Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Delta Herald-Times from Delta, Pennsylvania • Page 1

Location:
Delta, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Udta ffcralft. VEEK1.Y BV TBB PUBUSHOTG COMPACT i DELTA. PA. In Wie Depot Budding, tLOO per la idraow 1.9 (f pud within gix months after taoutlia, Aflnnto direct a (K of the Urn considered engagement. Subscriptions cut be discontinued at 10 time by paying all th? for.

will be AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. VOL. V. DELTA, YORK COUNTY, JULY 6, 1883. NO.

34. PLAIH ArtDPAHCT I I wiu. KEcnn Special and Prompt Attention am HERALD OFFICE. nm run 11 mm PftlCBS LOW. TERMS CASH Professional and Business Cards.

ma OMAS MACKENZIE, Ja. A1TOKSET-AT-LAW, BALTIMORE, MD. SONGS. SO. 3 SOUTH OEOUGB re, A 49 St.

rial AMES H. GABLE, ATTOBNEI-IT-UW, 45 St. Paul street, 1SALTUIOKE. MD. ctlS-82.

A Full Supply BOOKS, STATIONERY, HAIKES, ATTOBSBT-AT-LAW, BALTIMOKE, MD. 8. W. Corner St. Paul and Lexington streets.

Boom No. 16 Lmr BuUdinga. Entrance on St. Paul street. Consultations iu German and English.

00(13-83. Of PICTURE FRAMES, BLANK BOOKS, POCKET A thfi very lowest prices. Do not fail to before making your purchases. gop30-ly. SMALL C(L EH W.

ABCHEB, 3s. Successors to Siall's, Sons Co HEL AIB. MD. TEVENSON A. WILLIAMS, ATTOSEX-AT-IAV, CE4LEBS IS BEL AIK, MD.

WillgiTe prompt attention to all bnainesj entrusted to hie care. jan7-81. W. McCALL, Building. IOBK, PA.

jullu-82. AMES EELIi. ATXOBHZX-AT-AW, TOBK, PA. AIL OH OF Building Material. Office Knpp'a BtUldine.

HILIP J. BAtT, 'AnOiLSET-AT-LAW, YOKE, PA. Office with Hon. Levi Miish. Lehmayer'a Building.

jnnelO-82. PBICE3 LOW, E. COCHBAN, ArrOBNET-AT-LAT, TOBK, PA. Office in Farmers' Fire Insurance Building, No. 29 Market street.

OCI13-82. EOBQE B. COLE, AnOBKE TOBK, PA. Office, 1 Centre Hall, second floor. eeplO-82-tf; W.

HELLER, ATTOnSET-AT-ULW, TOBK, PA, Office, N. W. corner Centre Square. seplO-81-tf. EVI MAISH, ATTOKSET-AT-LAT.

YOBK, PA. Consultation in English and German. Office in Leumayer'a oppoat Hotel. Sep. KE.VK Tits N.

O. B. W. DXPOT. M.

WANNER, ATTOBim-AT-LAY, Seeds Ferguson, nnan. umce io Prote Commission Merchants 12th St, -Market, Philadelphia, No. 22 East Market street YOBK, PA. eep30-82. EORGE E.

NEFE 1 YOBK, PA. Office second floor, Dime Bnildmg, opposite Onrt Honse, 47 E. Market street. Consultation in English and German. Consignments solicited.

25 years' In York county. apal-82-pd. A. ATTOCSET-AT-LAW. TORE, PA.

Office Southeast corner Centre Square, over Jno A. Weisor'a store. and German. teplO-' KOi'-GE W. HEISES, ATTORKEr-AT-lAW, TOBK, PA.

Office in Lebmnycr's Building, second floor, No. 5 Market street. PHOTOGRAPHER, UPFS UILDING, Centre Square, YORK, PA. IT.EH 4 NILES, AXrOEHETS-iT-LAW, YOBK, PA. Henry C.

Niles, 19 E. Market street. Alfred 8. Niks, cor. St Paul Ixaungton sta.7 Baltimore, Md.

seplO-SJ. ALL WORK fo giro satisfaction. Every grade of the art, from a tin-type and locket picture to life portraits in water, oil, pastel and crayon, therery best manner and at THE LOWEST PRICES. inTite all to call and of onr work. OSS.

One day gladdest of the year, One loveliest wheu shadows near; One clond floats softest, lone and high, One star is brightest of the sky. One tint lies fairest on the hill, One glance flies brightest from the rill; One whitest lily, reddest rose-None other such the summer knows. Once come and gone the one dear face, Forever empty is its place; Only one Toice the lover hears, Sounding across the waste of years. Only one spirit rules the breast, Be it in waking or in rest; Only one lays, at will, the spell Subduing as when first it fell. Of all the myriad things that prove The human heart framed to love, Wise nature never suffers two To mate the soul as one shall do.

6UMMEB KOOX. A summer noon is thi.s The trees are breathless, every one; Underneath the shadow is. And overhead the sun. No in the meal, No children on the grean at play; Listless drops iha thistle seed Beside the traveled way. Alone, the butterfly Floats dreamily in lower nir; And circling hawk on high Is all thit's moving thsre.

The brook runs ever by, But seems to pause the while it flows; "Tis more like a line of sky, So placidly it goes. EVENING. Behind the hilltop drops the sun, The curled heat falters on the sand; While evening's ushers, one by one, Lead in the guests of twilight-laud. The bird is silent overhead, Below tne beast has lain him down; Alone the marbles watcU the dead, Alone the steeple guards the town. The south wind foels its amorous course To cloistered sweo.s in thickets found; The leaves obey its tender And 'twist sil nce and a sound.

--John Vance Cheney, in tfu Century. SARA'S YOUNG MAN. Gr EOKGE W. McELBOY, ATrOBSET-AT-LiW. ARTIST TAILOR.

YORK, PA, Office in Mercantile Lvr Building, opposite court home. seplO-80. TJOBEBTaPABKE, TOCT1CE OT THI PEACI, DELTA, PA. All business attended to with care and promptne a. Junel2-81.

LLIS CHANDLEE, jrsncs OF TKE FZICK, CASTLEFIX, YORK COCTXTY, PA. Special attention given to the preparing ol papers and eecnriog soldiers' pensions. apr26-79. JPSTtCB OF THE PEACE AND SCEVETOE, DELTA, PA. Particular attention given to the collection of claims.

Mirisagos and other Instruments with accuracy. ocll3-s2. Temperance Hotel, YORK, PA. N. Dnke ntreet, near Railroad Depot Gable, proprietor.

Also dealer in Lea Tobacco. Special inducements to cigar mana Ikctnrera. eep30-31. H. BRESSLER, M.

DXRTIST, West Mariet street. JCo. 11 South George street York, Pa. The hMFtting. the be-st JIade and best Trimmed suils for the least money.

CHARLES H. MARTIN. cir Ladies' Hair Store NO. I 1 8 S. DUKE ST.

YORK, PENNSYLVANIA. All styles of ha'r ornaments constantly on hand; all elii-dfs of hair matched. MaUn switches a epi-cialty, also tonic to th head and prevent the hair from falling out. apr21-ly MKS. M.

B. JO1CE. J. A. DEMFWOLF, YORK.

PA. Plans and Designs for residences and cot tages, farm honsea, stores, halls, church? and school houses, prepared at reasonabl ratos. octl3-ly. W. peopl'' YORK, PA.

seplO-81 D. SCARBOROUGH, D. D. PROSPECT, MD. scrricss to (ho Charges moderate.

Watchmaker Jeweler, YORK, PA. Opposite Court House Building. oct21-81 D. S. WAGNER, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Spectacles, SEAL ESORAVIHO A SPECIALTY.

or N). 10 South George street, York, Pa. E. A. BARNITZ SON, Watchmakers Jewelers, No.

3 Weat Market Street, York, Pa. Mr. 'hob jam Fenno was a widower one child; a daughter, aged seventeen. One day it occurred to him quite suddenly thut he ought to get married. So he looke I about him in search of a suitable spouse.

He selected Mrs. Ilerthusi Morse, a widow Indy and mother of sit children, all daughters, aged variously from twenty-tiiree down to eleven. why Sir. Funno should all at once have tluvight it necessary to a second wife, no one, not even the individual presumably most interested, could have It could scarcely have been on account of Sara, his daughter, since she had got along very well without a stepmother from very early childhood up to the present time, and had become quite a customed to taking care of htr elf. And why, having resolveJ upon matrimony, lie had selected Mrs.

Morse, was something still more difficult of solution. However, it is no uso to speculate in regard to this obtuse question. The indisputable facts remained and could not have been explained away, if an outline treatise had been written on the subject. Mr. Fenno decided to marry, and he chose Airs.

Morse for a wife. He told her so, and she accepted the situation calmly. In the course of a fortnight she was sitting at one end of Mr. Fenno's table, while he sat at the other end, looking more meek and resigned than usual. Several leaves had been added to tha table for the accommodation of the six and Sara Fenno, who was directed to address her stepmother as mamma.

This Sara resolutely refused to At, and always spoke of, and to that large, ilorid female, as Mrs. Fenno. This was prolably the cause of the feud which henceforth raged between the stepmother and the husband's daughter. The position of Isaac and Isbmael was reversed, ami Sara found herself pushed aside and almost thrust out of her father's house, while the stranger girls reignrd there as the rightful heirs. Poor child! She led a hard life of it, but she bore up against it with much outward show of bravery, because she felt only too sure that her meek, gentle little fattier had a lot even worse than hers to bear.

But for him Sara felt that she would willingly, lie down and die; but all at man, of good manners, quite well bred, undemonstrative, mo lerut ly good- locking; anil, as Mrs. Kcniio ery justly remarked, "apparently of no quence in the woild." 11 is name was George Willi im Smally, and no oae seemed to know anything about him-as Mrs.Fenno again remarked, "probably because the was nothing to- know, for s-he never hail met sut-h a nonentity in all her His host an-l hostess, when ques- tionei on the sub e't, answered care- lessly that he was a young Englishman making his firi-t visit to America, who had brought letters of introduction from friends of theirs on the ether side. i This nonentity had a quick eye, however, and before Sara Fenno had been in the room five minutes, he had singled her out from all the young ladies present and proceeded immediately to fall in love with her. That is why he seemed to her, if to none else, a person of very great importance. I believe I have omitted to mention that Sara was a beauty.

The fact was so carefully concealed by her step- mother that the girl was scarcely conscious of it herself, so that I had almost forgotten it. And then Was not one of those resplendent, dazzling beauties, who challenge admiration and shine out like the sun with a light that cannot bu hidden. She was rather like some pale star, whose luster, pure and white, would be perceptible only to eyes accustomed to read the heavens. Mr. Smally was s-o lucky as to possess such eyes, and they discovered Sara.

lie devoted himself to her during the whole evening with a pertinacity which provokid the ri lirule of Mrs. Fenno and her two the gentleman was too unimportant tor lii-s evident admiration of Sara to cause them angtr. On the next day he called, having received permission, and th pointed manner in which he sent his card to Miss Fenno called forth new bursts of ridicule as soon as he was gone. From that time forward he was known to the satirical stepmother and her daughters by the title of "Sara's Young Alan," and many and varied were the impertinences which the young girl was obliged to endure because of lit. attentions.

But as time passed Mrs. Fenno ceased laughing at "Sara and her young man." In her own forcible if not elegant language, it was quite evident tliat Jlr. Smnlly "meant business," and being a "person oi no consequence," she soon concluded that he ABM, OABDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. during the winter. It will pay to do i England Farmer, Cucmubrrti WilUoul Cardra.

The methods by which an old lady managed to have a supply of cucumbers from her back yard may afford a useful hint to others whose garden area is limited. A cask was placed in the corner and partly, perhaps one- third, filled with sti ues and a thi-k layer of stable manure, und upon this six or eight inches of soil. Two simdl boards tacked together to form a trough were placed against the side of the cask and extended from the top to the bottom. The seeds were sown in the soil, and the washing water was The use of eoal ashes in the hill with seed potatoes is said to prevent them from growing scabby. One of the best coatings for tree wounds is gum shellac alcohol.

It effectually excludes air, and the wound quickly hea's over. A York gardener believes that tobacco tea, occasionally syringed over infected pla-its, is a far bt'tter insecticide than tobacco smoke. It is not only necessary to select the sweet cream. Tour over the tables and close tight. Kaw tomatoes, sliced, are also excellent with this dressing.

lUuwhold let the tea boil. For rough hands, use lemon Juice Strong lye cleans tainted pork barrels. Tepid milk and water cleans oilcloth without soap. Paint splashed upon window glass can be easily removed by a strong so- ution of soda. To give stovts a good polish, rub poured in through the trough to keep plumpest seeds of wheat for seed, but i them with a piece of Brussels carpet the soil moist.

The vines in time in making such selections the largest' after blackening them, ran over and covered the sides of the and most perfect heads should also be If you wish to make a cake that will cask, and some were trained along the observed. keep well, use the yolks of eggs only fence. They bor.i in a wanner seldom i There is no doubt that, with good I they keep it nun-h more moist and less seen in the usual methol of growing crops of fruit here, our export Ayri'-nlturist. evaporated apple? can be immensely increased. In no country is fruit BO HHJ scarce and dear as in England.

In haymaking In general the stack Soot j. one of the best manures for or mow should be covered one foot or house plants and, if it can be had in more in depth with dry straw. Some quantities large enough, it is excellent moisture will aporate daily for sev-1 or out-of-door use. For the latter it eral weeks after cutting and storing, is best xe with one-tenth its bulk In the bright sunshine the moisture sa it will pass oil into the air, but at night, unless the surface is covered with some perfectly dry material, it will condense so soon as it meets the currents of colder air. The lack of this pre- I caution is the occasion of he.ivy losses I both in hay and gn'in.

We have occasionally seen thoughtless farmers i throw a few forkfuK of wet hay or I grain on top of a mow, with the idea that such a position was the best place to facilitate its drying. On the contrary, damp hay thus placed will usually wet down and spoil more fodder than was contained in the lot originally damaged. If there is any part of the fleld of hay not fully dried, it may be placed at the bottom of the mow with little danger of injury if a sufficient quantity of thoroughly dried material is pitched upon it to absorb the moisture--Citltica'or. couldn't oblige her more than by carrying off her troublesome stepdaughter, whom she detested. It mattered not to her that bo was probably some adventurer under the mitaken impression that Sara must have money.

She didn't care if they started in a garret together, since she would take good care that Fenno should give Sara nothing more than the clothes she was married in." She therefore began to smile on Mr. Smally's visits, and continually praised tiie prospect of the coming marriage when she alluded to the subject in her hubbanrt's presen e. Whether Kehoboim Fenno understood his wife's tactics or not, he certainly gave his consent very warmly when Mr. am ally asked for his daughter's hand; and Sara made no effort to conceal her joy from Perhaps she was precipitate in her acceptance, for she knew thing of George Smally, save what her eyes and heart could tell her, and she neither spoke nor thought of settlements or of provision for the future, or any of the hundred etceteras of that sort which a properly brought up young lady ought to have considered. So they were married, Mrs.

Fenno doing all that she could to ha ten the bridal; and when the marriage was aHnounced in all the next day's papers Sara was as much amazed as her stepmother to learn that her hutband was the Hon. G. W. Smally, second son of Lord of England. She began Corn can bo perfected by going through the fields and cutting out the stalks that do uot exhibit the proper form in stalk and ear, and the seed now ready in the.

barn can also be assorted with benelit. A butter maker, writing to the lotra Homestead, says the best butter color is a pailful of corn meal mush, fed i has groat extremes of heat and cold, warm once a day, the corn to be of The Indian story of "the tiger tha the yellow variety; adding that it will liable to dry than the whites do. To crystallize grasses, one pound best alum, powdered half a gallon of soft water; boil until dissolved; dip the grass in the solution, and allow it to remain six or seven hours remove and dry in the sun. This is a reliable recipe. Corea and the Coreans.

There is much natural beauty in the country, the beauty of mountain, forest and prairie, of profuse vegetation, and plentiful rivers and cataracts. And the people are not indifferent to these beauties; they are a "seeing" race, and proud (among themselves) of their marine and mountain views. The country is fertile, but the climate a pretty little speech, reproaching her husband for his double dealing and wicke 1 de -eit; but as her ps were wn jcM The Totituto Plttnt. The variations which occur in seedling plants of our cultivated varieties of vegetables is the subject of a recent bulletin from the New York agriciil tural experiment station. In tomato seedlings young plants frequently show three and evtn four seed leaves instead of tho normal two.

The tomato presents numerous variations in its growth. The speci-s t( which our garden varieties are referred are sulliciently distinct to be classed as separate species or subspecies. Dr. Stiirtevant, in the bulletin under consideration, notes tiie variations in the fru.t upon the same plant and upon the same clusters. Among other variations in the tomato fruit is noted that of shape.

It is only i i recent years that the tomato has become smooth. Formerly it was ribbed and in shape quite distorted. One of the most marked variations obtained by culture seems to have been in tho diminution of the seed, and variations are also to be noted between varieties in the manner in which the seeds are as also in flie thickening of the core and the size of the various cells and partitions which contain the seeJ. There appears also to be considerable variation in the vitality of feeds as between different varieties as there certainly is between the strength of the young pl-ints. But Dr.

Sturtevanthas not yet'collected suflicient data to assign this variability to other than accidental causes. It is an interesting subject of inquiry whether tiie tendency to seedlessness and quiility be not correlated, and also whether there bj not a correlation between the vitality of seed and the quality, as also between the vigor of the plant and York World. Tmpnrc Wntrr for Farm A Western writer says he recently saw an illustration of the injurious eilects of compelling stock to use impure water. A neighbor has a well presently calkd on for other dut.es, the little speech was broken off and never nothin than a re- tac)e the drainage from the 1)uring (irst the water g.auiv nc MIT.I uic; uui, ui at, i once the spring in the desert was found bombshell into the domestic circle. i I Oniint.lpsc; von rrnnnivpd at.

1 for her, and she saw the sparkling water which was to revive, freshen and give life anew to her parched and tliristing As a rul-, Sara was secluded from i i a a 3 the impure water had the eldest MissesJMorse turned so many NH been pumped out, and the most of different colors that they have not yet stoc ank There quite recovered their natural com- I wag one colt howcver which had plexions. been le 1 to the trough when the water was at the worst. This colt could not be induced to taste the water from this well, for more than two weeks after it was pure as ever, and, in the meantime quenching his thirst with nothing but snow, he became thin in llesh and spring-poor in widwinter. The damage to this colt is serious, and it could have been prevented by not draining the barnyard into the well. C'jws are not near so sensitive in the matter of 'And you knew it, too," screamed Mrs.

Fenno, recovering her speaking voice, as her shrieks subsided. The remark was addressed to Sara's father, who was partly concealed be- liind the paper which had firod the increase the. milk and butter as well as give a good color. An ingenious Virginia woman has discovered that saturating the bag containing her sued beans with coal oil utterly exterminated the weevil inside and out of the beans, but did not harm the least. Probably the same treatment would serve with infested Don't follow in the same rut this season that you did last.

Do something clillerent'y. Try experiments of some sort. Give boys a chance to grow a rop on their own account. Save t'me, money and labor by using your brains and having your plans for each day's work well matured the night before. Sir Humphrey Davy found that the most fertile soils, among those which were lit for plowing and tillage, would absorb the most moisture from the air, and would also retain the most moisture when stirred and exposed to the sun.

This may be a guide in selecting fields for ct rtain crops wbea the gardener wishes to select a spot on which to grow a premium crop, or an especially good place for some choice seed or plant. Care should betaken, however, nut to mistake a field that ii wet fur lack of sufficient drainage for one such as is referred to above. A good coat of paint upon farming tools is a profitable estmeiit, whether they are put in the sheds every night, as they should be, or whether they aro stabled in fence corners or under apple trees. In the latter case the painting is of the utmost importance. Five hundred dollars'worth of carts, sleds, wheelbarrows, machines, horserakes, plows, harrows, ladders and other tools can be painted with less than $5 worth of paint, and it can be put on in a rainy day, or in any convenient time, and such precaution will double the period of their usefulness.

-cabby leg in poultry is caused by a minute insect that burrows beneath scales upon the leg. An occasional washing of the roosts" with kerosene oil is an excellent preventive, as it is also against other vermin. If the has started in the flock, then wash the turkeys with a mixture of one-half water and one-half kerosene. Repeat the application in a week if a cure is not effected by the wash. Do not use the wash too strong lest it cause swelling of the legs, or even paralyze them.

In a very bad case separate the diseased fowl from the others, use the solution weaker than above and repeat in three days. Reclpea. GOOD PLAIN pounds of scrag mutton; eight potatoes; four onions; pepper and salt. Cut your neat in about ten nice pieces, and lay them in your stew pan. Slice the potatoes and onions, season them with salt and pepper; cover with water, and set it in a slow oven to cook for two liours.

Then stir it up well, and serve in a deep dish. owns my village" would bu thoroughly appreciated in Corea, where a very large and fierce species of that terrible animal abounds, and the idea of it pervades all works of art. To Japanese children. Chosen is known as "the land of the Leopards, bears and wolves are also very numerous, the wild deer and the wild hog abound, mot.keys are found in the southern provinces, and alligators and salamanders in the rivers. The people are large eaters, esp ij cially of meat; small oxen in great numbers supply them in the south, and dogs are eaten commonly.

Tea and rice are rare luxuries, and fisU is chiefly devoured raw. Altogether, the "diet" chapter is an uncomfortable one. Sheep are from China for sacrificial purposes only, and goats are rare. The poorer classes aro meagerly fed; they live, like the Japanese, on millet and beans. All classes use tobacco very much.

We may tak; it that the manners which Mr. Gritlis describes as existing now are just the same as they have'been a domestic slavery in its mildest form, for instance, the position of women, the fraternal principles on which tralesun.l industries conducted, and the curious ceremonies of marriage, burial and mourning Women are not so ill of in Corea ai in many other less secluded heathen countries. They no rights, and are disposed of like the other animals but they are not ill-treated by their owners, and thoug'i their personal insignificance actually extends to their having no names, they receive titles of h'nor in their apartments aro secure from intrusion, they cannot be punis'ied for any crime, the malei of the family being responsible for them, and they are free (and safe) to go about at all liours. Widows of position are not supposed marry again, and are exp cted to mourn a'l their lives, but a man whoss wife dies wears half mourning for a very short time. It is a breach of go manners to be vehemently sorry for one's wife, and the sex that makes every law finds that one easy to keep.

Corean king is a rather absurd pir.sonage; nobody must touch him unbidden, and any one who accidentally does so has henceforth to wear a red cord round the neck. Metal, also, must er approach the royal person. The king has despotic power, but it is tempered by many kindly customs; he hears the complaints his subjects, and is in constant communication with the populace, by means of commis- The royal outings are tre- niendous affairs, with caparisoned horses, dragon (lags, aid the sacred fan and umbrella. The nobles are a bad and cruel class, according to all accounts of them; the officials and magistrates are literary." Literature has from time immemorial been held in honor in Corei, from whence the Japanese adopted printing in the twelfth century, when a work of the Buddhist canon was printed from wooden blocks. "A Corean book is BEKF four pounds of i known which dates authentically from fresh beef, or what is better and more the period over a century Doubtless you connived at this piece of treachery on the part of your daughter.

However, thank heaven! he's only a second son, and they're little batt-r than beggars in England, economical, a nice beef shank or "soup bone put it into four or five quarts of water, salt it, let it boil slowly five ot.i-.uucu mni i near so sciisiuve me mailer or all the invitations to parties next to I where everything to the eldest tagte horseSi yet this should not be DR. K. L. EISENHART. YOBK, PA.

Baltimore College Dental Snrgerr. Bos, Bapp's Bnilrlinar, Cezttn Squaw. Artificial Teeth Mfrtod from one tip to an entire Mt, on tabber or Ollnloid. Full set from ffr to ID tMoraa for Five Yoan. Fall or Teeth wrtntctod wilbwt in, bj William Froelich, Merchant Tailor, NO.

108 SOUTH GEORGE ODDFELLOWS HALL, YORK, PENNSYLVANIA. A fall and fresh line of Foreign and Do- mttlic Goods constantly on band, aprtl-lr the Fenno household, and kept entirely in the background when entertainments in return were given in her father's house. But on one occasion, by some oversight. S-ira was included in the invitation t- the house of an old friend of her father, or, to put it more rrectly, her name was included in the acceptance of the same, for she wai always invited, although never allowed to be pre-ent. This time she was dressed and in the cab along with the two elder Misses Morse before Mrs.

Fenno realized the circumstance, and then the good lady thought it wasn't worth while to rectify the blunder, more particularly as it was a very quiet and unpretending entertainment to which they were going, and it wasn't at all likely that anybody of any importance would be there any way. son. 7 "Thereare exceptions," murmured the Itehoboam. It was his little bit of revenge, and he enjoyed it. "Smally is one of the exceptions.

lie inherits a fine estate and a clear fortune of from his mother." Mrs. Fenno uttered another shriek loud than any that had preceded it- and went off into real Rehoboam on calmly for som. moments, then caught up his hat and went for a walk. he waa frightened and thought his wife would recover if he left her Snowe, in St. Loute Magazine.

South Bern era, where stands the famous lighthouse of the Hebrides, is visited twice a year only by the supply ship, and once a year by a clergyman. little bit out of her reckoning. For there was, at least to Sara, a very important personage present on that occasion. He wai a tall, somewhat pale yo jng and eggs! the sea on a crag. It is very difficult for even a lifeboat to land.

There ore about twenty iwople on the island, mainly subsisting on fish, Wild fowl an excuse for negligence in of water furnished them. The stock breeder and the dairyman owe it to themselves to supply their stock with the purest and freshest of ater. How often should animals lie allowed to drink 'i I presume were stock allowed free access to watrr in sumniT that each individual would drink at least a dozen times during the day. If they are not free access to water, but compelled to drink at stated periods, they are quite liable to drink too much. This is one of the greatest advantages of having water in the pasture.

In winter I am aware that the practice is to water horse-" perhaps twice a day, morning and night. With cows the practice is to turn them into the yard and allow them to drink what they want during two or three hrurs. Perhaps an improvement upon this plan wonld be to turn them out for an hour at a time morning and night. All those who own horses should have some way arranged for taking the chill off water for horses or six skim well. Half an hour before you wish to take it up, put in a cup partly full of rice, a small quantity of potatoes, carrots, onions and celery, cut in small pieces, foup can be made in the same manner.

i pint of sweet milk, one pint of sugar, quarter of a before the earliest printed book known in Europe." The Coreans are Buddhists, but Shamanism has never lost its hold upon them, and the old gods are reverenced still, just as the old Myths remain in modern Greece. Tho air is not empty for a Corean, and Mutton every month has its three unluc-ky 'days, the 5th, the 13th and the 25th. The worship of ancestors and the Chinese system of ethics, or Confucian- pound of butter, three of four eggs i ism are their lin and well beaten separately, two table- i separately, two spoonfuls of cream of tartar, about two pounds of flour, oi just enough to make a very soft dough, rose water and grated nutmeg to taste. Roll out! thin; make the cakes small and round, with a hole in the center. Fry in boiling lard, and after draining them well roll them in powdered sugar flavored with cinnamon.

COUXTRY GARDEJJ whatever vegetables are in season, young and tender. Choose them, as for soup, in delicate proportions. Green peas, new potatoes, string beans. Lima beans--these and others, together or separate, are excellent. Boil in salted water until tender; drain, and place in a glass fruit jar.

Make a salad dressing of a well-beaten raw egg, a saltspuonful of salt, one of cayenne, a dessertspoonful of mustard, two table- of and filial relations in an admirable manner the distinguishing virtue of the hermit 8pe' ta'or. Fair Treatment. "That's a nice life you lead," said Senator Fair to his son Jim. You are running after every girl in town." It's not my fault that I run after them." Whose fault is it, then?" "It's their own fault. If they would stand still so I could catch up, I wouldn't run after them so much!" A short time since many of the Indian pupils at San Luis Rey, died from a certain kind of fever.

They refused to taka any medicine, and relied upon some heathenish incantations to drive the devil away, to whose agency A spoonfuls of vinegar and a cup of the sicknen WM ascribed. NEWSPAPER!.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Delta Herald-Times Archive

Pages Available:
10,256
Years Available:
1879-1946