The Exeter Advocate, 1895-11-22, Page 32
;aeon
WITHOUT
ana steam or electric vehicle running en
RORSES. thei queen's highway, and the wonder ts
OM it dia not step in in time to preemie
bieyoliog. There is an agitation just now
in England to hare thls law repealed, alla
deubtlese, it will be repealed
As it Was, the exhibition at Tunbridge
Wells could, not take pittee on the bigh
road, but was held in the agriculture'
grounds, veinal, with its damp, sodden
grass, was about as peer a place for Mine
an exhibition as could well be imaglued.
England, of course, is far in the rear in
the invention of machines of this kind,
and acoordingly only one Euglish carriage
Was to be soon there, whicit was more
than ordinarily clumsy and by all odds
the poorest vehicle on the grounds All
the rest were trom France, and none of
them were very neat carriages indeed.,
Without any poreeplable machinery about
them that would show that they were not
to be drawn by horses. The one steam
carriage exhibited could hardly be called a
success, as every now and then a cloud of
steam and smoke enveloped the carriage,
whioh made it rather uncomfortable for
the occupants. The petroleum and naplitha
engines are evidently the practioable and
workable machines of the future; although
the advance of electricity may yet oust•
the petroleum engine from its place. No
electric looters were shown at worn there,
however. and so one weld not jodae The
carriages worked by petroleum engines, it
was said, would run 200 miles without
needing a fresh supply, and the cost was
something like a cent a mile.
A bionic), made in Paris, was shown
Worked by a petroleum engine, and, these
are said to be boomniog very popular in
the 'French capital. There was also a tri-
cyle worked by the same menus, although
a person had to do some pedalling at the
start and also to work with the feet when
going up hill. These mac:lanes did not
a. look as cumbersome as might have been
expected.
My own idea, is Want the tricycle and bi-
cycle of the future will be iitted up with
storage batterles that will be,as it w ere, in-
terchangeable and that all along the inain
travelled roads a person can get a
charge batterY in exchange for his ex-
hausted one, just as 11ONV afollow can get
drink at various reerefin Illent places,
which, in a way is a kind ofphysioal stor-
age arrangement for putting now energy
into the cyclist .
Althoagh England made such a poor
show at this exhibition of road machines,
she claims to have been the first to intro-
duce a practicable horseless carriage. In
1827 a steam oarriage was run in Regent's
Park, and about the same time another
ran, carrying passengers, between I-41,d-
dington and the Bank. charging twelve
cents for the trip.
If America takes to the invention of
horseless oarriages she ought to make the
business hum. The macihines shown at
Tunbridge Wells cost, they told me, from
000 to 62,000, so there ought to be a good
margin of profit in the making of them
By and by when the United States quit.
fooling about trivial questions as the presi-
dency, tho silver question, the tariff and
such, and turns its attention to the real
live and important problem of good roads,
there ought to be greater future for horse.
less carriages. Several of those on exhibi-
tion, made in France, had no difficulty in
going fifty nines an hour. and a carriage
that can ran along like that, only needing
filling once every 200 miles, in going to
be no uniinportant coinpetitor of the rain
roads. —Luke Sharp.
MONT BLANC'S OBSERVATORY.
SOME HORSELESS CARRIAGES EX-
HIBITED lr.4 ENGLAND
By the Modern Solomon—AL Road Exhibi-
tion ampossible itegland—onnalbus to
Seat Inve--A Petroleum Bleyele—tfla.r-
tinges of IP, very fawns.
I took a run down to Tunbraisee Wells
the other day, not for the drinking of the
waters, nor even with the object of seeing
the very pretty little town whitth nestles
there in the hollow of the hills, but for the
purpose of witnessing an exhibition which
I thought might be of interest to our
numeroass readers. was a show
of carriges without horses, and it was not
a bioyole exhibition either.
Tunbridge Wells is a wat3ering place
about thirty -live miles from London,
whioh one day had its vogne, but now is
seldom visited, although. perhaps its
waters have not lost whatever efficacy they
once possesed; nevertheless healing prop-
erties were perhaps the least important of
the factors that went towards the making
of a mineral spring in England. Tun-
bridge Wells has run down at the heel
merely because royal favor has been withn
drawn from it
Now in Germany, 'Where thy take their
Inineral waters seriously, and actually be -
HOMELESS CARRIAGE TO SEAT FOun.
lieve in them this state of things does not
obtain. There are many popular health
resorts on the continent that have never
been patronized by royalty.ln Eogland all
this is different, .A. history of the various
health resorts of Geeatl3ritain would give
one a history of the kings who have ruled
over the country. The study of the health
resorts would afford one an insight into
the petty jealousies from which even mon-
archs are not free, No king or queen
would put up at a health resort that' his
or her predecessor had made popular. One
monarch gave the vogue to Tunbridge
Wells; another to Brighton, another to
Epsom; another to Bath, and so on down
tbe list. As England has had many mon-
arehs she has accordingly ninny health re-
sorts, for, when once the place got its
boom; as it were, it kind of bold on, 'up to
the present time, Bath, for instance, be-
ing situated in a dry spot on this damp
little island, has retained its hold upon the
people, although no king, bas lived there
for years, except Clark Rassell, the king
of sea, story writers.
The Tunbridge springs were discovered
in 1606 by Lord North, and at that time
the surrounding was a forest. In .1680
Queen Henrietta yeent to Tunbridge Wells,
and that at °nue made the place. For a
long time, however, it was a unique resort
which might well be coined in those mod-
ern days. A great many cottages Were
built near the tvelis, but they were all
movable. These huts were rented by men
HOUSEHOLD.
THE HQIVIE couNTgR.
"Time shelt uot covet."
I know it, of course; but nowithstand-
tin, 1 bhin1 1 have never beheld the in-
side arrangement of a storekeeper's
counter without expealettoing sante Buell
teclieg as the ou0 forbidden! Bence it
was that, wane waiting in a country
store for the clerk 110 find ao artiele
amotig the varied assortMent rouged
along his counter shelyes, an nclea was
borne to me. This I shortly (tainted Into
praotical wovking, and haeteu to explain,
that others, who may have the same
LloltsELEss omIBUS To SEAT FIVE.
of fashion froin London for the season,
and whenever a person got tired of his
near neighbor, he could have a horse hitch-
ed to his cottage and change his location.
A man could thus live in the wilderness
in peaoe and quietness, or move nut into
the main street just as suited his purpose.
It seems to me that a watering place con-
ducted on this principle nowadays would
be a distinct boon and would be nearly as
good as camping out.
Tunbridge Wells bus always been a favor-
ite resort, and Lord Macaulay has written
very favorably of it in his bistary of Eng.
land,and besides liked to take a run down
there lamself whenever he got tho chance.
Samuel Johnson liked the place'and so
did Garrick and Richardson and Cibber.
Tunbridge Wells lies in a hollow of the
hills, and all round it are woods and fine
estates. A broad park or cominon, right
in the center of the town, adds muck to
its attractiveuess, and the walks about aro
extremely beautiful, with their views over
bill and dale. From the old chureh at
Frant, two or three miles from Tunbridge
'Wells, is one of the finest views in Eng-
land, overlooking a fine extent of country
with shining blue lake itt the center of the
picture.
There is a grave in Frant churchyard
that alvvays appealed to me. It is the
grave of a yoong man of twenty who died
O hundred years ago somewhat tragically.
The epitaph on the tombstone says that
the foot -stone ot the grave falling from
the church tower killed the young man.
USEFUL, SATCHELS,
now to 1S1aUe Them, and What lvfateriels
to Lae—Some Pretty PesIgtts.
1 saw a pretty satchel a few days age
that was designed to bold the little
articles so usefal to. a traveller. It Would
be nice to bold the sewing or bit 01
needlework, alto, wen tny lady Wished
to visit a friend, ;Materials, daap red
plush, red satin for lining, pale blue rib-
bon, silk for working it, and a baud.
strap, snob as childrea use to carry their
hooka to school. Take a width of the
plush twenty-sevee inches long. Baste
a length of the ribbon down tee center,
allowing it to come within three incees
of the edge at either end, and another all
rental the plush, two inehes from tho
edge. Caton down the ribbon on either
side to the plash with fancy stitches,
using Asiatic twisted embroidery silk of
Wants, may obtain the same relief tvitieb
came to me irom the adoption of a new
piece of houeehold furniunre.
I call it the "home connter," by way
of contra distinetion to the merchant's
countea and yet it serves the same purpose
in household "business," and is as much
a necessity, I conceive, as in a store.
The co -tinter shown in the engraving
gives a very clear oonception of the Man-
ner of its construction. A long table
on "legs" might explain it, the top
being a board or boards, thick enough
and kiln -dried to prevent warping. The
supporting pieces need not be xvider than
three inches, avid about three-quarters
of an inch thick. The same material
may he used for shelving, this being
Covered, with screen wire. Tbe wixe is
An the Delicate Astronomical Instruments
Carried up.
The highest permanent astronomical
observatory in the word—on the summit
of Mont Blame—was et last completed azd
folly equipped with instruments a few
days ago. There has been a temporary
station there for some years, but the in-
struments have been small and of little
power compared with those now in place.
The establishment of this observatory was
a task which at the outset seemed impos-
sible, and the obstacles which M. Janssen,
who headed the quartet of French astron-
omers had to overcome, was unparallel-
ed. Mont Blanc is nearly 16,000 feet
high. and its ascent, even under the most
favorable conditions during the sumtner
menthe, is difficult as well as dangerous.
The transporation of many heavy and deli-
cate scientific instruments to the top of
this loftiest mountain of the Alps was
therefore a labor so great as to seem be-
yond the range of possibility,yet it was ac-
complished without the loss of a single
life. The telescope and the other instru-
ments had to be taken to piecee before being
carried up the precipitous mountain sides;
even then some of the packages weighed a
hundred pounds, and most of them about
fifty.
One of the guides who assisted in the
work hinds the record of having made the
ascent more than five hundred times since
the beginning of of his professionat career,
and it was he who found recently the
bodies of the Austrian professor and his
two guides who lost their lives not long
ago.
In place of being entirely movable about
a pivot, like ordinary telescopes. the tele-
scope on Mont 131ano is fixed and directed
towards the polar star. A movable mir-
ror placed near the lower opening enables
the observer to study whatever star he
wishes, its image being thrown upon the
glass. This makes necessary a protective
cupola of comparatively small dimen-
sions.
" ie particular acivantage10 astrono-
mers in having an observatory at such high
altitude as this one lies in the transpar-
ency and purity of the atmosphere. The
study of the stars, however, will not be
the sole task of the observers, for game of
them will devote themselves especially to
meteorology as on the summit of Mont
Blanc, says Prof. Janssen, they will be in
the very origin of atmospheric phenom-
ena.
an old gold color. Tne plush is lined
with dark red (ranted satin, one end fold -
ea over ten inchee to form a pocket, and
the edges stitched together. This loaves
O flap seven inohes wide to fold over.
An old gold silk cord is used to finish
the edges all 3'01111(1. The handle of the
• shawl strap is fastened to the top in such
a way that the straps pass over the flap,
and when buckled holds them in Place.
.A. less' expensive satthel, which we have
used with much satisfaction, has a differ-
ent shape, being in the form of a roll,
and does away with the strap. The
material used wait heavy linen; it Was
lined throughout with silesia, and inter-
lined with buckram. For the ends, out
two circular pieces of seven inches in
diameter and another piece twenty-eight
inches wide. Stiffen the circular pieces
with pasteboard. Sew the long strip
round the (limiter pieces, overcasting
the same neatly, and finish all the edges
With brown silk cord. Three loops made
of cord are sewed to the flap, and three
buttons placed on the natio part of the
satchel, to fasten it with. A monogram
was worked on the flap, just above the
cord, and a design done in outline with
Inown Roman slik floss, ornamented the
ends and formed a border around the
laeg,e piece of linen. 'Handles were made
of linen, folded tvsice to make them
strong, one 111011 wide and twelve inches
bettor than boards, because dust °Linnet
long, and sewed upon each sicte of the
colloct The obnoxite.s.
shown may be used in satchel. It is an article that will Well
o thousana and one ways. I got the repay one for the tiMe and expense put
mediumtsiaed gratin Pasteboard boxes upon it. A. music roll may be made in
used by milliners for laces, hats and such the mune way.
things, and on the corner I placed a
figure, numbering from ono up. Now, Receptaele for a Dust cioth.
whatever I place in one of these ream. .A. unicine device for concealing a dust
Males can be easily kept track of by in- 010111 is here portrayed, in the Corm of a
dexiug in a small blank book. If the basket to be suspended on the wall or a
garret admits of it a counter may be
door knob. To make one you will need
made to extend its entire length, and
'boxes ot all, siees made to serve various
purposes, whioh will suggest themselves
to one bent on systematizing. things. 1
venture to warn her to begin in a small
way and soo which is the wisest way to
MULTUM IN PARVO,
, -
No man's religioa eller $1,1rviYekt /tie
InOralia
Sense ships with a aeuble baster Witell
eet in. humility,
Tao true way to gam mucia is never
to desire to gain too inuela
Christianity commuods 118 to poise by
ingtertlielel
lwpiohlinty,tooeastsleptmte
slotrtP
vtle uitisea fbrYomals.
a
tyraut; and of all tame, from a flatterer,
To
an honest num the best perquisites
oifmaPar
r t. lace 0 the advantages it gloves 01
dolug good.
Ilse not misled by strange fantastic art,
but in your dress let Ionian take Some
I never think he is quite ready for an-
other world who is altogether weary of
this.
All science rests on a basis of faith,
for it assumes the permanence and uni-
formity of natural laws,
lt I might control the literature of the
heusehold, I would guarantee the well-
being of the Church and atate.
We may read, and read, and read again,
and still. find something new, something
to please and something to indruct.
We should uot quarrel rashly with
adversities not yet understood, nor over-
look the mercies often bound up in them
Everyone of us, whatever our specula-
tive opinions, knowS better than he prac-
ties, and recognizes a better law than
he c bays.
Sedition is bred in the lap of luxury,
and its chosen emissaries are the beggared
spendthrift and the impoverished liber-
tine.
Wehave more power than will; and it
Is often by way of excuse to ourselves
that we fancy things an impossible.
A little wit and a great deal of ill -
nature will furnish a Man for satire; but
the greatest instance aud value of wit is
to oommana well.
Avarice is generally the last passion of
those lives of whioh tbe first part bas
been squauclerect in pleasure and the
second devoted to ambition.
Man never fastened one end of a chain
around the neck of his brother that God
dia not fasten the other end round the
neck of the oppressor.
How will you find good? • It is not a
• A PETROLEUM BICYCLE.
And so, in the eternal fitness of things,
they have made the stone the guardian of
the unfortunate youtat's resting place,
thus anticipating Mr. W. S. Gilbert's Mi-
kado, in Making the punishment fit the
crime.
Bat I went to Tunbridge Wells, as I
have said not to see the place, but to wit-
ness an exhibition of horseless carriagos
gotten up by Sir David. Solomon, who,
like bis namesake of old, is evidently a
wise man and seos into the future. Not
long ago there was a road race of horseless
carriages from Paris to Bordeaux and re-
turn in France. It was a long journey
and the race Was won by a carriage work-
ed by a petrolearo engine, which Made
qUicker tilne on the high road. than the
usual Prench expresses do on therailwaye.
In England the low Makes snail a road ex-
hibition impossible, The law says that
any carriage not drawn by horses must be
Wooded by it man carrying a red ftag
and that it must not travel faster than
two miles an imur, This laW was evident.
ly framed with an eye toWatcls the crash -
log steam roller; nevertheless, pre's/watt
expant
Tho top should be built to project in
front and wider it curtain may be sus-
pended to cover all from the (lust; the
ends being boarded in and the back cov-
ered by tacking paper over It, or by set-
ting the counter snugly against a wall.
'Underclothing, wraps and other winter
goods may be stored in these boxes (in
company with camphor), paper being
HOLDER:
pasted around the cover cracks, if desir-
Duel' CLOTH
ed. If there aro several children in the a a round piece of "Art linen." or duck,
family, oath may have his or her own twelve inches in diameter. Draw a
"number" in which to keep the "clean
change," etc. Or a entail section of
counter ntay be niade for the different
rooms, as most convenient The appli-
cation of this idea may be varied, the
object of my article being to put the
reacier to inquiry and experiment.
Ono
BY EXPRESS C.O.D.
Way to Secure Back Salary From an
ASsigned Employer
A man who is compelled to pay his
just debts even theough trickery, has no
recourse at law in many oases. ill s
amply demonstrated by the following lit-
tle story which is not two days old.
A young New Yorker was clerking for
a cigar dealer doing business within a
few blocks of the post-ofilce. The dealer
assigned and beat his employe out of 87.
This happened about three months ago.
The employe wow back to New York
and devised a plan .to got paid. He
secured a large.sized cigar bon, filled it
with shavings, on top of Which he laid
his receipted bill for 0, plus al for his
trouble. Then he made a nice package
which he sent C. a D. to his old em-
ployer who had resumed business. The
latter thinking that the box was filled
With en extra fine brand Of cigars paid
the e8 and now he swears that it is the
werst trick. ever plaped on him.
He will not sweet. oval watrant, bow -
ever, tieninet the elork, who had given a
flotatious name to the express ownpany
10 avoid auspicibri.
Xmproved Clothes --Pin Bag.
The accompanying illustration shows a
clothes -pin bag which has two distinct
improvements over the apron bag usual-
ly used for this purpose. It has a shoulder
strap, so that its weight can be supported
border of blossoms around this, folcl at
together and mark the lines as seen here
to imitate a basket; these lines are done
in the stem or outline stitch, and the
border in an irregular buttonhole stitch.
It is then laundried very stiff, folded to-
gether and handles sewed on it of heavy
linen cord. The embroidery is done in
linen floss—shaded pink for the flower
border, and straw color for the basket. A
bow of pink ribbon is tied on the handle.
Hints for Housekeepers.
Old kid gloves make excellent pen -
wipers.
To clean papered walls tie a soft cloth
ABOUT COMMON SPICES,
Gioger it eata etten to relieve sea biek,
nqss,
Sumatra peppee is said 10 be the °beep -
eta.
The uatmeg tree is a oative of the
Moluceas.
The gtuger plant grows from 2 to
feet high.
A. Preserve is made from young -MOW
of ginger.
The utatineg is the seed of a tree of the
laurel family.
The fruit of the nutmeg is often suede
into a stveetteeat,
• Ten varieties of plants are known to
produce black pepper.
The rea peoper plant belongs to the
deadly nightshade
Chmemon is tbe innerltark of a tree
of the laurel family.
Cardantou kiwis of excelleut quality
are grown im Germany.
The ordinary red pepper has long been
used as a medicine.
The clove is a product of a tree belong-
ing to the myrtle family.
The strips of cinnamon bark are 1181101-
ly about 40 inches long.
The clove plant is believed to
native of the Molucca Islands.
Pepper has always been regarded as
tonic and stisnulant to digestion.
Anise seed cordial is made of anise
seed, alcohol, and angelica.
From nutmegs two products are obtain-
ed, a volatile oil and a solid fat,
Cardamon is used in England and Hol-
land as an adulterant of gin.
The popper plaint flowers in June and
the crop is gathered in January.
M'our species of plants produce capsi-
cum, or the rod pepper of commerce.
The first cloves mentioned in Europe
were brought from the East in 1521.
The cinnamon gardens of Ceylon are
said to have an area of 122,000 acres.
The jamaica nutmeg is a seed of a
fruit somewhat resembling our papaw.
Caraway seeds are regarded as a Sti11111-
lant and an efficient aid to digestion.
Ginger is said to be employed In more
than 200 different M0010111 prescriptions.
Throughout India and all South Asia
cardamon seeds are used as a condiment
be a
thing of choice; it is a 'river that flows The nutmeg plant has never been sue -
from the foot of tho invisible throne, and, cessfully grown beyond the limits of
the treaties.
Caraway seeds are grown for the
market in many parts of Enrope and
South England.
The cinnamon gardens of Ceylon pro-
duce from 250 to 500 pounds of this spice
per aere.
In Marseilles imitation nutmegs were
formerly made from bran, day and nut-
meg refuse. .
The oinnainon tree grows tea height of
20 or 30 feet It is believed to be a native
than that it should be concentrated Into
of Ceylon.
efestacies full of danger and followed by Malabar pepper is said to bring the
reactions. highest price in the great pepper markets
of the world.
flows by the path of obedience.
Lenity will operate with greater force
in some instauces than rigor. Itis, there-
fore, my great wish to have my whole
conduct distinguished by it.
There never was any party faction,
sect or cabal whatsoever in which the
most ignorant were not the most violent;
for a bee is not a busier animal than a
blockhead.
It is better that joy should be spread
over all the day in the form of strength
In human lite there is constant change
of fortune; and it is unreasonable to ex -
peat an exemption from the common fate.
Life itself decays and all things are daily
changing.
Employment gives health, sobriety and
meatus. Cortstaut employment and well-
paid labor produce, in a country like
ours, general prosperity, content and
cheerfulness.
In all evils which admit a remedy,
impatience should be avoided because it
wastes that time and attention in com-
plaints which. if properly applied, might
remove the cause.
Pedantry, in the common acceptation
of the wordnneans an absurd ostentation
of learning and stiffness of phraseology
proceeding front a misguided knowledge
of books and a total ignorance of men.
If we can advance propositions both
true and new, these are our own ay right
of discovery; and if we can repeat what
is old more briefly and brightly than
others, this also becomes our own by
to a broom and gently brush. right of conquest.
When the hands are stained, use salt Pleasure and pain spring not so much
and lemon juice; this will take off stains frola the nature a things as from our
and render the hands soft and white. manner of coneideriug them.
All traces of mud can easily be remov-
by rubbing
Pleasure, especially, is never an invari-
ed from black clothes the
able effect of particular circumstances.
spots with a raw potato cut in bait Largely that is pleasure which is thought
Light curtains have a vexatious way of to be so.
flying out open windows, or across the How noiseless is the growth of corn!
MOM ; this may be remedied by small Watcb it night and day for a week, and,
weights sewed into the hem. you will never see it growing; but return
If the throat is husky from dust or after two months and you will find it all
weariness, an excellent gargle can be
The leaves, and even the bark, of tbe
wattle°. tree are said to have -the frog -
Nance (7f the seed. •
The anise seed plant grows spontaatin
ously in most of the. countries around
the Mediterraneau. •,,,
Cinnamon was brought to Greece •
Horne before the time of Christ by Arab-
ian merchants.
The fruit of the nutmeg tree is aboutthe size of a peaeh, to which it bears 'a
strong resemblance.
The nutmeg, tree begins to bear in the
seventh or eightb year, and lives seventy
to eighty years.
ARE YOU MARRIED?
Or About to Marry? Before You Marry
. Read These Mines and Remember
That baldness is no disgrace.
That few women care for politics.
That jealousy is not 0 proof of love.
That the "lodge dory" has whiskers..
That a loud. tone is not an argument -
That boys and girls still like a circus.
That the golden rule is a good old rule.
That carving a fowl is one of the fine.
arts.
That there can be no love like the old
love.
That children's shoes are not indestruc-
tible.
That there are limits to a woman's
whitening for the harvest. Such, and so aredulity.
made of a teaspoon of spirits of camphor
imperceptible in the stages of their mo- That the landlord loveth a prompt -
in a elass of hot water. tion, are the victories of the press. . paying tenant.
That tele walls of an apartment house
have ears.
That after all your wife dresses well to
please, you.
That family affairs should never be
If grease or oil is spilled on a carpet •
ty one shoulder, as a postinau supports
Is letter -bag. The weight of a Clothes- flour or fine meal should .be eprinkleci
pin bag, when full of pins, ,is too groat PAPER AND PAPER -MAKING.
over it as soon as powilsle, and. let re-
main for several hours, and it will ab -
o be supported in tho usual fashion
about the vsaist, while great inconvenn Africa has four paper mills.
ence is experienced in attempting to put sorb the grease.
Steel knives which are not in general Asia has nineteen paper mills, mixed with your drinks.
clothes pins with one hand into a bag use may be kept front rusting by cover- Wasps were the first paper makers. That you should set the example where
whose '`ntoutli'' is continually closing. ing the steel portion with mutton tallow, The first paper min in Germany was there are children.
• then wrapping them in paper and put- set up ia 1317. That it may be profit:Abe to get Your
Language of the ran. ting away. wife to learn the typewriter.
Wall paper has been in use in China
Fans will be universally married this New brushes that are an improvement for oyer 700 years. That women, when given a chance,
coming winter ay women wheu in full on the featber duster have long bandles For 800 years the Chinese have made beco3ne enthusiastic anglete,
dines. They will be unusually mail and with the brush of lambs' wool, Which waterproof paper.
peculiarly Hell in coloring, thereby oda_ gathers the dust and holds it. These
kland-made paper was always sized
ing 0 charmiug touch of coati! to light brushes can be ameba' after using,
with a solution of common glue.
toilettes. In view of the .fan's return whereupon they are again made as white - '
favor frecruent inquiry is lima° oup., and soft as wool.
• There ave over 4,500 paper Innis ill the
' civilized countries of the world.
1
018 wffl
10 miming the different movements by The rubber iinae o pr
whicb the fan may communicate what recover their elasticity, if soaked for a
its owner's tins cannot utter. These ,while in weak ammonia water. This is
quite an item When canning is being
done, and the rubber rings am found to ;
be stretched out of shape.
Wash your cans clean if you want the
creamery butter sweet. A scrub brush
perpendicular position, like an exclama- is much better than 0 cloth to gheetrotbie
it
na I creases
signals, though they sometimesam
vary,
giveu by Enropeanatuthority as follows,
IIS beiug in most general use, and are
known as the Spanish method:
The olosed fan means: 1—Hold in a
ohin "We are noticed, take care," 2— sticks so. Try it mace, if you don't be- !
:Held against the ileart, it says, "Be neve it, then take a good smell of your
5050 of my love." 3—Held 10 11 horizontal can after it is scaided out.
position, with both arms hanging, it
conveys the sorrowful message, All is
over between us." i—But if the head
leans on the fan, it signifies the humble
entreaty, ''Be kind again!"
Tho half -open fan says: "I don't
understand you, explain yontself more
lately P' It the fan is opened to its
full width and covers half the faCe, it
means: Want to speak to you!" If
the lady fans hereell in the 'usual way,
It means;"Come, the Coast is clear!"
If the opeii fan is 'bold fla , a 1, ai ter,
it eiguifles: "There Is nettling More in
our way, all the obstacles a,re removed!"
But if it is allowed to fall negligently
downward it is meant to express; "I
never cared for you, and I uevor sball
cate l"
'rite Very tattest.
Narrotv layaiollars and ceffs cf hem-
stitched !teen or1 cambric, are the latest
thing for accessories on dark cloth
CoStilines.
Plowers on Mats Confirm.° in Eavor,
Althotigh feathers are in use, ilOWertf
Boston's Famed Brown Bread.
For one large loaf of bread use three
pints of sifted cornmeal, thi•oe pints of
rye flour, one oup of good bop yeast and
one cup of nnolasses. Mix very soft
with •warni water, pour the mixture into
a round pudding Mu anti allow it to
stand midi light. Bake With a steady
fire for three hours.
To Candy Orauge anti Lemon Peel.
To candy orange and lemon pool, throw
the peel as you Collect it into salt water,
and let it stand two or three weeks. Re-
move front the brine, wash well in dear
cold water, and boil until tender in fresh
water. It will take about three hours
for lemon peel and two for orange,
Drain from the Water and drop 'into a
thio syrup made 111 the Proportion of one
pound et sugar 10 one pint of water;
enamor gently until the peel le trans-
parent, end the eyrup abnost belled away.
Drain the pieces Mal drop into a thick
syrup which must be boilibg; remoad
trent the fire and stir tonal tbe whole
looka white, then lift out each pleat of
conduit° to be the most popolar telm- peel and roll it in granubat0d sugar.
mittg for all kinds of inillibery modeln When quite day peek in jars with tissue
meet between the lavers
. ']21)ee Chinese and Japanese make many
articles of furuiture uut of paper.
The manufacture of linen paper in
ian . 1 bogun about 1314
Seine Wrapping papers are made as
nstersosi.a g as cloth of a proportionate thick -
The paper product of the world in
1800 was estimated to exceed 1,000,000
tons.
Until the present century, all paper of
whatever description was made by head.
Paper hangings, for use on walls, were
introduced into Europe from the East in
11160A75beautiful paper is 11.3 the fibrous bark of the mulberry or
me.de .Tapan
palp.ehre tree.
weight of paper is sornetimeg
toaterially increased by the addition of
Clay and kaolin.
Watevatmeas Were originally used on
bank Uotes as a means of preventing
counterfeits.
Papieranaehe shoes for horses have
been rel.:tinny introduced, With, it is said,
gratifyiag rest -tits.
The papal bulls eV the eighth and ninth
centuries were written on cotton paper
of a fair quality.
The cost value of the paper annually
made ita all the countries of the world
extends 150 000,090.' ,
Sheets of paper four or five miles long
are nove conanoely made for the use of
the newspaper press.
The 8111111151 18800 of books le 0511)1 101811
at 851000,000 of volumes,m
coneuing 65,-
000 tons of 81Zoli. paper,
The pulp froin the grinding And cut,
ting of the rags is bleached White by the
Use ot chloride of lime.
Mans Itaby was slam, we gave lier castorm.
Wiaen she was a Child, she tried for °Astoria,
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoritt,
When film hadelaildren, she gave them Castoria.
tion poiet, restiag, against the mouth and sou
TSHS!4"111, REIYIEDY'
1 MOSTFgff pe,,ICAlii on acAsy.
Certain in kg effects and never blisters,
need proofs holoW:
KENDALL'S SPAVIN GiliDE.
Box 52,,Carman, nendersonCe., III., Feb. 50, 14
1 Dr.
Delartrj$11r1)14, DrAl go' 9°8.010 me ono of soar Horse
Books and oblige. lhateusedo great deal 0510111
150118,111',. Spamit Coro TWoi,tilai 0 gbtioodadsttinco4o
ee.eSti, ttx be ft
wi
enw"delesizantienleeldwilL"nne nye bottles eared Mr, I
keep 6. bottle on lituld ell the -dine, .
Yours trulS. atlas. INDITE,.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN DUNE,
CANTON, go., ap1.6, n.th
Br, B. 3, Knsakvf, Co.
PeOr 81r8-4 lipe heed several 1)4008 et Iser
"Itontlell's Spovin Caro," wita ranch success 1
tAnk it the best ante -ant 3. ever used. Mac re-
mota Cat Carl,. ene Jaloed anavie sad AVM
two Iloilo Searles. Rave rhoommended 111 54
a
several my friends who 11r0 Mush pleased lath
tunikeop it. itespeettraly,
S. R. itAv, P. 0, HoztlO,
For Selo by ail Druggists, or address
..—...--..............
Dr. P. J. A r?.:7A7.7)ALL COM.P.A!.VY,
EN6301./TIGH rsti.s, VT.
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