not mere 'sand- ' . v 0 . V y inca oi - tnem 'ads of ' advertise- i to trousers, and ud cement on their let on sixty, men. Vwill be Taid. oi paid, servnl area, ays ) .rica,' v - by ri l itbc .biorbe rivers werb a dc , the cities e land be h$ United one of his tion made rJ respect- ,1 'almost "e howling L- .A Commi ul acts'hefcre f iC her of valuao'2 threatened 8 r nblic Ian--' S A general L'ctioa of titn ;t:rt:.- ftsr says in q the sufcject, Inuunl', report, r tiaably de- 11 be ade hith forest lei. in whi-J t nrovision 1 i .V.a f ti removal )V necessl a'lj of indU njaes, etcj: y and improVe - J, ani - requests tion , lumber co iipP1!1 ' - m 1 lLL ' 'ts. Only -ic lal settlers, locate fuel, buildings, x . M its should be sr yi "persons lor er for all other poses whatever should be denied and aalty for wast 3 should h. ' provided ' those v?ho despoil the ptfc iand of trees. The commisaioneris undoubt- ily right In this matter and 8U3. lined by public sentiment, a Vpng adequate law on thjubject ha Jt been long ago enacted ij0ae of rjsverics u w 0.- sjsieoo. J 'leaflets, hajtl he ChTcafvfA ; iving anB 7 v h ?. lain- 'the ut lent ,ar ions of in iinhe "Express trains in Russia, rarely travel faster thaiy' twenty-two miles an hour. These are very alow expresses indeed, yet a railway uard avers that the fastest trains are always the safest. The Minneapolis Journal is convinced that the most idiotic college yell is proba bly that of the senior class of the Kansa State University. It is: "Johnny took a 'bite, Susie took a chew, jaw hawk, class of '92." Rock, chalk, The American Dairyman boasts that the dairy industry of the United State?, notwithstanding its low average profit, is more valuable than all our gold and silver mines; and, it adds, if all the cows were as valuable as the majority of those which have been tested the yearly output would be more than trebled. , The rediscovery of a new species of fish known as the tile fish, which is said to be valuable for its food qualities, come, at a time when, in the opinion of the New. York Sun, it will be welcome, es pecially if the United States Fish Com mission is able to propogate the species artificially, so as to stock some of the worn out waters around our Eastern coast. It is strange that we have no salmon in the Hudson, or only a few very rarely. Shad, once so plentiful here, seem to be disappearing. Many other valuable fishes are decreasing in numbers from year to year, owing to tho furious onslaughts . made oa them by menhaden trawlers and other fishermen who use catch-all-nets. Peihaps the tile fish may be able to survive these net?. It is a good omen, at any rate, that from the time it was first recognized, in 1S79, the tile fish has only once in 1832 been found in larxre numbers. ' ; The statistics presented by Poor's Manual off American Railroads, show a total mileage January 1, 1S93, of 170,601 miles, the increase in the quarter century being 131,351 miles, or 435 per cent. In the past twenty-five years the mileage of railroads in New England, where the development has been without specula tive feature, has increased from 3933 miles to 6360. In the six States com prising the middle group the increase has been from 9190 miles to 20,428 miles, and in the South from 9940 miles 110 mUesyrhroughout the West es, fromrthe- Ohio and Missis- .qn the east to the Rocky the west, -Qmprising a ?6,339' squarNmiles in gjrogress of th '..Nation pidYd its incsase in urked,"the railway has Vrument ppening urv Settlement, anuiir n Wa of transportation, with- lese lands woul l be still Jc anA nnrrr4l'if'Mvo Tn 1RK"7 r. r r rro only.l5,777miles of railroad h States, against 2Q0,553 miles in Of this mileage ,031y a small por- i 1867 was west of the IMississippi, sthcre are now 50,000 miles of 1867 the mileage in the States auiuu coaau.r was noi; iu ioji, miles. The rate of increase in eage of , our railroads -in the pe .med, vast as it ha3 been, has been eclipsed by their operations of ds. In 1866, from carefully pre- ;data, the tonrjage of our railroads not exceed 47.872,500 tons, the ge, for 4hat year beinsr 36,801 In 1891 .their tonnage equalled 3,609 tons for 170,601 miles of $2Q d ton, the value of the merchandise .moved in 1SS6 equalled f 937i450,020 of that moved in 1891, 7,972,180. .S.onij the curiosities of crime, says Once-A-Wcek; is an analysis recently made, by a physician who has long been attached to s -great prison, of the effect of years upon wrongdoers. According to him, nearly one-third of the convicts sent ipthe last sixty years to the East ernPenuentiary tf Pennsylvania were between twenty and twenty-five years of nil3wv fc"S"me ineir crimes were com mhiere ere .is a marked diminution in the proportrosof ciiminals among persons between twenty-five and thirty and a still greater one between thirty and thiity-five. The t natural inference is that, crime in general is the result of imperfection and lack of self-control ratter than that of deliberate intention an inference which ought to be very cheering to the moralist and religious teacher as well as to the families which contain troublesome members. The physician's deductions do not agree with those of the police officials, who almost everywhere insist that "once a criminal, always a criminal," but perhaps in the Pennsylvania institution, where the ob servations were made, the treatment of the inmates is not of a nature to confirm all their bad habits and teach them new ones, which is alleged to be the result of State Prison life m general. The authority alluded to say further that the crimes committed by middle-aged per-, sons are mostly those which can be most secretly and safely followed, and that the offenses of later life are those which may in general be attributed to de terioration of the mental and moral machinery; a large proportion of em bezzlers and defaulters are men of middle-age and good standing in the community, tut they are are also persons who fcae "thought crooked" so long that they are powerless at last to resist temptation when the mind as well as the body begins to feel the weakening in- fl. f Rem. THere is material ior a Pat manv sermons ia these facta and 9 m ftzures. AS YOU CO THROUGH UFE. Don't look for tho flaws as yon go through life. And even when yon find then It is wise and kind to be somewhat blind. And look for the virtues behind them. For the cloudiest night has a hint of light Somewhere in its shadows hiding; It is better by far to hunt for a star. Than the spots on the sun abiding; The current of life runs every way To the bosom of God's great ocean. Don't set you force 'gainst the river's course And think to alter its motion. Don't waste a curse on the universe Remember it lived before yoa; Don't butt at the storm with your puny iorm But bend and let it go o'er you. 'The world will never adjust itself ; . " To suit your whims to the letter; , Some things, must go wrong your whole life long. And the sooner you know it the better. It is folly to fight with the inSnite. And go under at last in the wrestle; The .wiser man shapes into God's plan. As the water shapes into a vessel. Ladies Home Journal. TEMPEE. ANDEMONIUM raging I Chaos turned inside out 1 What is the rea son a man can't be allowed to sleep peaceably the morning, without this ever lasting racket raised , about his ears? Chil dren crying doors slamming I will know the reason of all this up roar!" Mr. Darcy shut the dpor of his bed foom with considerable emphasis, and went straight to the breakfast parlor. All was bright, and quiet, and pleasant there; the anthracite snapping and spar kling in the grate, the china and silver neatly arranged on the spotless damask cloth, and the green parrot drowsily winking his yellow eye3 in the sunny glow- of the eastern window Bedlam plainly wasn't located just here, and Mr. Darcy went stormily upstairs to the nursery. Ah I the field of battle was reached at last. Mrs. Darcy sat" in her little low chair before the fire, trying to quiet the energetic screams of an eight-months' old scion of the house of Darcy, while an other a rosy boy of five years lay on his back, prone on the floor, kicking .and crying m an ungovernable fit of childish passion. "Mrs. Dar cy!" enunciated Luke, with slow and ominous precision, 'may I inquire what all this means? Are you aware that it is fifteen minntes past nine o'clock? Do you know that breakfast is waiting?" "I know, Luke I know," said poor, perplexed, Mrs. Darcy, striving vainly to li '.J the rebellious urchin up by one arm. lyome, Freddy, you're going to begcod, now, mamma is sure, and get up to be washed." "No o o," roared Master Freddy, performing a brisk tattoo on the. carpec with, his heels and clawing the air furiously. Like an avenging vulture, Mr. Darcy pounced abruptly down upon his son and heir, carried him promptly to the closet, and turned the key upon his screams. A tall, blue-eyed young lady, with a profusion of brfght chestnut hair and cheeks like rose velvet, was already at the table when they descended, by name Clara Pruyn, by lineage Mrs. Darcy's sister. She opened her blue eyes rather wide as the two entered. "Good gracious, Evy, what's the matter?" "Notbin,g,M answered Luke, tartly. "Mrs. Darcy, you appear to forget that I have eaten no breakfast." "Something is the matter, though," said Clara, shrewdly. "What is it, Evelyn? Has Luke had one of his tan trums V Luke, set down his coffee cup with a sharp "clink." "xou use very peculiar expressions, Miss Pruyn." "Very true ones, said Clara, saucily. Evelyn smiled in spite of herself. 'It's only Freddy, who feels a. little cross, ana . "A little cross I" interrupted the in dignant husband. "I tell you, Evelyn, it s quite time that temper was checked. Hang that parrot i What an intolerable screeching he keeps , up ! Mary,' take that bird into the kitchen, or I shall be tempted to wring its neck. Strange that a man can't have a little peace once in a while I What does ail these eggs. Evelyn? I thought I asked you' to' see that they were boiled fit for Christians to eat!" ' Mr. Darcey gave his egg, shell and all, a vindictive throw upon ther grate. Evelyn's brown eyes ' sparkled a little dangerously as she observed the man ceuver, but she made no remark. "And the plates are as cold as a stone, when I've begged, and entreated, and im plored, again and again, that they might be warmed. Well, I shall eat no break fast this morning I" t "Whom will jou punish most?" de manded Miss Clara. "Evelyn, give me another cup of coffee it is perfectly de liehtful." ' Luke pushed his chair back with a vengeance and took up his stand with his back to the tire, botn bands under bis coat tails. Please, sir," said the servant, depre catingly advancing, " the gas bill the man says would you settle it while" "NoP roared Luke tempestuously. "Tell the man to go about his business; I have no small bills this morning, and I won't be so persecuted!" Mary retreated precipitately. Clara raised her long brown eyelids. "Do you ,know, Luke," she said, de murely, 'I think you would feel a great deal better if you would just do as Freddy does lie flat down oa the floor and kick your heels against the carpet for awhile. It's an excellent escape valve when your cnoier gets the better of you.' Luke gave his mischievous sister-in -4aw a glance that ought certainly to have annihilated her, and wai&ed out of the room, closing the door behind him with a bang that would bear no interpreta tion. Then Clara came round to her sister's side and buried her piak face in Evelyn s neck. Don't scold me, Evy, please I know I've been very, very naughty to tease LukeaoP "You have spoken nothing but the truth, said Evelyn, quietly, with her coral lips compressed, and a scarlet spot burning on either cheek. "The remedy needs to be something short and sharp," said Clara, "and the dark closet system certainly combines both requisites. Tears and hysterics are played out long ago in matrimonial skir mishes, you know, Evy. Nonsense I" laughed Mrs. . Darcy, rising from the breakfast table in obe dience to her husband's peremptory sum mons from above stairs, while Clara shrugged hex shoulders and went to look for her work basket. Lnke was b tan ding in front of his bureau drawer, flinging shirts, collars, cr&vats and stockings recklessly on the bedroom floor. "I'd like to know where my silk hand kerchiefs are, Mrs. Darcy l. he fumed. "Such a state as my bureau is in! It's enough to drive a man crazy !" "It's enough to drive a woman crazy, I think 1" said Evelyn, hopelessly stop ping to pick up a few of the scattered articles. "You were at the bureau last, Luke. It is your own fault I" "My fault of course, it's my fault," snarled Luke, giving Mrs. Darcy's poodle a kick that sent It howling to its mistress. "Anything but a womanr's re torting, recriminating tongue. Mrs. Darcy, I won't endure it any longer 1" "Neither will I !" said Evelyn, reso lutely advancing, as , her husband plunged into the closet for his busine ss coat, and promptly shutting and locking the door. "I think I've endured it quite, Ion 2 enough and here's an end to it!" . "Mrs. Darcv. open, that door!" said Luke, scarcely able to credit the evi dence of his own senses. ' i-- "I shall do no such thing," said Mrs. Darcy, composedly, beginning to- rear range shirts, stockings and flannel wrap pers in their appropriate receptacles. "jirs. uar -cyr roared Luke, at a fever heat of important rage, "what on earth do you mean?" "I mean to keep you in that clothes press, Mr. Darcy, until you have made up your mind to come out in a mois amiable frame of mind. If the system succeeds with Freddy it certainly ought to with you ; and I am sure your temper is proving much more intolerable than his!" There was a dead silence of full sixty seconds in the closet, then a sudden burst ot vocal wrath: "Let me out, I say, Mrs. Darcy ! Madam, how dare you perpetrate this monstrous piece of audacity?" "My dear Luke, how "strongly you do remind me of Freddy ! You see there's nothing I have so little tolerance for as a bad temper. It ought to have been checked long ago, only you know" I'm so ridiculously indulgent." Mr. Darcy winced a little at the fa miliar sound of his own words. Tap-tap-tap came softly to the door, Mrs. Darcy composedly opened it, and saw her husband s little office bOy. "Please, mem, there's some gentlemen at the office in a great hurry to see Mr. Darcy. It's about the Applegate will case." Mrs. Darcy hesitated an instant; there was a triumphant rustle in the closet, and her determination was taken. "Tell the gentlemen that your master has a very bad headache, and won't be down town this morning." ' iiUice gnasnea ms teetn audibly as soon as the closing of the door admon ished him that he might do so with safety. "Mrs. Darcy, do you presume to in terfere with the transaction of business that is vitally important, ma'am vitally important?" a r w - j . Mrs. uarcv noncnaiantiy tooK up a little opera air where she had left it, letting the soft Italian words ripple mu sically over her tongue. "Evelyn, dear!" "What is it, Luke?" she asked, mildly. "Please let me out. My dear, this may be a joke to you, but " "I assure you, Luke, it's nothing of the kind ; it's the soberest of serious mat ters to me. It is a question as to whether my future shall be miserable or happy. There was a third interval of silence. Eveiyn, said LiUae presently in, a subdued voice, "will you open the door?" "On one condition only." "And what condition is that?" "Ahl ah !" thought the.little lieuten- ant-general, "he's beginning to enter tain terms of capitulation, is he? On condition," she added, aloud, "that you will break yourself of your habit of speaking crossly and sharply to me, and on all occasions keep your temper." "My temper, ' indeed 1" sputtered Luke. ' ' "Just your temper," returned his wife, serenely. VWill you promise?" Never, madam I .. Mrs. Dare j quietly took up a pair of hose that required mending, and pre pared to leave the apartment. As the door creased on its nioges, nowever, a voice came shrilly through tne opposite keyhole:' - ' "Mrs. Darcy I Evelyn 1 wife I" "Yes!" "Yuu are not going down stairs to leave me in this this Black Hole of Calcutta?" , "I am." - ' ' "Weil, look here hold up I prom ise." "All and everything that I require?' "Yes. all and cverythiDg that you re quire cqnfound it ail 1 Wisely deaf to . the muttered sequel, Mrs. Darcv opened the door, and Luke stalked sullenly out, looking right over the top of her shining brown hair. Suddenly a little detaining nana was laid on his coat-sleeve: "Luke, dear!" "Well?" "Won't won't you give me a kiss?" And Mrs. Darcy burst oui crying on her husband's shoulder. "Well!" ejaculated the puzzled Luke, "if you women aren't the greatest enig mas going. A kiss? Yes, half a dozen of 'em if vou want, you hard-hearted little turnkey. Dn't cry, pet ; I'm not ansrv with vou. althouzh I suppose I" ought to be." "And may I let Freddy out?" "Yes on the same terms that his papa was released. Evelyn, was I very intol erable?" "If you hadn't been, Luke, I never should have ventured on such a violent remedy. "Did I make you very unhappy V "Very." Luke Darcy buttoned up his overcoat, put on his bat, shouldered his umbrella, and went down to the Applegate will care, musing as ho went upon tho new state of affairs that had presented itself lor his consideration. It is more than probable that he left his stock of bad temper in the law buildings that day, for Evelyn and Clara never saw any more of it; and Freddy is daily getting the better of the peppery element in his infantile disposition. New York News. Inventions and Their Date. The bagpipe, the favorite Scotch and Italian instrument, . was invented in Greece 200 B. C. Window glass was in Italy is churches in the eleventh century, in Eng. giish houses in 1557. Gas was first made from coal by Clay ton, 1739, and was first used for il lumination in 1792. - Paper from rags was made in A. D. 1000, the first linen paper in 1319, and from straw in 1800. Chain shot were the invention of Da WUt, the great Dutch Admiral. They were first used in 1666. Watches were first made in Nuretn- burg in 1477, and were called "Nurem berg animated eggs. Air brakes wepe invented by George Westinghouse in 1869, and subsequently often improved. The daguerreotype was .invented by Daguerre, and the first miniatures were produced in 1838. Playing cards were invented for the amusement of the crazy king, Charles VI., of France, in 1380. Church bells were made by Pauhnns, an Italian Bishop, to drive away demons about 400 A. D. Canon were invented in 1330, wert used by the Turks at Adrianople in 1453, were made in England in 1547. , Copper-plate engraving was first done in 1511, wood engraving in 1799, etch ing on metal with acid in 1512. The harvester was invented by Cyru3 McCormick in 1831, and has been im proved by many subsequent inventors. Quill pens were first used A. D. 55o; steel pens were- invented by Wise, of England, 1803, and improved by Gil lott, 1822. Glass mirrors were known in A. J). 23, but the art of making thera-was lost and not rediscovered until 1300, in Venice. The first electric telegraph line tv:? laid in Switzerland by Lesage in 17C . the Morse transmitter was invented I 1837. Air guns were first made by Guar .a' Germany in 1656, and the invenioa h. also credited to Shaw, of AmeticV , in 1845. . . ? ' ' Breech-loading guns were mvnted by Thornton & Hall, 1811. Breech-load-ing cannon were used by tUe Turks in X5I53. v-- -;. '.. " 5 The great anaesthetic,? ; chloroform, was discovered oy uutnne, xodi, ana was first employed in surgical operations in 1846. -mf. Checkers or draughts were known to the ancient Egyptians, and pictures 4000 years old represent a quarrel' over the game. V i Tobacco was taken to Europe by the Spaniards early in the sixteenth century; was introduced into England by Raleigh,; in 1555. $.;::-'-k-: . V': The first carpets made in Europe were manufactured in France,' in 1664,Vin imitation of 'some whieh'v had .been Wooden railroads: were built in Eng land in 1602 : iron rails were first used in 17S9; the first iroofrailroad was laid iff America in 1827. Globe-Democrat. : Does Lightning Sour the Milk 1 It is a well-known fact . that milk is especially apt to sour during the preva lence of a thunder storm, and: from this itha3 been surmised that the electric dis charge held some mysterious sway over, the lacteal fluid, f An '. Italian experi menter, one Professor Tolomei, has been making trials of various sorts, the object being to throw some light electric in fluence over milk molecules In his first experience he passe. an eleric discharge from a Holtz machine between two' balls' of platinum hangttrgtwo inches apart in a bottle containing ijuartof fresh milk;' secondly, by sending a , "'"current between two strips of platinum at l ' i bottom of 4 a V tube filled with 1th ' same fluid r": thirdly, by subjecting ifA i a test tube to the action of a strong cm 2at through. a silk-covered copper wcetl ound spiral ly around tne tuoe. lu'eacaona ot these experiments, which were i thorough as; any lover of science coulcf wish,-it was' proved that acidulatidfn e he milk was delayed instead of hasten, a, as had been expected. Three eq frtions of milk from the same mill began to grow acid c ninth and the sixt while other portions been treated with t ' . thus treated. seventh.-the espectively; ich had not ' was rankly acid on the evenif Having thus di? tiieory of lightn' cause of the acidi sor Tolomei tried in the mystic age s tmra dav " the ooDular 3 the direct 3f milk Proles .nd found there--kilk souring. a In she 'brought tbe -'" ; c!ci ta the , and the 1 in cbh has ' a has :arely : . tLing his second trial c , : surface of a qua .ita- ( two balls of tn ra fluid alraqst inst sequence. , Hi r Here, at las. puzzled professor been made plain wrong when he s new under the su A Western dec tained a very curie, from Sweden or tt is making for thefVi J .j l a . "olas , ha They -x cca- 1 La net' 2 great i res.? T.- were coineu uunng. tury, when S edea a its circulating medium ing but copper. Tbec pieces roughly cut int,y smallest is four inches s and worth. thirty cents, and the largest over a foot square and with a face value of four dollars. Each slab is stamped in several j places with an inscription giving its date of issue and its denomination. ' The largest weighs over four pounds. When this coinage wa3 in circulation ladies' out shopping had to have servants ia attend ance to carry their purses. . f . The Use of Feathers. Man has been denned as a feathcrlcss biped, but his better half is more than ever determined to make good Nature's omission by the aid of art. It is reported in the Gaulois that a feather merchant of Paris has lately received 6000 birds of paradise, 300,000 Indian birds of various species and 400,000 humming birds. Another dealer has received 40,000 birds from America and 100,000 from Africa. We fear that the fafr sex is growing more featherheaded tkan ever. A " ; , i - ' the CLOVER .1 HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. TAINT FOS KITCHXjr VLOOK. A paint for kitchen floor, that dries quickly, can be made as follows: Dis solve three ounces of good glue in three quarts of soft water; heat over the fire till the glue is perfectly dissolved, then remove and stir in three pounds of yel low ochre; with a whitewash brush ap ply a thick coat to the floor. It will soon dry, then with a paint brush give coat of linseed oil. For a lighter shade use half white lead New York World. RHUBARB JEIiT. To make rhubarb jelly, wipe the stalks and cut them in inch lengths. Do not peel them. Weigh them. Put them in a porcelain kettle and to every pound of rhubarb add' a gill of water. Stew the stalks until they are thoroughly cooked. Then strain the juice that covers them through a thick cloth. Measure it and to every pint of juice add a pound of sugar. Put the sugar and juice in a porcelain kettlei and let them boil for twenty minutes, or until8 jelly is formed. Put away in tumblers or bowls like any other jelly. It will be much richer in flavor and color if the stalks are not peeled. New York Tribune. DRTTKG APrXES. In general quite a large amount of tha fruit of the aoDle orchard fallf off pre- f-maturely from the effect of winds, and a , considerable quantity, usually oi a oeuer qualito, is knocked off - or rejecieu iu the, final gathering from the tree of the winter apples. Where, such can be sold in their geen condition -in near-by mar kets .f 3r immediate . use, even" at low prices, it will commonly be found the most; -Stable E-.' 1 of disposing of them. . Whcra no such - market is not near enough at had to bs available a very common mr as V possible. 1 which otherwise utilizing a porti bers of the fatnl a long keeping is always a mar 6d is to dry as many wav much fruit be lost can. by , Lae time of mem j manufactured into uct for which there For work of this kind "hanl ' ii& be made before .y to hire labor to should be, provided asiness, and the fruit , i such a manner that it i attractive in appear ; dried. ' Nothing detracts ua of dried fruit in .uaser than- to find the .A and vrith bit3 of core c : rci t 03 Oi i j-L a bad! ,rticing-t: vof apples c- kudof good improve the fruit. Appl; well f avcrad 1. In dying fruit, either , it should r be ripe ';r drying will not , 7 of naturally poor .of sufficiently .fair and r c jiag, and - too good for the p,c-:i bo New York Vo ' l. nade into vinegar. : V; GRAPES AP THEIR USES. ' A pyramid of tgrapes of different va rieties makes; a handsome centrepiece for the table and a delicious desert, writes &i; J. Ashton, in the New York Obsver? Grape shears are very unique '. and. should 'be used1' on the table, as .' many of the casters are too large, and ,witb shears, cane. easily separated. : ; Iced Grapes- Take perfect bunches of grapes and Wip'h them, dip into white of eggs weu b,eat4n, then sift fine sugar over them andijay'them on a sieve in a warm place, where they will dry quickly. rnese are very ornamental. ',. To Prepare Grape J uice for Winter Select ripe, perfect grapes,, pick them from the stemsjleaving out any that are ripe or 4mperfect, . wash and measure, and put them in a porcelain kettle with onef;pint 'of water to three quarts of grapo3. uooK'siowly ten minutes, skim off everything that rises ; while hot pour into a jelly bag and drain; wash the kettle and return the juice, put over the fire, and. as soon as -it comes to a boil, dip into iruit jars same as fruit. Put tne covers t on securely. Keep in a cool, dark place.' -Pack the jars in a wooden box which is a little higher than the jars axe, then put a cover oyer the top; this will keep them from the light. This makes a pleasant and healthy beverage with the U addition of a ; little sugar and cracked iCC .'; V ; . ; ; , ' 5 : " . :. Spiced Grapes Allow five pounds of grapes, three pounds of sugar, two tea spoonfuls of cinnamon, one of allspice, and half a teaspooof ul of cloves. Wash the grapes and take' the skins off; boil the skins in water until tender; cook the pulp and strain through a- sieve ; when the skins are tender add them, to the pulp; then put in the. sugar and spices and cook slowly," watching the oa closely that they do not ) burn. When thick enough put in jars and : cover closely. Keep in a cool place', ' . .. ;, Grape Catsup pick over, steam and wash the grapes; then weigh, mash and cook in porcelain kettle; when--soft strain through a colander; Allow two thirds as much sugar as , you have grapes, add the sugar to the nuln and . turn to the kettle, and cook until thick's r4 P.1", auowmg ior evecy nine pounds-, of grapes, one tablespoonf ol of ground cloves, one of cinnamon, one of allspice one teaspoonful of black pep per, one quart of vinegar. If too tWn. cook ' slowly ahil longer; "Pat ii bottles for winter use. C Grape Jelly Wash and look over tho grapes; put in a kettle on tha til hot,mashing them fine. Strain through a jeuy-oag; ai you wub the jelly clear. uo nor. squeeze, but let the bag hang urer nignt and drain; tie a knot in tho enua ot the stramer, and put a stick mrougn tne . knot. Measure th ' ixin and allow one pound of sugar for each pint of juice; boil fifteen minutes, and dip into glasses. A little white sugar, sifted over the top is used as a preven tive of mould. All jam and jelly should us ept in a dry, daric cupboard. , wape jam fick over, and wash the grapes, caosmg if possible those not very ripe ; put in porcelain kettle and mah fine over the fire ; when warm pour into a coiander ana siir, reign,; put back into tne Kettle, allowing three-fourths of a pound of sugar for each pound of fruit; boil rapidly twenty minutes. Put ' in jelly tumblers to use with meats, seal and keep in a cool place To Can Grapes Wash the grapes and take o2 the skins, and cook the pulp on. til the seeds are loose, then sift through a colander to get tho seeds out, add the skins; then weigh, allowing ons pound cf sugar for four pounds of fruit, cook in a porcelain kettle fire minutes tyid dio into jars and seals. .. A deposit cf C-3 made in the New bury port (liass.) .Iaatltutba for eavins in 1820 now call for interest asouatlr to $398; Ko one has ever claimed tho ongisal deposit and nr addition has ores' boca made to iU f the daisy and lily and roe?, iTthTpan and pinks that the sum time throws - to tgreen, grassy lap of the medder that BUnkuTup at the skies through the sunshiny But wtK ' and th Tf . Of the flowers to a man with a heart in ha breast Tbathas dipped brimmin full of the honey Tid dew Of the sweet clover blossoms his boyhood knew? I never set hevey on a clover field now, Or fool rouni a stable, or climb in the mow, But my childhood comes back just as clear and as plain As the smell of the clover Tm snifflrf ajain; And j wandered away in a barefooted dream, . Where I tangled my toes In the blossoms that gleam With the dew of the dawn of the morning of love Ere it wept o'er the graves that I am wjejy ing above. And so I love clover it seems 'ike a part Of the sacred est sorrows and joys of my heart; And wherever it blossoms, OI there let me bow And thank the good Lord as I'm tlnnkirf Him now; And pray to Him still for the strength when I die To go out in the clover an 1 tell it oo-lbr, -And lovingly nestle my face in its b'.o.m While my soul slips away on a brent of perfume. Jacdes Whitcomb Itiley. P1TJ1 AN 1) POINT. The hammock girl is in full swing.. Philadelphia Record. Boycotting tbe baby Putting him to bed at night. New York News. Let in on the ground floor the police man, usually, by the cook. Puck. A Harlem milkman says he passed the summer at the watering places. Texas Sif tings. She "Your roommate called on me last night." He "How did jou like my new dress suit?" Hunger may be an evil, but it is the cause of nearly all the industry in this world. Puck. ; Sparing the rod sp Mis the child be cause the rod makes the child smart. Boston Transcript. The desirability of bonds depends on whether you hold them or they hold you. Indianapolis News. Father 'What are you practising with my daughter now?" Music Master "Patience." Boston Globe. The lover that Anna kissed the other night is afraid he "will be arrested, be cause he is a fellow-Annakist. New York News. 'No, Beatrice, you are wrong; the is not put there for 'trougn ot the sea the purpose Of watering the 'ocean grey hounds. "Statesman.., ' "Ma, can I play on the piano?" "No, dear ; you might hurt it. Go next door and . play on Mrs. Jones's. She rents her's." Washington Star. , It is when a young fellow in love has lost his head that the girl in the case if likely to mercifully lay her own oa hi t shoulders. Philadelphia Times. , i Why does a woman carry her pursein 1 her hand in the street? Simply becuse she thinks it may induce some mai to seek her hand. Boston Transcript. If the telephone "iri has a soft voice it is next to impossible ierthe ; matt- at the other end of the wire to 'Aeve that she isn't pretty. Somervills Journal. Dinglebury loves his donkey, but w?; Anrvsraw ' anralrana hil. master at peep of day, 'Dinglebury wishes, in his wrath,' that Jack might have a .visitation of softening of the brayin'. Boston Transcript. The poor youth's brain began to whirl As he stood 'neath the sun's flercs glare But he winked at a pretty Boston girl And she frozs him with a stare; x i .f ' . New York Press. "Father,? said a six-year old,; "where is Atoms ?" "Atoms, my; boy ? What do you mean?" "Why, the place where everything gets blown to." Bos ton Bulletin. . , " " Jarvi8 Do you know what I'm go ing to do with the first hundred ' dollars I earn?" Jessup "Pay your entrsnco fee to a home for aged men probably. New York'HeraljL J . Bagga (emphatically) ''Novr, jo would absolutely be frightened st aota lZ"f V Wfggs-xactly ; a for inttance,"f-TTid.Bits. 'Mabel, this question of mrriF b serious One that I v hope joa haTe coa . sidered welL": Mabel 'Oa, dear, yes auntie, I have - Worried mysell sick al ready about my trousseau.' 2 Inter Ocean. ; "1 4ont tee' what attraction the girl can find about young Sapley. Why, his mind is positively feeble, " Yes ; but as he hasn't any occasion to use it they probably have never found it out." IQ dianapolis Journal. What's Miss Thackeray looking so vexed about? 1 Why, she became en gaged In the dark last night, and found out this morning that she has duplicated. He was No. 3 of er former series." Chicago New Record. "Mercy I' excUimed Mrs. Homespun when she read la the paper that Jay St Tie U cents every time tbe clock ticked; I should think he'd be worried to death for f..i. v -nuld run down." Boston Transcript. Mrs. Cashna declares that berbasband did not marry her, but her money. A. the money is all gone, Cashus arguea that he must be a widower, and there fore Mrs. C. has no cU.im upon hixa whatsoever Boston Traa.Cript. Philanthropic Visitor (at the jail) "My friend, may Iask,WDit brou-ht you here?" Bad Dick (fm the slums) "Yes, sir. Same thing that brings you here. Poking my noe into other folks affaii g. Only I gener'ty f wen t in by way of the basement wilder-"Chicago Tribune. ; A. - ' j Flica Dislike Geralami. : A suggestion comes fro0 abroad that tVia fr.rrr.nf tn the olr? rose geranium beloved V our grand Botaers keeps flies aw'T- A moderate sized geranium abrub i "fid to be so disagreeable to flies th they avoid its neighborhood, and t f these planta in a room will drive tbe out altogether. Now YorkTribua.i '0A
Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 29, 1892, edition 1
2
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